The advent of artificial intelligence (AI) is catalysing one of the most profound shifts in legal leadership since the emergence of corporate law departments. In a recent conversation at the India AI Impact Summit 2026, Anne E. Robinson, Senior Vice-President and Chief Legal Officer of IBM, provided a powerful new lens on this evolution portraying the modern General Counsel not merely as a legal interpreter but as a strategist, technologist, and business enabler in an AI-driven world.
Traditionally, GCs were seen primarily as custodians of compliance, managing contracts, litigation, and regulatory risk. However, Robinson emphasises that this definition is no longer sufficient. Instead, AI has expanded the GC’s remit to encompass broader strategic responsibilities:
- Understanding technology deeply, especially AI and data, to govern risk.
- Shaping organisational culture and corporate governance in the face of rapid digital transformation.
- Engaging proactively with regulators, boards, and customers to build corporate trust and competitive advantage.
In Robinson’s words, in-house lawyers must become “enterprise strategists,” not just legal interpreters. This means thinking proactively about business objectives and structure, and embedding legal counsel early in commercial decision-making rather than acting as a post-hoc risk filter.
One of the pervasive myths about AI in law is that it will replace lawyers. Both Robinson and broader industry commentary refute this. Instead, AI should be viewed as an augmenting force that accelerates efficiency and amplifies human judgment. By automating routine work such as NDA drafting, clause analytics, document summarisation, and invoice review legal professionals are freed to focus on higher-order tasks requiring judgment, commercial insight, and nuanced legal interpretation.
This is consistent with broader expert findings that generative AI tools can transform drafting, research, and compliance monitoring, while still requiring human oversight to ensure accuracy, ethics, and accountability.
In a world of fragmented and evolving AI regulations from the EU’s AI Act to India’s emerging data protection frameworks legal teams are tasked with translating complexity into clarity for business leaders. Rather than merely reacting to regulatory change, GCs must anticipate it and integrate governance structures that align with corporate strategy and risk appetite.
Robinson’s approach at IBM reflects this realignment: legal and regulatory affairs operate as a unified, global function that blends centralised expertise with embedded legal partners aligned to business units. This hybrid structure ensures that legal counsel participates early in business processes, strengthening organisational agility and compliance resilience.
The changing nature of legal work demands a new skill set. According to Robinson, future legal leaders must cultivate: Insatiable curiosity to explore unknown legal and technological territories, AI literacy to understand both the opportunities and risks of automation, Commercial acumen to align legal strategy with business growth, Cross-functional fluency to collaborate effectively across operations, technology, and policy functions and Adaptability to stay agile amid rapid technological and regulatory evolution.
These competencies echo broader industry insights as AI accelerates routine tasks, the differentiator for legal leaders will increasingly be judgment, strategic influence, and trusted relationships within the organisation.
A significant part of IBM’s vision is its commitment to skilling 5 million learners in AI, cybersecurity, and quantum technologies by 2030 a strategic bet on India’s role in the global AI workforce. Robinson emphasised that India’s talent pipeline will shape the pace and quality of global AI adoption, with legal and compliance talent playing a central role in scaling AI-enabled legal operations.
For corporate legal departments worldwide, investing in continuous education and cross-disciplinary training has become vital. This not only helps manage technological risk but also positions legal teams as co-drivers of innovation and growth.
The era of legal management dominated by manual review and isolated compliance will soon be obsolete. AI is not merely reshaping the GC role it is redefining legal leadership itself. As tools evolve, corporate legal teams must evolve with them focusing on governance frameworks, ethical deployment, and organisational trust.
In this landscape, the successful GC will be a hybrid leader: blending legal expertise with technological fluency, strategic foresight, and a deep understanding of business dynamics. The transformation is not just about adopting AI it’s about reimagining the function of law within the enterprise

