AI adoption is moving quickly across the enterprise. For many teams, the tools are already in use before the operating model is fully defined.
That is especially true in high-stakes work. Security, fraud, risk, engineering, and innovation teams are using AI to move faster, analyze more information, and support more complex decisions. But the work still needs to happen in a way that protects sensitive data, limits unnecessary exposure, and gives the organization a clear record of what happened.
Recent research from Coder shows how quickly this shift is happening. In an assessment of 100 engineering organizations, 61% of respondents were already running agents of some kind. At the same time, 70% were running agents in infrastructure that was not designed to support them, and only 31% had reached organization-wide governance or better.
For teams responsible for security and risk, the lesson is straightforward: AI governance needs more than policy. It needs the right environment for the work.
Here are three ways organizations can make AI-enabled work safer and more sustainable.
1) Create a trusted place for high-risk work
Many AI programs begin with tool approval. Teams decide which platforms are allowed, who can use them, and what data should stay out of scope.
That is an important start. But approval alone does not answer where the work should happen.
When AI-enabled workflows touch sensitive data, internal systems, source material, customer information, untrusted sites, or regulated processes, the environment becomes part of the risk model. Organizations need to understand what users and tools can access, what traffic is visible, what data can move, and what activity can be reviewed later.
This is especially important for teams working across fraud investigations, threat research, tool evaluation, and sensitive development workflows. These teams often need speed, but they also need containment. Without a trusted place to work, they may rely on one-off exceptions, local devices, unmanaged tools, or manual processes that are difficult to audit.
A better approach is to give teams secure environments designed for this kind of work from the start. That helps reduce exposure while giving practitioners a clear path to move quickly.
2) Make governance enforceable in the workflow
Coder’s research found that only 31% of assessed organizations had reached organization-wide governance or better. The report also noted that many teams are still working through early approval models as AI usage expands across tools, systems, and workflows.
For high-stakes work, governance must show up inside the workflow itself. Teams need clear controls around access, data movement, routing, collaboration, logging, and review. Those controls should not depend on every user remembering a policy or every team building its own workaround.
Organizations should consider which activities need additional safeguards, such as:
- evaluating untrusted AI tools or applications
- working with sensitive data or source material
- investigating fraud, threat activity, or suspicious infrastructure
- collaborating with third parties or external experts
- testing workflows that could affect production systems or regulated data
Not every workflow needs the same level of control. But high-risk work should happen in environments where controls are consistent and visible.
3) Measure outcomes, not just adoption
AI usage can grow quickly without proving much about business value or risk reduction.
Coder found that only 10% of respondents had connected AI adoption to business outcomes. The report recommends tracking measures such as productivity, quality and risk, developer experience, and cost.
Security and risk teams should apply the same discipline to AI-enabled work.
Useful measures may include time to provision, time to complete investigations, number of policy exceptions, audit readiness, data exposure reduction, repeatability of sensitive workflows, and quality of records available for review. These metrics help leaders understand whether AI-enabled work is becoming safer and more effective, not simply more common.
The goal is not to slow teams down with more reporting. It is to create enough visibility to know what is working, what is risky, and where investment should go next.
Final thoughts
AI will continue to become part of everyday work across the enterprise. That includes routine tasks, but also more sensitive work in security, fraud, engineering, risk, and innovation.
As that happens, organizations need more than enthusiasm, policies, and approved-tool lists. They need secure environments where high-stakes work can happen with the right controls around access, data, traffic, collaboration, and auditability.
The teams that get this right will be able to move faster with more confidence. The teams that do not will continue to spend more time managing exceptions, investigating unclear activity, and retrofitting controls after the work has already spread.
Replica helps organizations create secure environments for high-stakes work, so teams can innovate, investigate, and collaborate without unnecessary exposure.