Category: Market Analysis | Read time: 5 min | Date: March 15, 2026
The productivity era of AI is over. Revenue growth is now the top priority for Asia-Pacific enterprises — and they’re putting serious money behind it.
According to Lenovo’s CIO Playbook 2026, conducted by IDC and surveying 920 technology leaders, 96% of APAC organisations plan to increase their AI investments by an average of 15% this year. But the real story isn’t the spending figure — it’s what’s changed about why they’re spending.
From Cost Savings to Top-Line Growth
For years, the dominant narrative around enterprise AI in Asia-Pacific was efficiency: automate processes, cut headcount, reduce costs. That playbook has been retired.
“Increasing revenue — the top line and bottom line — is becoming the top-notch requirement for enterprises,” said Rakshit Ghura, VP and GM of Digital Workplace Solutions at Lenovo. “It was at the number eight position last year; this time, it is number one.”
This shift is corroborated by IBM’s APAC AI Outlook 2026, which found that 64% of organisations are now redirecting AI investments toward core business functions — customer value and top-line growth, not back-office automation.
By 2026, 95% of global executives expect generative AI initiatives to be at least partially self-funded, reflecting the widening revenue pool AI is creating across industries.
The Numbers That Matter
The Lenovo-IDC study reveals several data points that enterprise leaders should pay attention to:
- 66% of APAC organisations are now either piloting or systematically adopting AI — past the experimentation phase
- 88% expect returns from AI projects this year, with an anticipated ROI of $2.85 for every dollar invested
- 50% of non-IT departments are now funding AI initiatives, with projects increasingly originating from marketing, finance, and business units
- 86% are opting for hybrid AI, repatriating workloads from public cloud to on-premise or edge infrastructure
That last point is critical. The hybrid approach is being driven by cost management and data sovereignty requirements — particularly in ASEAN markets where governments are actively legislating around AI data governance.
Agentic AI: The Next Frontier
Perhaps the most forward-looking finding is around agentic AI — systems capable of independent action and decision-making. While interest is high, with 60% of APAC organisations exploring or planning limited deployments, only 10% consider themselves ready to scale.
The gap between interest and readiness represents both a risk and an opportunity. Vendors that can bridge this gap with enterprise-grade agentic solutions will find a receptive market.
What This Means for the Region
The shift from productivity-driven AI to revenue-driven AI marks a maturation point for the APAC market. Enterprises are no longer asking “should we use AI?” — they’re asking “how do we use AI to grow faster than our competitors?”
For vendors, the implication is clear: selling AI as a cost-reduction tool is yesterday’s pitch. The winners in 2026 will be those who can demonstrate direct impact on customer acquisition, product development, and market expansion.
For investors, the 15% spending increase across a region that already represents the world’s fastest-growing AI market signals sustained demand — particularly in hybrid infrastructure, enterprise AI platforms, and agentic AI tooling.
Sources:
- Lenovo CIO Playbook 2026 (IDC), via ComputerWeekly — https://www.computerweekly.com/news/366637305/APAC-enterprises-to-boost-AI-spend-by-15-in-2026
- IBM APAC AI Outlook 2026 — https://www.ibm.com/new/announcements/apac-ai-outlook-2026-signals-ai-breakout-moment-as-a-new-revenue-driver
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