Australia’s biggest bank has turned its attention to a question that is preoccupying boardrooms across the country: how are business leaders actually approaching artificial intelligence, and are they moving fast enough to keep up with the technology without getting ahead of their own governance?
In new commentary published through its business banking arm, Commonwealth Bank’s look at how Australian business leaders are approaching AI reads less like a hype cycle and more like a temperature check. The message is that the country’s executives are broadly convinced AI matters, but many are still working out where it fits, how to fund it, and who is accountable when an algorithm gets it wrong.
The context
CommBank is not a neutral observer here. The bank has spent the past two years rewiring large parts of its own operation around AI, from fraud detection and customer messaging to a broader partnership with Microsoft on agentic tools. That means its read on the market carries the weight of a company that has already made the leap, and is now watching to see whether its business customers follow.
The backdrop is a national economy under pressure to lift stubbornly flat productivity. Successive Productivity Commission and Treasury discussions have flagged AI as one of the few levers that could move the dial in the near term, and the federal government has spent much of the past year debating how to encourage adoption without letting the risks run unchecked. Against that, a bank telling its customers that the technology is worth taking seriously lands as more than marketing.
The news
The through-line in CommBank’s framing is that Australian leaders have largely moved past the question of whether to engage with AI and are now stuck on the harder questions of how and how much. Curiosity is high. Confidence is patchier. The gap between the two is where most businesses currently sit.
That maps neatly onto what other researchers have found. Practical use cases such as drafting, summarising, coding assistance and customer service are being adopted quickly because the return is obvious and the downside is contained. Bigger bets, the kind that reshape a whole workflow or touch sensitive customer data, are moving far more slowly, held back by worries about accuracy, privacy, and reputational exposure.
CommBank’s pitch to its business clients is essentially that this caution is healthy but should not become paralysis. Start with contained, measurable use cases, the argument goes, build internal literacy and governance as you scale, and treat AI as a capability to develop rather than a product to buy once and forget.
Two ways to read it
There is an optimistic reading and a sceptical one, and both have merit.
The optimistic case is that Australia’s measured approach is a feature, not a bug. Businesses that rush to bolt generative AI onto everything without controls are the ones most likely to suffer a data leak, a hallucinated customer response, or a compliance breach that ends up in the headlines. Leaders who take the time to get governance right may move slower at first but build something durable. On this view, CommBank is nudging the market in the right direction: ambition tempered by discipline.
The sceptical case is that caution is often just a polite word for inertia. Plenty of Australian firms have been circling AI for two years without committing real budget or executive ownership, and every month spent deliberating is a month competitors overseas spend shipping. There is also a fair question about self-interest. A bank that sells AI-enabled services and has a stake in the broader adoption story is always going to encourage its customers to lean in. The framing is useful, but it is not disinterested.
Both readings point to the same uncomfortable truth. The businesses most likely to benefit from AI are the ones with the resources to govern it properly, and those tend to be the larger end of town. Smaller operators risk being left with the choice of adopting without adequate guardrails or not adopting at all.
What it means for Australia
This is where the story is unmistakably local. Australia’s economy is dominated by small and medium businesses, and the productivity payoff from AI will only be national in scale if those firms can access it safely. A bank with millions of business customers is one of the few institutions positioned to shape that, through the tools it builds, the advice it gives, and the standards it sets by example.
There is also a trust dimension that is peculiarly Australian. Survey after survey has found Australians are among the more sceptical populations globally when it comes to AI, wary of both the technology and the institutions deploying it. That scepticism does not disappear at the office door. Business leaders who are personally uneasy about AI are unlikely to champion it internally, and staff who distrust it will find ways to route around it. Any adoption story that ignores this cultural reality is only telling half the tale.
The regulatory environment adds another layer. With Canberra still finalising how it intends to govern high-risk AI, and a live debate over a dedicated Office of AI and a national framework, business leaders are being asked to invest in a technology whose rules are not yet written. That uncertainty is a genuine drag on the bigger bets, and no amount of encouragement from a bank fully removes it.
What’s next
Expect the conversation to shift from awareness to accountability. The interesting question over the next year is not whether Australian businesses will use AI, most already are in some form, but whether they can put in place the governance, data controls and staff capability to use it at scale without an incident that sets the whole sector back.
For CommBank, the commercial logic is straightforward. If its business customers grow more comfortable and more capable with AI, the bank’s own AI-enabled services become easier to sell and harder to leave. For the rest of the country, the stakes are broader. Australia has spent this period debating AI more than deploying it. Whether that caution matures into confident, well-governed adoption, or curdles into a competitiveness gap against faster-moving economies, is the story that will actually matter.
Sources: Commonwealth Bank.
















































