CFOs are misjudging AI investments by treating them as a single ROI problem rather than as a portfolio of very different bets, according to Gartner, Inc., a business and technology insights company.
“AI does not follow one cost curve, and it does not produce one uniform type of value,” said Twisha Sharma, Senior Principal, Research in the Gartner Finance practice. “CFOs need to stop looking for a single ROI formula and instead build a balanced portfolio that includes productivity use cases, targeted process improvements, and selective transformational bets.”
Figure 1. Different Economic Identities of AI Initiatives
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Source: Gartner (March 2026)
Seek Nonfinancial Value
“The value of AI is not always captured first in traditional financial metrics. In many cases, it appears earlier in better decisions, faster adaptation and stronger organizational capability. CFOs need to account for that if they want a complete picture of what AI is really delivering,” said Sharma.
The companies that get the most value from AI will not be the ones chasing a single breakthrough or forcing every initiative through the same ROI lens. They will be the ones that treat AI like a portfolio — balancing routine productivity gains, targeted process improvements and selective transformational bets, while scaling winners and cutting weak ideas early.

