Boards feel confident, but most admit they are not ready for the risks of 2026, finds new research
Board directors and C-suite leaders reveal a widening gap between boardroom confidence and real readiness across cyber, compliance, ESG and AI.
Despite high levels of general confidence in the boardroom, most directors admit they are not fully prepared for the specific governance risks that will define 2026, according to new research from The Corporate Governance Institute (TCGI). The study of 500 board directors and C-suite leaders reveals a stark boardroom paradox: a disconnect between perceived board effectiveness and the specific capabilities required to manage escalating cyber threats, accelerating AI adoption, intensifying ESG scrutiny and mounting regulatory complexity, exposing what TCGI describes as a growing “confidence gap” at the heart of today’s boardrooms.
The Corporate Governance Institute (TCGI) has launched its findings in a new research whitepaper, Boardroom Resilience in 2026: Independent Research Into Board Readiness, Risk and Strategy, revealing what it describes as a growing gap between boardroom confidence and board capability.
The research, conducted independently by Censuswide, surveyed 500 board directors and C-suite executives across the UK and Republic of Ireland, all working within organisations of 100 or more employees. To ensure sector relevance, the sample was drawn from four industries where governance plays a critical role: financial services, legal, healthcare, and education.
Key findings from the research include:
- 85% of directors say they feel confident in their board overall, yet only 35% report high confidence in addressing specific governance and compliance issues.
- 86% agree their organisation must do more to address potential governance blind spots or deficiencies.
- 85% agree that a lack of training or professional development ranks among the most significant causes of governance failure.
- 80% are concentrating on improving regulatory compliance, yet only 22% identify the complex regulatory environment as a top business risk.
- 41% of boards currently lack a formal approach to ESG governance oversight, and 15% have no plans to implement one.
- 76% agree governance failures directly damage employee satisfaction, highlighting the human cost of poor oversight.
Ciaran Bollard, CEO of The Corporate Governance Institute, said: “Boards today are facing an agenda that has fundamentally changed. Cybersecurity, AI, ESG and regulatory complexity are, without a doubt, core governance responsibilities. It’s no use treating them like emerging ideas and giving them only a fraction of attention.
Our research shows that while many directors feel confident in their boards overall, that confidence does not always extend to the specific governance capabilities organisations need to stay resilient in 2026. This paradox is alarming. It ignores the fact that escalating cybersecurity threats, fast-moving AI adoption, rising ESG expectations, and increasingly complex regulatory environments are now firmly on the boardroom agenda.
A board that is truly prepared is defined not only by its current skills and experience, but by its capacity for continuous adaptation.”
“Separately, board leaders recognise the presence of internal vulnerabilities. A significant 86% of respondents agree that their organisation must do more to address potential governance blind spots or deficiencies, underlining a broad acceptance that business as usual is no longer sufficient. This is certainly welcome.
The report also highlights a clear capability challenge inside boardrooms. 85% of directors agree that a lack of training or professional development of board members ranks among the most significant causes of governance failure, reinforcing the link between upskilling deficits and organisational risk. Again, this is welcome; it’s crucial that, in this day and age, boards recognise the strategic advantage of training and development.”
TCGI’s report calls for a shift from static governance to a more dynamic model of board oversight. It argues that boards must address blind spots through targeted upskilling, strategic succession planning, improved diversity, and stronger transparency and accountability across governance practices.
Boardroom Readiness in 2026 is available to download now here: https://www.thecorporategovernanceinstitute.com/insights/thought-leadership/boardroom-resilience-in-2026/
Notes to editors
About the Corporate Governance Institute
The Corporate Governance Institute (TCGI) believes that governance is a powerful force for transformation, innovation, sustainable growth, and real progress. By combining grounded expertise with practitioner-led experience, the Institute equips today’s most effective leaders, businesses, and boards to move far beyond compliance to unlock serious, strategic competitive advantage. Whether for individuals, teams, or organisations, TCGI brings sharp insights, fresh perspectives, and hands-on tools to drive long-term impact, build momentum, and make tough calls with confidence – in a world that won’t wait. Because good governance isn’t just about risk, it’s about readiness. With learners in 79 countries and courses independently rated as excellent, we’re a trusted global partner in leadership and boardroom success.
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