Tuesday, June 16, 2026
MediaNews4U
  • Exclusive
  • Advertising
  • Media
    • Radio
    • Cable & DTH
    • Print
    • Digital Frontier
    • Gaming Nexus
  • Television
  • OTT
  • Ad-Tech
  • Marketing
  • Campaigns
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
    • Opinion
    • Think Through
    • Prescience 2023
    • Prescience 2024
  • People
  • Events
    • Leader Speak
    • STRAIGHT TALK
    • Gamechangers
    • Print & TV Summit
MediaNews4U
  • Exclusive
  • Advertising
  • Media
    • Radio
    • Cable & DTH
    • Print
    • Digital Frontier
    • Gaming Nexus
  • Television
  • OTT
  • Ad-Tech
  • Marketing
  • Campaigns
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
    • Opinion
    • Think Through
    • Prescience 2023
    • Prescience 2024
  • People
  • Events
    • Leader Speak
    • STRAIGHT TALK
    • Gamechangers
    • Print & TV Summit
MediaNews4U.com
Home Exclusive

The Price of Being First: India’s AI Surge and the Complexity It Left Behind

Leading the world in AI adoption was the easy part, Now comes the harder work. As AI sprawl grows across Indian enterprises, industry leaders are urging a shift from accumulation to integration and measurable outcomes.

by MN4U Bureau
June 16, 2026
in Exclusive
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
The Price of Being First: India’s AI Surge and the Complexity It Left Behind
Share Share ShareShare

There is a particular kind of problem that only the ambitious encounter — the problem of having moved so fast that the scaffolding hasn’t kept up. India’s mid-market enterprises know this problem intimately. They were first into the AI arena, first to deploy at scale, first to embed artificial intelligence across core business functions. And now, with characteristic candour, they are among the first to confront what that speed has cost them.

The Freshworks Global Cost of Complexity Report 2026 puts a precise number on it: 27% of the average mid-market AI budget in India is consumed not by innovation, but by what the report dryly calls “complexity overhead.” That translates to an estimated ₹33,000 crore in wasted AI spending annually — a figure higher than the global average of 25%, and a direct consequence of scaling fast across fragmented, often mismatched technology environments. The irony is sharp: India leads the world in mid-market AI integration, with 36% of organisations embedding AI across multiple core business functions — more than double the global average of 15%. Yet the more deeply AI is embedded, the heavier the operational burden it appears to create.

The Audacity Dividend — and Its Shadow

To understand how India arrived here, it helps to appreciate the sheer scale of the ambition. Saket Dandotia, Co-Founder and CEO, Onetab.ai, captures it with a line that doubles as a manifesto: “The world invented AI. India made it useful.”

It is a bold claim. It is also, by the numbers, a defensible one. India leads the world in generative AI adoption at 73%, with coding queries running at three times the global average and data analysis at four times. Enterprise deployment has outpaced the US, the UK, and every other mature digital economy. And unlike markets that have approached AI cautiously — through extended pilots, governance frameworks, and phased rollouts — India’s enterprises largely chose to deploy first and refine later.

But that very instinct — to move, to build, to commit — is precisely what the complexity report is measuring. The cost of going fast is, in part, the cost of going messy. And Rajiv Dingra, Founder and CEO, ReBid, is clear-eyed about what that means on the ground: “Indian enterprises are moving fast, but many are also discovering that AI without integration, clean data, workflows and governance can become another layer of complexity rather than a productivity multiplier.”

The Freshworks data bears this out in uncomfortable detail. Some 88% of Indian mid-market IT leaders report that managing AI complexity has increased their team’s workload — meaning that in nearly nine out of ten organisations, AI is creating effort, not just replacing it. The average Indian mid-market firm now runs 4.6 AI tools; 16% are juggling seven or more. Managing that sprawl is consuming 27% of AI-related working time — time spent not on value creation, but on coordination, validation, and troubleshooting the very systems that were supposed to simplify things.

When AI Becomes the Problem It Was Meant to Solve

Perhaps the most telling symptom of this complexity trap is what happens after AI produces an output. According to the Freshworks report, 85% of Indian IT leaders say AI-generated content introduces noise, errors, or rework into their workflows. The productivity loop, in other words, is broken at the last mile.

Kartik Mehta, CBO and Head of Asia, Channel Factory, sees this not just as an operational headache but as a market-level phenomenon that is reshaping the brand environment. “As India shows signs of fast adoption of AI, we are also noticing an increase in low-quality content,” he observes. And what distinguishes today’s version of this problem from its historical predecessors is velocity. Low-quality content has always existed. What’s changed, as Mehta puts it, is “the velocity and scale of its creation.”

This is the phenomenon the industry has begun calling “AI slop” — content manufactured for monetisation, stripped of intent or craft. For brands navigating a media environment increasingly saturated with it, Mehta argues the challenge is not merely defensive. He introduces the concept of the Unsloppable Brand — one that doesn’t just sidestep low-quality adjacency but actively converts brand safety into brand advantage. The prescription: audit where your signal is coming from, interrogate what you are actually optimising for, and resist the temptation to conflate platform performance with genuine brand presence.

Siddharth Kelkar, Managing Director of India/MENA and Performance Business, AnyMind Group, takes a structurally similar position but frames the problem at the ecosystem level. For Kelkar, the rework and noise are symptoms of a deeper misalignment — organisations that have accumulated AI capabilities without building the connective tissue that makes them function together. “Many businesses have reached a point where they’re spending as much time managing AI as they once spent managing manual processes,” he notes, before adding the crucial qualifier: “and that’s not because the technology isn’t working.”

It is a distinction worth sitting with. The problem is not AI. The problem is the environment AI has been dropped into — and the assumption that adoption alone constitutes strategy.

The ROI Gap Nobody Wants to Talk About

There is a further tension embedded in the Freshworks data that the industry is only beginning to address openly. Some 74% of Indian executives expect AI investments to deliver measurable returns within eight months. The actual deployment timeline, in most mid-market organisations, runs between six and twelve months — meaning the return window and the deployment window are, in many cases, the same window. Programmes are being evaluated, and in some instances discontinued, before they have had sufficient time to generate any outcome worth measuring.

Dingra names this directly. “India’s AI adoption story is no longer about intent — it is about execution.” And execution, in his framing, has a specific meaning: not the act of deploying a tool, but the act of making it work durably within existing business systems, with governance, clean data, and measurable accountability baked in from the start.

The structural barriers to getting there are well-documented in the Freshworks report: 34% of Indian respondents cite system integration complexity as a key obstacle; 31% point to excessive configuration requirements; 30% flag talent shortages. Together, these factors slow the journey from pilot to production — and it is in that gap, between proof of concept and scaled deployment, that most of the wasted ₹33,000 crore disappears.

Maturity Looks Like Simplification

What emerges from both the data and these industry perspectives is a coherent picture of what India’s next phase of AI adoption needs to look like — and it is less about capability accumulation than it is about deliberate simplification.

Kelkar puts it plainly: “The next stage of maturity will be less about adding new capabilities and more about simplifying the environments those capabilities have to operate in.” Success, in his view, will come from building connected ecosystems — AI deployed in ways that fit into existing workflows, teams, and decision-making processes rather than layering on top of them.

The data reflects a market already shifting in this direction. In India, 93% of IT leaders now say they prefer AI solutions with built-in workflows over those requiring extensive configuration. Some 44% rank workflow integration as their single top priority. The appetite for complexity, quietly and without fanfare, appears to be fading.

Dandotia, characteristically, frames the trajectory in larger terms. The 73% adoption figure, he argues, is not the ceiling — it is the floor. “Per capita, most of India hasn’t meaningfully started yet. The 73% is the early wave. The engineers, the entrepreneurs, the first movers. Behind them sits the largest untapped AI-ready population in the world — young, digitally connected, and hungry.” For him, what India is building right now is not a trend reaching its peak. It is a foundation being laid for a transformation of a scale the global technology industry has not witnessed in a single market, in a single generation.

The Reckoning — and the Opportunity Inside It

These are not comfortable conversations. They require Indian enterprises to acknowledge that moving fast created real costs — costs now borne by IT teams stretched thin, brands navigating content environments they didn’t design, and finance functions staring at a ₹33,000 crore gap between spend and outcome.

But discomfort, here, is a marker of maturity. The markets that are not having these conversations are the ones that haven’t moved far enough to need to. India’s complexity problem is, at its core, an adoption problem — one that only countries leading the field are positioned to experience.

Dingra captures the stakes with clarity: “The winners will be companies that don’t just adopt AI, but operationalize it across teams, data, processes and customer journeys.” Mehta adds the brand dimension: those who don’t just avoid the noise but build brands strong enough to cut through it. Kelkar maps the architectural requirement: ecosystems, not tool stacks. And Dandotia holds the long view: a country not at its ceiling, but at the beginning of something far larger.

India’s mid-market has already answered the question of whether it can lead the world in AI adoption. The question it is now answering — in real time, at significant cost, and with characteristic energy — is whether it can lead the world in making AI work. The evidence suggests it will. But the path there runs not through more tools, more deployments, or more ambition. It runs through the harder, quieter work of making what already exists actually function.

Tags: AnyMind GroupKartik MehtaOnetab.aiRajiv DingraReBidSaket DandotiaSiddharth Kelkar

RECENT POSTS

ata-led optimisation works best when balanced with strong brand building: Vinay Tamboli, DataQuark – LS Digital
Exclusive

ata-led optimisation works best when balanced with strong brand building: Vinay Tamboli, DataQuark – LS Digital

June 16, 2026
0

Medianews4u.com caught up with Vinay Tamboli, CEO, DataQuark, LS Digital around the recent launch of QuarkAssist, a modular data platform...

Read moreDetails
Agencies that deliver outcomes win more than agencies that deliver outputs: Aditya Kathotia, Nico Digital
Exclusive

Agencies that deliver outcomes win more than agencies that deliver outputs: Aditya Kathotia, Nico Digital

June 15, 2026
0

On the occasion of marketing day that took place on 27 May 2026, an interesting conversation emerging within the industry...

Read moreDetails
“The Next 20 Years Are About Becoming Global”: Prasad Shejale on LS Digital's Future
Exclusive

“The Next 20 Years Are About Becoming Global”: Prasad Shejale on LS Digital's Future

June 15, 2026
0

With consumer behaviour becoming increasingly fluid across search, social, commerce, content and AI-powered interfaces, businesses are being compelled to rethink...

Read moreDetails
Engaging Gen Z and Gen Alpha remains central to our brand evolution strategy: Takuto Kimura, Casio India
Exclusive

Engaging Gen Z and Gen Alpha remains central to our brand evolution strategy: Takuto Kimura, Casio India

June 12, 2026
0

On the occasion of Baisakhi, Casio India, a pioneer in timekeeping innovation, had unveiled a campaign that celebrates the power...

Read moreDetails
Building reliability into every interaction becomes the core objective for long-term brand trust: Sairaj Hemachandran, REHAU India
Exclusive

Building reliability into every interaction becomes the core objective for long-term brand trust: Sairaj Hemachandran, REHAU India

June 11, 2026
0

There are elements within a home that stay with people over years of use, becoming part of everyday living without...

Read moreDetails
Our strength in North India is real, but we have never treated it as a ceiling: Anupam Bansal, Liberty Shoes
Exclusive

Our strength in North India is real, but we have never treated it as a ceiling: Anupam Bansal, Liberty Shoes

June 10, 2026
0

Liberty Shoes has launched its new Healers range, which combines all-day comfort, acupressure-led support, and versatile style across workwear, everyday,...

Read moreDetails

LATEST NEWS

ata-led optimisation works best when balanced with strong brand building: Vinay Tamboli, DataQuark – LS Digital

ata-led optimisation works best when balanced with strong brand building: Vinay Tamboli, DataQuark – LS Digital

June 16, 2026
Lionsgate Play partners with PlayboxTV to expand access to premium Hollywood content in India

Lionsgate Play partners with PlayboxTV to expand access to premium Hollywood content in India

June 16, 2026

ANALYSIS

53% of Indian CMOs project AI-driven revenue growth, surpassing global 43% average: BCG Global Report
Analysis

53% of Indian CMOs project AI-driven revenue growth, surpassing global 43% average: BCG Global Report

June 15, 2026
0

Mumbai: India is emerging as one of the world’s most marketing-led AI transformation markets, with Indian Chief Marketing Officers (CMOs)...

PEOPLE

Jeffin (Jeff) Thomas exits McCann Worldgroup India after 2.5-year stint as VP Strategy
People

Jeffin (Jeff) Thomas exits McCann Worldgroup India after 2.5-year stint as VP Strategy

June 15, 2026
0

Mumbai: Jeffin (Jeff) Thomas has resigned from McCann Worldgroup India, concluding a two-and-a-half-year tenure with the agency where he served...

MARKETING

Zepto elevates Roohi Raj to Vice President
Marketing

Zepto elevates Roohi Raj to Vice President

June 15, 2026
0

Mumbai: Quick commerce platform Zepto has promoted Roohi Raj to the position of Vice President, marking a new milestone in...

Subscribe to Newsletters

ADVERTISING

National Geographic
Advertising

National Geographic brings Sara Dosa’s Time and Water to India as MIFF 2026 opening film; honours David Attenborough with centenary showcase

June 15, 2026
0

Mumbai: National Geographic is set to present two landmark documentary screenings at the Mumbai International Film Festival, bringing together contemporary...

PRINT

Mathrubhumi Group
Print

Mathrubhumi Group launches National Thought Leadership Awards in honour of M P Veerendra Kumar

May 30, 2026
0

Kozhikode: Mathrubhumi Group, Kerala’s largest media house, has launched the National Thought Leadership Awards to commemorate the legacy of late...

AUTHOR'S CORNER

The FIFA Ball Has a 500 Hz Sensor. Why Brands Need One Too.
Authors Corner

The FIFA Ball Has a 500 Hz Sensor. Why Brands Need One Too.

June 16, 2026
0

Why the future of marketing will be won not by better dashboards, but by better sensing systems. 1. The Lesson...

UPLIFT MEDIANEWS4U DIGITAL PVT LTD
No. 194B , Aram Nagar 2, JP Road,
Versova, Andheri West
Mumbai - 400061

For editorial queries:
[email protected]
[email protected]

For business queries:
Smitha Sapaliga - +91-98337-15455
[email protected]

Recent News

The Price of Being First: India’s AI Surge and the Complexity It Left Behind

The Price of Being First: India’s AI Surge and the Complexity It Left Behind

June 16, 2026
ata-led optimisation works best when balanced with strong brand building: Vinay Tamboli, DataQuark – LS Digital

ata-led optimisation works best when balanced with strong brand building: Vinay Tamboli, DataQuark – LS Digital

June 16, 2026
Lionsgate Play partners with PlayboxTV to expand access to premium Hollywood content in India

Lionsgate Play partners with PlayboxTV to expand access to premium Hollywood content in India

June 16, 2026

Newsletter

Subscribe to Newsletters

Medianews4u.com © 2019 - 2025 All rights reserved.

  • The South Side Story 2023 Download Report
  • Goafest 2023: Day 3
  • Goafest 2023: Day 2
  • Goafest 2023: Day 1
  • Straight Talk Gallery 2022
  • The South Side Story 2022 Download Report
  • Focus 2022
  • Futurescope Conclave Gallery 2022
  • The South Side Story 2021 Download Report
  • FOCUS 2021
  • Exclusive
  • Exclusive
  • Advertising
  • Media
    • Radio
    • Cable & DTH
    • Print
    • Digital Frontier
    • Gaming Nexus
  • Television
  • OTT
  • Ad-Tech
  • Marketing
  • Campaigns
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
    • Opinion
    • Think Through
    • Prescience 2023
    • Prescience 2024
  • People
  • Events
    • Leader Speak
    • STRAIGHT TALK
    • Gamechangers
    • Print & TV Summit

Medianews4u.com © 2019 - 2025 All rights reserved.