
Most Enterprises Fall Short In AI Readiness: F5
The report unveils stark truths about the state of AI readiness for enterprises today and their ability to adapt at sufficient speeds to keep pace with new innovations. The most notable findings of the report reveal that while 77% of companies demonstrate moderate AI readiness, most lack robust governance and cross-cloud security, exposing them to risks. Meanwhile, 21% of companies fall into the low-readiness category, limiting their competitive edge as AI transforms industries.
F5's research reveals trends illustrating the rapid expansion of AI use by today's enterprises. All told, 70% of moderately ready organizations have generative AI in active use, and virtually everyone else is working on it. Additionally, 25% of apps, on average, use AI. Highly ready organizations typically use AI in a much higher percentage, with portfolio-wide saturation expected. Low-readiness organizations use AI in less than one-quarter of their apps, typically in siloed or experimental settings. Moderately ready organizations currently have AI present in about one-third of applications.
The report provides a snapshot of the latest trends in enterprises grappling with embracing AI. Nearly two-thirds of survey respondents (65%) use two or more paid models and at least one open-source model. The average organization uses three models, and the use of multiple models correlates with deployment in more than one environment or location. The majority of models in use today are paid models such as GPT-4, but open-source alternatives are also popular. The top open-source models cited are Meta's Llama variants, Mistral AI variants, and Google's Gemma.
'As AI becomes core to business strategy, readiness requires more than experimentation—it demands security, scalability, and alignment,' said John Maddison, Chief Product and Corporate Marketing Officer at F5. 'This report highlights actionable steps for organizations to operationalize AI with confidence. AI is already transforming security operations, but without mature governance and purpose-built protections, enterprises risk amplifying threats.'
Cybersecurity Challenges in AI Adoption
The report highlights critical cybersecurity issues as organizations scale AI capabilities, revealing concerning trends about enterprises' ability to tackle the complexity of securing AI workloads. Key cybersecurity trends identified in the report include: Organizations see AI as a viable cybersecurity asset: 71% of all respondents already use AI to augment security.
71% of all respondents already use AI to augment security. AI-specific protections are lacking: Only 18% of moderately ready organizations have deployed an AI firewall, with 47% aiming to have done so within a year.
Only 18% of moderately ready organizations have deployed an AI firewall, with 47% aiming to have done so within a year. Data governance weaknesses: Just 24% of organizations practice continuous data labeling, indicating reduced transparency and increased risks of adversarial attacks.
Just 24% of organizations practice continuous data labeling, indicating reduced transparency and increased risks of adversarial attacks. Cross-cloud inconsistencies: Hybrid environments create governance gaps, leaving workflows and data exposed to vulnerabilities.
Hybrid environments create governance gaps, leaving workflows and data exposed to vulnerabilities. Expanded attack surface: The use of diverse AI models exacerbates risks without proper control frameworks for open-source tools.
Recommendations to Improve AI Readiness
The report introduces the AI Readiness Index, a framework measuring six factors of operational maturity, including security and infrastructure alignment. F5 outlines key actions for enterprises to enhance AI scalability and security, including: Diversify AI models: Use both paid and open-source AI tools while improving governance to mitigate risks.
Expand AI use across workflows: Move beyond pilots and embed AI in operations, analytics, and security for enterprise-wide transformation.
Integrate AI-specific security: Deploy protections like AI firewalls and formalize data governance processes, including data labeling, to safeguard workflows.
Organizations with high AI readiness can scale effectively, mitigate risks, and leverage innovation strategically. Those without maturity frameworks face operational bottlenecks, compliance challenges, and stifled growth. The AI Readiness Index serves as a roadmap for enterprises to benchmark progress and implement actionable changes for secure scalability. Download the 2025 State of AI Application Strategy Report to benchmark your readiness, identify gaps, and accelerate secure AI scaling.
'The research in the State of AI Application Strategy Report aligns with what we're observing across the Middle East, where many organisations are increasingly integrating AI into their operations, often without all the necessary levels of governance or safeguards in place,' said Mohammed Abukhater, RVP for the Middle East, Türkiye, and Africa at F5. 'While most companies demonstrate moderate AI readiness, they still need to ensure robust governance and comprehensive cross-cloud security to avoid exposure to significant risks. In line with the report's AI Readiness Index, we are committed to empowering our customers to embed AI in their operations for seamless application delivery and security.'
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