Your dashboards have a new reader, and it doesn’t have judgment. TL;DR: AI tools like Claude, ChatGPT, and Copilot are now consuming the same dashboards your team relies on, but without the organizational context a human analyst uses to catch bad data before it drives a decision. Mid-sized companies are the most exposed: they’ve rolled out AI at an enterprise-like pace while keeping governance practices built for a 12-person startup—Notion pages, ad-hoc naming conventions, and Slack threads pinging the analyst. Enterprise governance frameworks assume infrastructure most mid-market teams lack: a data engineering group to manage dbt or LookML, a full-time CDO, and a standalone semantic layer outside the BI tool. For mid-sized organizations, governance has to be embedded directly in the BI tool: verified metrics, clearly named owners, AI-readable semantic context, and an auditable activity log of every change. Once governance lives outside the BI layer, it starts to drift within weeks. You can diagnose the problem in ten minutes. If your team can’t identify the canonical Pipeline dashboard, can’t say who owns the CAC definition, and can’t point an AI tool to a verified asset, the governance gap is already influencing the AI outputs your leadership is acting on. Your dashboards have a new reader. It can calculate faster than your analyst, detect anomalies a human might overlook, and condense three months of pipeline data in the time it takes to pour a coffee. What it cannot know is that the marketing team’s MQL numbers have been questionable since the HubSpot reconfig in March, or that “Revenue” on the CFO’s dashboard…