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NewslettersCEO Daily

Rishi Sunak tells CEOs to move fast on AI—or risk landing on the wrong side of the K-shaped economy

Kamal Ahmed
By
Kamal Ahmed
Kamal Ahmed
Executive Editorial Director of Europe
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Kamal Ahmed
By
Kamal Ahmed
Kamal Ahmed
Executive Editorial Director of Europe
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 26, 2026, 6:07 AM ET
Rishi Sunak, former UK prime minister, speaks during an event organized by the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, India, on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026.
Rishi Sunak, former UK prime minister, speaks during an event organized by the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, India, on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026.Abeer Khan/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • In today’s CEO Daily: Fortune‘s executive editorial director for Europe Kamal Ahmed reports on Rishi Sunak’s AI outlook.
  • The big leadership story: Social media faces its Big Tobacco moment.
  • The markets: Down globally as an Iran peace deal remains elusive.
  • Plus: All the news and watercooler chat from Fortune.

Good morning. Is it worth a 100-mile train ride from London to England’s second city, Birmingham, to hear the former U.K. prime minister talk about the AI revolution? Despite my original train being cancelled (this is Britain) and a mad dash from the main Birmingham rail station to the venue to be there in time (through a hail storm)—it turns out, yes.

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Rishi Sunak was prime minister from 2022 until 2024—when he was defeated by Keir Starmer. Although they come from different parties (Sunak is a Conservative, Starmer leads the Labour Party), they are surprisingly close on the issue of AI development (more and faster, please). The U.K. business department regularly contacts Sunak to ask for advice.

Sunak is considered an expert on technology and is U.S.-friendly, which is key to creating AI momentum in Europe. He has an MBA from Stanford and is an advisor to Goldman Sachs, Microsoft and Anthropic.

In front of an audience of hundreds of smaller business leaders, Sunak laid out some golden rules for AI application: 

  • Don’t think of the technology first, think about what your business needs. 
  • Make decisions at speed or risk being left on the wrong side of a “K-shaped” economy (AI adopters on the up, laggards drifting backwards). 
  • Pilot and iterate—rather than try and boil the whole ocean in one go.

I heard fascinating insights from the business leaders in the audience about how they are approaching AI. One founder talked of the “false confidence” risk engendered by AI products like Gemini, Claude and Perplexity. Each give slick, plausible answers in the blink of an eye to any question you ask. Which answers, though, are worth your time?

To understand that, you need a strong understanding of your business and its value to your customers. It may be a new AI approach. Or it may be something that is very human in nature.

Sunak was soundly defeated in 2024, and Starmer came in on a wave of hope that Britain could redefine its role in the world. But the polls have turned against Labour, the U.S. president has described him as “no Churchill,” and now neither the Conservatives nor Labour lead in the polls (Nigel Farage of Reform does).

But there is brain power in the U.K. in AI. Nscale, a builder of data centers, is valued at $14.6 billion. Revolut, in financial services, is valued at $75 billion. Sunak wants AI thinking to flourish on this side of the Atlantic and argues that smaller businesses, which employ most people, will lead many of the advances. They are more nimble and quicker than big bureaucracies, he argues. He also hopes that in this one aspect, at least, the U.K. can show the U.S. a thing or two.

If only the trains could run on time. — Kamal Ahmed

Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com

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CEO Daily is curated and edited by Joey Abrams, Claire Zillman and Lee Clifford.

This is the web version of CEO Daily, a newsletter of must-read global insights from CEOs and industry leaders. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.
About the Author
Kamal Ahmed
By Kamal AhmedExecutive Editorial Director of Europe

Kamal Ahmed is the executive editorial director of Europe. Kamal is the author of Letter from London, Fortune Europe's weekly take on global business as seen from London. Previously, he was director of audio at The Telegraph and presenter of The Daily T podcast.

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