Cover of Who Decides 2025, Morris Misel’s foresight research report, showing a human hand and a robotic hand sharing control of a steering wheel, symbolising the question: Will AI steer the future or will human hands stay on the wheel?

{Podcast} Who Decides 2025: Global CEOs Reveal Where AI Can (and Can’t) Be Trusted to Decide

TL;DR

  • 0% of senior leaders trust AI with hiring or strategy. Zero. The line is drawn.

  • Hybrid dominates: “AI suggests, human confirms” wins 3:1.

  • Comfort cliffs are real: Media execs 58% vs Government 0%.

  • PTFA (Past Trauma / Future Anxiety): suppresses trust by 60%.

  • Built from conversations with 120 senior leaders across Australia, the United States, and beyond.

  • This is the first foresight benchmark of how far leaders will really let AI decide — and where they never will.

👉 Download the full report here


Will AI steer the future or will human hands stay on the wheel?

That’s the question on the cover of Who Decides 2025. Two hands gripping a steering wheel. Because at its core, this is about control.

Cover of Who Decides 2025, Morris Misel’s foresight research report, showing a human hand and a robotic hand sharing control of a steering wheel, symbolising the question: Will AI steer the future or will human hands stay on the wheel?
Who Decides 2025 Morris Misel’s foresight research report on how CEOs and leaders across Australia, the U.S., and beyond decide when to trust AI, and when to keep human hands on the wheel.

And the answers? Brutal. Revealing. Startling.

  • 0% of leaders trust AI with hiring or strategy.

  • Only 15% would let AI plan a family holiday.

  • 29% are fine with AI managing their superannuation or 401(k).

  • Media executives are 58% comfortable. Government? Zero.

These aren’t theories. These are real leaders, real decisions, real lines in the sand.

I asked 120 senior leaders across Australia, the United States, and beyond, from finance and technology to healthcare, retail, government and more, where they would let AI decide for them, and where they would never hand over the wheel.

Here’s what they told me.


Look at the Numbers

  • 0% of Government & Policy executives allowed AI to decide on capital spend.

  • 62% of women in Operations were comfortable letting AI manage investments — the single highest subgroup score recorded.

  • HR leaders were the most AI-sceptical: only 15% trusted AI on any hiring step.

  • Gen Z execs were 1.7× more AI-positive than Boomers — but still shut the door when decisions touched identity or ethics.

  • Hybrid dominates everywhere: four times as many leaders chose “AI suggests, I confirm” over “AI decides outright.”

Diagram showing four Decision Trust Zones: No-Brainers, AI as Co-Pilot, Human in the Loop, Humanity Rules. Maps where leaders let AI decide and where they keep control.
The Decision Trust Zones, from routine tasks to high-stakes strategy, reveal where global leaders draw the line with AI decision-making.
Matrix showing sharp drop-offs in AI trust across industries and roles when decisions touch ethics, people, or reputation.
The Trust Cliff Matrix highlights the moments where leadership comfort with AI collapses, from data-heavy tasks to people-facing decisions.

This is the Comfort Cliff in action. The moment money, people, or reputation enter the frame, trust collapses.


Industry Shocks

Different industries drew very different lines.

  • Media & Communications: 58% average comfort. Algorithms already shape content, pricing, scheduling. Leaders here treat delegation as normal.

  • Government & Policy: 0%. Not hesitation a flat refusal. Regulation, risk, and reputation froze them.

  • Finance & Insurance: More open on investments and pricing, but slammed the brakes on hiring and ethics.

  • Healthcare & Biotech: Trust AI to crunch data, but never to make the final call.

  • Tourism & Hospitality: 3% comfort. The strongest human veto of any sector.

Bar chart comparing AI comfort levels across industries: Media & Comms highest, Government and Utilities lowest.
Cross-industry comparison showing which sectors are most comfortable with AI decision-making and which remain closed.

This isn’t just data. It’s a cultural fingerprint of trust.


Gender and Generational Surprises

Forget the clichés. The data doesn’t match the stereotypes.

  • Women overall were six percentage points more open to AI than men, especially in finance decisions.

  • Gen Z executives were more positive until the decision touched ethics, identity, or reputation. Then they were as cautious as everyone else.

  • Non-binary leaders recorded the lowest overall trust (8.3%)  but showed willingness on specific, data-heavy tasks.

Heat map matrix showing gender and role discrepancies in AI trust, with women in Operations scoring highest comfort.
Gender and role matter, women in Operations showed the highest trust in AI, while HR leaders recorded the lowest.

So no, this isn’t about age or tech-savviness. It’s about context and consequence.


PTFA: Past Trauma / Future Anxiety

I built the PTFA Index to capture the emotional drag that no algorithm can see.

Leaders with high PTFA scores showed 60% lower trust in AI.

  • Past rollouts that failed left scars.

  • Future anxiety about reputation or liability froze decision-making.

  • The silent stall point? Middle managers. They scored highest PTFA, lowest trust.

Chart showing how leaders with high PTFA scores are significantly less likely to trust AI decision-making.
Past change scars and future anxiety cut AI trust by more than half, the silent emotional veto in boardrooms.

This is why transformation fails. Not because the system doesn’t work, but because trust does.


Ripple Effects

Every AI decision ripples.

Hand over a small decision, and it cascades:

  • Into culture (who feels trusted).

  • Into brand (who holds the voice).

  • Into compliance (who carries liability).

  • Into trust (inside and outside the organisation).

Diagram mapping how one AI decision cascades into culture, brand, compliance, and trust.

Every AI decision ripples beyond the task into culture, brand, compliance, and public trust.

Leaders who ignore the ripple effect pay the price.


HUMAND: The Orchestration Model

So how do we deal with this?

I built HUMAND, a foresight framework to orchestrate Human, Machine, and AI roles.

  • Humans: Frame intent, ethics, context.

  • Machines: Execute repeatable processes.

  • AI: Explore alternatives and probabilities.

  • Navigation & Design: Align trust and clarity.

Grid showing HUMAND model: Humans frame, Machines execute, AI explores, Navigation & Design ensures trust.
HUMAND – a foresight framework to orchestrate Humans, Machines, and AI in decision-making.

The sweet spot? AI crunches. Humans narrate and sign off.


How to Use This Report

I didn’t build Who Decides 2025 to sit on a shelf. I built it to be used.

Here’s how leaders are already working with it:

  • Using PTFA to surface hidden resistance.

  • Reassigning decision roles with HUMAND.

  • Anticipating ripple effects before rollout derails.

Practical next steps:

  1. Print the Decision Trust Zones quadrant. Bring it to your next board meeting.

  2. Ask your team: where would you never hand over control?

  3. Pilot one low-risk shift, from human-only to hybrid, in the next 90 days.

  4. Build human override points into every AI workflow.

  5. Use PTFA to map resistance before it stalls change.


Why I Built It

For more than 30 years, I’ve helped leaders navigate disruption across 160 industries and five continents.

I’ve always said: “The future isn’t about prediction. It’s about preparation.”

But in 2025, I saw a blind spot. AI wasn’t just supporting decisions.

It was already making them, quietly, invisibly.

And no one was asking: “Where do we let AI in, and where do we refuse?”

So I built Who Decides 2025.

The first foresight benchmark of its kind.

A pulse of real C-suite voices from Australia, the United States, and beyond.

It’s not commentary. It’s data. It’s foresight. And it’s designed for you to use.


Final Thought

Every decision nudges a direction.
Every handover carries a ripple.
And in the age of AI, the line between human and machine is being drawn, whether you notice it or not.

So the question is no longer “can AI decide?”
The question is: “Who decides, and when do we let go of the wheel?”

👉 Download the full report here
👉 Book me for a keynote, workshop, or executive session to start Choosing Forward, using this report and my foresight frameworks to shape your 2025 and 2026 strategy with clarity, confidence, and courage.

Because the leaders who act on this now will own the future.

Choose Forward.


For more on my Who Decides 2025 research report listen to Hong Kong Radio 3’s Phil Whelan and I chat about it live on-air, in this week’s catchup on all things future (17 minutes)



Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Who Decides 2025 report?
Who Decides 2025 is a foresight research report I commissioned and led, built from conversations with 120 senior leaders across Australia, the United States, and beyond. It is the first global benchmark of how far executives are willing to let AI make decisions — and where they draw the line.

What are Decision Trust Zones?
Decision Trust Zones are a foresight framework I created to map comfort levels with AI decision-making. They range from “No-Brainers” (routine tasks) to “Humanity Rules” (ethics, hiring, strategy). The zones reveal where leaders delegate to AI, where they co-pilot, and where they never let go of control.

How does PTFA affect AI adoption?
PTFA stands for Past Trauma / Future Anxiety. My research shows that leaders with high PTFA scores are 60% less likely to trust AI. Past change failures scar confidence, and fear of future risk stops adoption. PTFA is the silent emotional veto in every boardroom.

What is HUMAND?
HUMAND is my orchestration model for the future of decision-making. It balances Human, Machine, and AI roles: humans frame intent and ethics, machines execute repeatable processes, AI explores probabilities, and Navigation & Design ensures clarity. It is a practical way to assign trust and responsibility in an AI-shaped world.

Why is the Who Decides 2025 report important for leaders?
Because it provides not just commentary, but hard data and foresight frameworks to guide 2025 and 2026 strategy. It shows where leaders are comfortable with AI, where they refuse, and how to prepare for ripple effects. It’s a tool to help executives and boards Choose Forward with clarity and courage.


Morris Misel is one of the world’s most trusted futurists and foresight strategists.

For more than 30 years, he has guided leaders across 160 industries and five continents through disruption, not by predicting the future, but by preparing them to shape it.

Heard by millions each year in the media and on stage, Misel is the creator of foresight frameworks including HUMAND™, PTFA™, Decision Trust Zones™, and Ripple Effects. His work helps CEOs, boards, and executive teams build clarity, confidence, and courage in the face of accelerating change.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the ‘Who Decides’ question and why does it matter more now than before?

It is the question of where, in an organisation, consequential decisions are actually made — not where the organisational chart says they are made, but where they are actually made. This question has always mattered, but it is more urgent now for two reasons: AI systems are making more micro-decisions more quickly than human oversight can monitor, making the actual location of consequential decision-making more diffuse and less legible; and the speed and interconnection of the current environment means that the consequences of decisions — and their second and third-order effects — arrive faster than traditional review processes can catch them.

Q: What do global CEO surveys reveal about how decision-making authority is actually distributed?

That the rhetoric of distributed leadership and empowerment often does not match the reality of how decisions are made under pressure. When conditions are stable, authority flows outward. When conditions are uncertain — and conditions are currently structurally uncertain — authority tends to contract toward the centre. The organisations that handle rapid change most effectively are those that have done the deliberate work of deciding what decisions should be made centrally and what should be made at the edge, and have built the systems and culture to make that distribution work under pressure, not just in stable conditions.

Q: How does AI change the Who Decides question in practice?

By inserting a non-human decision-maker into the chain at multiple points. When an AI system is recommending, filtering, or directly executing decisions — about which customers to prioritise, which risks to flag, which candidates to shortlist — the ‘who decides’ question becomes ‘who decided to deploy this AI, on what basis, with what oversight, and who is accountable for its outputs?’ The governance frameworks that answer these questions clearly are still being built in most organisations. The ones that get it right will have a significant trust and resilience advantage over those that do not.

Q: Can Morris Misel speak on the future of leadership, decision-making authority, and AI governance for our CEO, board, or senior leadership audience?

Yes. Leadership authority and AI governance are core keynote topics for CEO, board, and senior leadership audiences. Book at morrismisel.com.

Morris Misel is a global foresight strategist and keynote speaker with 30+ years of experience across 160 industries and 25 countries. Creator of the Immediate Futures™, HUMAND™, and PTFA™ frameworks. Industry Fellow at Griffith University. Regular voice on RTHK Radio 3 (Hong Kong) and Australian media including ABC and Sky News. For keynotes, workshops, and advisory: morrismisel.com | Book Morris

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