For the past two years, Hyperion has conducted AI readiness assessments for enterprises across Europe. The data paints a clear picture: AI adoption varies dramatically by industry, and the gap between leaders and laggards is widening.
This report summarizes insights from 200+ assessments across seven industries, scored on five dimensions: strategy, data readiness, team capabilities, technology stack, and organizational culture.
Overall Findings
The average AI readiness score across all industries is 42 out of 100. That means most organizations are still in the early stages of AI adoption — but within every industry, there are outliers scoring 70+.
The biggest gap isn't technology — it's strategy and culture. Organizations with clear AI strategies score 2.3x higher overall than those without.
Industry-by-Industry Breakdown
Financial Services: 58/100 (Highest)
Financial services leads AI adoption, driven by regulatory pressure, data abundance, and quantifiable ROI. Top use cases: fraud detection, credit scoring, algorithmic trading, and customer personalization.
Strength: Data infrastructure and talent acquisition. Weakness: Legacy system integration and regulatory compliance (especially with the EU AI Act adding new requirements for credit scoring AI).
Technology: 55/100
Tech companies have the talent but often lack focus. AI initiatives proliferate without strategic coordination, leading to redundant efforts and resource waste.
Strength: Technical capabilities and experimentation culture. Weakness: Strategic alignment and production deployment rate.
Healthcare: 45/100
Healthcare has enormous AI potential but faces unique challenges: data privacy, regulatory approval, clinical validation, and practitioner adoption.
Strength: Clear high-value use cases (diagnostics, drug discovery). Weakness: Data silos, regulatory complexity, and slow procurement cycles.
Manufacturing: 40/100
Manufacturing AI is growing rapidly, especially for predictive maintenance, quality control, and supply chain optimization. Digital twin adoption is accelerating.
Strength: Clear ROI metrics and operational data availability. Weakness: OT/IT convergence and workforce digital literacy.
Retail: 38/100
Retail AI focuses on demand forecasting, personalization, and inventory optimization. E-commerce retailers lead; physical retailers lag.
Strength: Customer data richness and experimentation willingness. Weakness: Fragmented data across channels and thin margins for AI investment.
Professional Services: 32/100
Law firms, consultancies, and accounting firms are just beginning their AI journey. Document processing and knowledge management are the entry points.
Strength: High-value knowledge work ripe for augmentation. Weakness: Partner-driven decision making and billable-hour model misalignment.
Logistics: 30/100 (Lowest)
Despite clear use cases in route optimization and demand prediction, logistics companies face data fragmentation, legacy systems, and razor-thin margins that limit AI investment.
Strength: Operational efficiency imperative. Weakness: Data standardization and technology investment capacity.
Key Takeaways
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Strategy matters more than technology. The top predictor of AI success is having a documented AI strategy with clear business objectives.
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Start with data, not models. Organizations that invest in data infrastructure first see 3x better production deployment rates.
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Culture eats AI for breakfast. Companies with experimentation-friendly cultures deploy AI 4x faster than those with risk-averse cultures.
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The EU AI Act is a catalyst. Organizations treating compliance as an opportunity (not just a burden) are building more robust AI systems.
Where Do You Stand?
Take our free AI Readiness Assessment to see how your organization compares to industry benchmarks. It takes 5 minutes, generates a personalized report, and identifies your top 3 priorities.
