AI top of the agenda

A whopping 80 percent of enterprises are investing today in AI, but one in three business leaders believe their company will need to invest more over the next 36 months to keep pace with competitors.

  • Thursday, 12th October 2017 Posted 7 years ago in by Phil Alsop
At the same time, enterprises are anticipating significant barriers to adoption and are looking to strategise against those issues by creating a new C-suite position, the Chief AI Officer (CAIO) to streamline and coordinate AI adoption. These results come from survey of 260 large organisations that operate globally, conducted by leading technology industry market research firm Vanson Bourne on behalf of Teradata (NYSE: TDC), the leading data and analytics company.
 
“There is an important trend emerging evident in this report — enterprises today see AI as a strategic priority that will help them outpace the competition in their respective industries,” says Atif Kureishy, Vice President, Emerging Practices at ThinkBig, a Teradata company. “But to leverage the full potential of this technology and gain maximum ROI, these businesses will need to revamp their core strategies so AI has an embedded role from the data centre to the boardroom.”
 
Companies are Doubling Down on AI Investments
The survey results found that companies are bullish and expect their AI investments to be worth the upfront cost.
 
The industries where respondents expect to see the most impact from AI are IT, technology and telecoms (59 percent), business and professional services (43 percent), and customer services and financial services were tied for third (32 percent).
 
The top three challenges where businesses expect AI to drive revenue are product innovation/research and development (50 percent), customer service (46 percent), and supply chain and operations (42 percent). This mirrored some of the top areas of AI investment, which include customer experience (62 percent), product innovation (59 percent) and operational excellence (55 percent).
 
While adoption rates are high and companies expect AI to prove its worth, there is a lot of opportunity for future implementation:
 
  • 80 percent of respondents report that some form of AI is already in production in their organisation, although 42 percent say that there is lots of room for further implementation across the business.
  • 30 percent still believe that their organisation isn’t investing enough and will need to invest more in AI technologies over the next 36 months to keep up with competitors in their industry.
  • On average, the companies surveyed are currently investing $6.47 million in AI technology — that number rises to $8.25 million average spend for companies in APAC.
 
Challenges Lie Ahead for AI Realisation
Almost all respondents are anticipating barriers to adoption and ROI — as is the case with nearly every emerging technology. Business are ready to continue to invest in AI, likely because of the gains executives and IT decision-makers anticipate in cost and time savings, but lack of IT infrastructure and lack of access to talent are cited as the leading barriers. Surprisingly, business leaders are not as concerned about the impact AI and automation will have on employee morale — only 20 percent see this as a barrier — and even less, 19 percent, are worried about making a business case for AI.
 
  • 91 percent expect to see barriers to AI realisation, with lack of IT infrastructure (40 percent) and lack of access to talent (34 percent) leading the challenges, followed by lack of budget for implementation (30 percent), complications around policies, regulations and rights (28 percent) and impact on customer expectations (23 percent). By contrast only 19 percent view a weak business case for AI technologies as a concern and only 20 percent are concerned about the impact of AI and automation on employee morale.
  • Businesses anticipate about a half-and-half split between revenue increases (53 percent) and cost/efficiency savings (47 percent) from their AI investments.
  • Only 28 percent of respondents say that their organisation has enough trained people internally to buy, build and deploy AI.
 
How Businesses are Strategising to Extract ROI from AI
While executives currently rely on existing technology leaders like CIOs and CTOs to steer AI adoption and strategy, they believe the future of AI will be so relevant for creating a strategy across business practices that they will need a CAIO (Chief AI Officer) to coordinate and mandate implementation throughout the enterprise.
 
  • The CIO (47 percent) and CTO (43 percent) are leading the effort today, with 62 percent of respondents say they are planning to hire a dedicated role — a CAIO — to lead the effort in the future.
  • Companies expect a $1.99 ROI in the next five years for every dollar invested today and $2.87 in ROI over the next 10 years.
  • The industries that most anticipate positive impacts are: IT, technology and telecoms (59 percent); business and professional services (43 percent); consumer services (32 percent); financial services (32 percent); and manufacturing and production (31 percent).
 
What it Means
Tech companies have been promising AI as a robust solution and business strategy for the past few years, and this survey shows businesses are realising the benefits of AI adoption today.
 
“As we continue to adopt AI solutions across our business, we’re finding it is a proven differentiator for creating opportunities to streamline our operations and drive revenue,” says Nadeem Gulzar, Head of Global Analytics, Danske Bank.  “Finding the right talent is always a challenge in emerging tech fields and having service-based options, as well as off-the-shelf, will be important to fill the gap as we continue to invest in this technology.”

Enterprises expect AI to be a technology with longevity, planning to double their investment in five years and triple it within 10 years. But to maximise this ROI, companies realise they must re-imagine how AI will disrupt all aspects of their businesses and create a suitably agile strategy to gain ROI.