The failure rate for AI projects is strikingly high, and the reason surprises most people: it's almost never the technology. It's strategy. Here's what actually goes wrong, and what it takes to land on the right side of the statistic.
A RAND Corporation report found that more than 80% of AI projects fail — roughly twice the failure rate of traditional IT projects. When RAND researchers asked dozens of senior data scientists and engineers why, the top cause wasn't technical. It was strategic misalignment: leadership with an unrealistic view of what AI can do, and no clear connection between AI projects and how the business actually runs.
The pattern predates the current wave. In Harvard Business Review, Thomas Davenport and Rajeev Ronanki documented MD Anderson Cancer Center's AI "moon shot," which was put on hold after costs topped $62 million without ever being used on patients — even as smaller, focused projects in the same organization succeeded. Ambition aimed at the wrong target is one of the most expensive ways to fail at AI.
The failure modes repeat: scope too big, no connection to the P&L, leadership chasing the wrong end of the business, and tools deployed without anyone owning the change. The downstream cost shows up as "workslop" — AI-generated output that looks polished but lacks substance, which colleagues then spend hours cleaning up. Researchers writing in Harvard Business Review estimated the cleanup cost at roughly two hours and $186 per employee per month — the quiet tax of using AI without a plan.
A 2026 Harvard Business Review analysis by a Bain and OpenAI team named the deeper pattern the "micro-productivity trap": companies treat AI as plug-and-play, run scattershot pilots, and automate individual tasks without rethinking the workflow around them — so the gains stall before they ever reach the bottom line. They flag a common tell, too: failure tends to follow when leaders hand AI to the tech department with a vague goal like "improve productivity" instead of owning it themselves.
The businesses that succeed don't start with the technology. They start by understanding their own operations well enough to know where AI creates real value — then pick one or two areas, get a clean win, and build from there. It's the opposite of the all-at-once transformation project that the research keeps flagging as the thing that fails. The HBR guidance is blunt about it: don't start with moon shots, and take an incremental rather than a transformative path.
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