AI is Ready but Firms are Not: How Falling Behind on AI Implementation is Costing Clients and Talent

PR Newswire

TORONTO, June 22, 2026

TORONTO, June 22, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Thomson Reuters (Nasdaq/TSX:TRI), a global content and technology company, today released its 2026 Future of Professionals report which warns of the financial cost of failing to effectively implement AI across the legal, tax and audit and risk professions. The findings, based on a global survey of 1,800 professionals, show a widening gap between AI ambition and reality, one that is now carrying material consequences with up to $143 billion in client revenue at risk in the U.S. alone* and talent considering leaving.

Thomson Reuters Logo (PRNewsfoto/Thomson Reuters)

"We're seeing a clear divide emerge," said Steve Hasker, President and CEO of Thomson Reuters. "Firms that are operationalizing AI are pulling ahead. Those that aren't are starting to take on real risk, across talent, clients, and financial performance. Closing that execution gap is now a business imperative for professional firms."

AI adoption is not the issue. 74% of professionals are already using AI tools every week, but organizations are struggling to translate that usage into real value. In fact, 91% of professionals believe their organizations are falling short of what AI can deliver, leading to unintended consequences such as one-third of lawyers, accountants, and compliance professionals saying they turn to unsanctioned tools, creating invisible, unmanaged risk.

Even where an AI strategy exists, execution is lagging: 35% say ambitions are not reflected in their day-to-day work, and nearly one in five say their organization still lacks a clear strategy. This gap between promise and reality is beginning to affect talent, with one in four professionals saying they would consider leaving within two years if they don't see the value they expect. Clients are reaching the same conclusion: 78% now see AI-enabled quality improvements as essential, yet just 6% believe most providers are delivering. As a result, nearly a third are preparing to reassess those provider relationships within the next 12 months.

These pressures are building faster than many leaders recognize, and are showing up in three interconnected areas:

Shadow AI is creating risk exposure

 Talent is leaving

Clients are not waiting

"Not all AI is created equal. In professions where there is real liability, the standard has to be much higher," said Steve Hasker, President and CEO of Thomson Reuters. "When outputs shape legal judgments, regulatory filings, or client advice, 'almost right' isn't good enough. That's why we build what we call Fiduciary‑Grade AI, technology professionals can verify, trust, and ultimately stand behind." 

Read the full Future of Professionals report 2026 here.

The technology is ready. The gap is in execution, and the benchmark is now accountability. Thomson Reuters defines this as Fiduciary-Grade™ AI, built on authoritative, domain‑specific content; rigorous privacy and security; subject-matter expertise; outputs that are transparent and verifiable; and access to real-time human support.

About Thomson Reuters
Thomson Reuters (TSX/Nasdaq: TRI) informs the way forward by bringing together the trusted content and technology that people and organizations need to make the right decisions. The company serves professionals across legal, tax, accounting, compliance, government, and media. Its products combine highly specialized software and insights to empower professionals with the data, intelligence, and solutions needed to make informed decisions, and to help institutions in their pursuit of justice, truth, and transparency. Reuters, part of Thomson Reuters, is a world leading provider of trusted journalism and news. For more information, visit thomsonreuters.com.

About the Future of Professionals Report 2026
Now in its fourth year, the Thomson Reuters Future of Professionals Report is an annual study of how technology is reshaping professional work. The findings in the 2026 report are based on a global survey of 1,816 professionals across law, tax, audit, accounting, compliance, risk, and global trade, conducted in March - April 2026. Respondents span private practice firms as well as in-house corporate and government departments across 62 countries. For more information visit http://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/institute/future-of-professionals-2026/report.  

Notes to Editors
* According to Future of Professionals data, within 12 months, 32% of corporate clients will be reconsidering their professional service provider relationships, with a third saying this will put more than $1 million in annual work at risk. Applied to the U.S. legal and CPA markets, this puts a combined ~$143 billion in client revenue in active reconsideration.

Media Contact
Samina Ansari, Corporate Communications
Samina.ansari@thomsonreuters.com

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SOURCE Thomson Reuters