Digital transformation in investor communications: how AI is amplifying investor communications
April 2026 | SPOTLIGHT | BOARDROOM INTELLIGENCE
Financier Worldwide Magazine
Efficiency. Transparency. Speed. Shareholders expect more than ever from corporate communications, even as studies suggest that 80 percent of a firm’s valuation is linked to investor relations (IR) activities. And as so often in our febrile digital world, it is tempting to see the solution contained in just two letters: AI. Certainly, the numbers here are once again compelling, with over four out of five insiders believing AI can make IR both faster and more streamlined.
To an extent, this overwhelming enthusiasm makes sense. Quite aside from the clear potential of AI across the broader culture, machine learning systems can parse and analyse vast amounts of data more or less immediately. Yet if that has manifest advantages for IR professionals, especially when dealing with thousands of shareholders at once, caution is still required. In the end, corporate communications are meant not for robots but people — with AI there to amplify, not replace, the value of flesh-and-blood IR teams.
Amplification not automation
Perhaps the clearest limitation of ‘tech-first communications’ is contained in the term itself. Technology, whatever its strengths, is ultimately just a collection of ones and zeroes, lacking the subtlety of an actual human being. Despite this obvious truth, and the fact that AI has only been around for a couple of years, IR teams have already been punished for ignoring it.
This is true even at the world’s biggest companies. At the 2023 launch of its Bing AI tool, for instance, a Microsoft marketing executive asked the system to summarise Gap’s IR site – only to be given answers filled with errors.
And even if teams avoid such awkward embarrassments, the truth is that ‘off the shelf’ AI platforms are designed by developers who do not always grasp the nuances of IR. Any IR professional worth their salt knows that tone, timing and context are key to keeping shareholders happy, with surveys highlighting personalised relationship building as fundamental to the role.
In other words, if left alone AI will never truly succeed, especially when over a third of chief financial officers report that IR communications are becoming more frequent and urgent, increasing the room for mistakes.
The solution is to craft AI platforms alongside IR professionals, appreciating their needs without removing their agency. In practice, this means seeing AI as a workforce multiplier, particularly when it comes to computational tasks that do not necessarily require the personal touch.
There are plenty of case studies here, not least when enterprise AI can perform literally trillions of sums a second. One example might involve using AI to flag abnormal stock movements, allowing executives to spot short attacks early. Elsewhere, AI could be deployed to analyse historical trading patterns, predicting what institutional investors will do next.
Even a cursory look at the figures shows how useful such number-crunching can be, with AI set to save white-collar workers 12 hours a week by 2029 — even as proxy fights at Exxon and Disney were partly won by lightning-fast campaigns.
Yet the broader point is that AI is only the first stage of the IR process. Once the algorithm has provided the data, it is up to the human team to act, whether by sending a chief executive letter or drafting a conciliatory press release.
The same is true even when AI takes on a more intimate role. Imagine, for instance, that a corporate is planning an investor day. AI is invaluable for finessing scripts – tightening tone and pacing, and so on – but a living, breathing executive must finally step up and give the speech.
In a similar vein, AI can help with other documents, drafting Q&As or earning reports. Yet they must still be finessed by hand, with shareholder sentiment and ongoing activist campaigns just two important factors to consider. This same rule applies even when AI is conscripted to more offbeat tasks. Yes, IR officers are exploiting AI to brief results in multiple languages or instantly generate podcasts. But that means little if the grammar is off or the voices inaudible.
To put it differently, then, AI is about more than mere speed, and rather represents an opportunity for corporates to work smarter, enhancing results even as they cut workloads. As so often, industry polling is revealing here, with AI especially popular among smaller media teams – those frantically juggling IR with more generic communication tasks.
From theory to practice: real‑world use cases
Across the IR landscape, teams are increasingly using AI‑enabled tools to track sentiment on platforms such as StockTwits and other social channels. This helps issuers understand how retail investors are reacting to press releases, earnings calls and investor days in near real time. These early indicators allow IR leaders to address concerns or misconceptions before they solidify and influence institutional conversations, transforming what was once a lagging signal into a proactive, early‑warning capability.
AI is also being adopted to streamline content development and review. Many IR teams now use AI to assist in reviewing earnings scripts and investor communications for clarity, tone and potential risk areas, compressing work that might previously have taken days or weeks into a matter of hours. Importantly, the goal is not to replace human judgment or generate copy autonomously, but to free experienced IR professionals to focus on messaging strategy, targeting and high‑value stakeholder engagement.
On the analytics side, advanced platforms are beginning to aggregate years of proxy, governance and market data to offer companies a real‑time view of shareholder activity, motivations and likely voting behaviour. As AI‑driven modelling features mature, issuers, advisers and financial institutions can run vote projections ahead of proxy contests or contentious meetings, allowing them to refine proposals and engagement plans based on predicted outcomes rather than assumptions.
Guardrails: governance, trust and ‘responsible AI’
As AI becomes more embedded in capital markets, both regulators and investors are sharpening their focus on how it is used.
On the governance side, a growing share of S&P 500 companies now disclose explicit board-level oversight of AI, with one recent review finding that such disclosures increased by more than 80 percent in a single year. Many boards are moving AI from a purely operational topic to a core risk and strategy issue.
Investors are sending similar signals. An EY survey of institutional investors in 2024 found that around one in five cited ‘responsible AI’ as a concern in their engagements with companies, and subsequent research indicates that proportion has since risen as awareness of AI risks has grown. At the same time, activist investors are pressing large technology and consumer companies, including Apple and Amazon, with shareholder proposals demanding greater transparency around AI, data collection and model usage.
For IR teams, that means two things. First, they need to be ready to explain how their company uses AI – in products, operations and decision making – in a way that is concrete, balanced and credible. Second, they must hold themselves to the same standard in their own use of AI: being clear about human oversight, data sources, accuracy checks and how they protect material non-public information.
This pressure is only likely to intensify. One recent industry forecast suggests that the AI enabled investor presentation software market could grow roughly fourfold by 2033, as both corporates and investors adopt more sophisticated tools for modelling scenarios, simulating votes and tailoring messaging. Activist funds are already experimenting with AI driven voting simulations and predictive analytics to stress test campaigns and anticipate management responses.
Against that backdrop, complacency carries both reputational and operational costs. The IR functions that will thrive are those that adopt AI early – but thoughtfully – and build a culture where human expertise is amplified, not sidelined.
Taken together, the message for IR leaders is clear. AI is no longer a distant buzzword; it is rapidly becoming a practical advantage – and, increasingly, a baseline expectation – in investor communications. But technology alone is not the differentiator. The real edge belongs to teams that blend human intelligence with digital amplification: using AI to see more, sooner, while still relying on experience, judgment and relationships to decide what to do next.
Alyssa Barry is president of Alliance Advisors IR. She can be contacted on +1 (604) 997 0965 or by email: abarry@allianceadvisors.com.
© Financier Worldwide
BY
Alyssa Barry
Alliance Advisors IR