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Agentic AI isn’t just a new technology, it’s the future—and it’s already here. Systems based on agentic AI can plan, act, and learn on their own, thereby accelerating efficiency, innovation, and growth. But to seize this potential, companies must navigate uncharted ground, managing a technology that combines capabilities typical of tools with others characteristic of people. The task involves reimagining workflows, roles, governance, and learning, and devising investment strategies to provide the flexibility necessary to create value with agentic AI.

This insight comes from the ninth annual global research study on artificial intelligence and business strategy conducted by MIT Sloan Management Review and BCG. A total of 2,102 respondents spanning 21 industries and 116 countries participated in the survey, and the results reveal that agentic AI is rapidly emerging in enterprises: 35% of organizations have begun to use it; and another 44% plan to join their ranks soon. On the other hand, 47% indicate that they don’t have a strategy for what they are going to do with AI.

The dual nature of agentic AI further complicates the situation. Blending qualities of tool and human, agentic AI doesn’t fit neatly into traditional management frameworks. Managing it purely as a tool or purely as a worker creates four strategic tensions: scalability versus adaptability, investment versus employment, supervision versus autonomy, and process retrofitting versus process reimagining. Yet few organizations are restructuring to manage the competing demands.

Although substantial effort is necessary, companies that embrace agentic AI’s dual nature put themselves in a position to unlock the technology’s full potential. The path forward starts by clarifying the underlying value thesis. Agentic AI systems have the ability to appreciate with use, getting smarter and more capable as time passes. Companies that treat agentic AI solely as a cost-saving tool risk missing its greater value as an engine for scalable learning, adaptability, and innovation. So organizations should first ask, “What are we trying to optimize for?” Then they should take five practical steps:

Leading in the Age of AI Agents: Managing the Machines That Manage Themselves | Exhibit

A mix of tool and collaborator, agentic AI is unlike any other technology. Businesses that recognize its dual nature and align their processes, governance, talent, and investments accordingly can capture its full value. Although agentic AI will inevitably challenge established management paradigms, with the right strategy, imagination, and execution, it won’t just offer promise—it will deliver impact.