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AI Adoption Brings New Risk Questions for Office-Based SMEs

Why cyber, management liability and governance controls now need closer attention

AI Adoption Brings New Risk Questions for Office-Based SMEs?w=400

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Artificial intelligence is quickly moving from experiment to everyday business tool, and a new global risk study suggests business leaders are starting to recognise the size of the shift.
The latest Corporate Risk Radar research from Clyde & Co found technology risk has climbed sharply in the minds of senior decision-makers, with AI now linked not only to IT security but also governance, regulation, reputation and third-party dependency.

For Australian office-based SMEs, this matters because AI is no longer limited to large corporates with dedicated technology teams. Small businesses are using AI to draft client communications, manage customer data, support bookkeeping, automate marketing, summarise documents and improve productivity. Those benefits are real, but so are the exposures. A poorly governed tool can create privacy issues, inaccurate advice, confidentiality breaches, copyright disputes or cyber vulnerabilities.

The report found 86% of company leaders now rate technology as a high-risk category, compared with 46% a year earlier. It also pointed to growing concern that organisations are becoming more reliant on a smaller group of external technology providers. For SMEs, that dependency can be overlooked. If a cloud platform, AI application, payment system or outsourced IT provider fails, the disruption may affect revenue, client service and contractual obligations.

This is where office insurance options should be reviewed as part of broader risk management, not treated as a once-a-year renewal task. Traditional property and public liability cover may protect the physical office and customer-facing risks, but AI-related exposures can sit across several policy areas. Cyber liability may respond to data breaches, ransomware or system interruption. Professional indemnity may be relevant where advice, designs or services are delivered using AI-supported workflows. Management liability may become important where directors or managers are challenged over governance failures, regulatory issues or employment-related decisions.

The practical lesson is not to avoid AI. It is to document how AI is used, who approves tools, what data can be entered, how outputs are checked, and which suppliers are critical to operations. Businesses should also consider whether staff training, access controls, incident response plans and privacy procedures have kept pace with adoption.

SMEs may also benefit from speaking with insurance brokers or advisers before renewal, especially if their systems, software providers, customer data handling or service delivery model has changed. AI can improve productivity, but it can also change the business risk profile. The sooner those changes are understood, the easier it is to match cover to the way the office actually operates.

Published:Monday, 29th Jun 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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