Trend
Research shows that nearly half of organisations are not ready for AI
By an AMD research team
are facing for its adoption. The survey found that 75% of IT leaders are optimistic
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about the benefits AI can bring – from increased employee efficiency to automated cybersecurity solutions – and over two thirds are increasing investments in AI technologies. However, they also express uncertainty over the AI adoption timeline due to lack of implementation roadmaps and lack of readiness of existing hardware. Despite hesitations around security and a perception that
training the workforce will be burdensome, those organisations that have already implemented AI solutions are seeing a positive impact – of these 90% are already seeing increased workplace efficiency. “Tere is a benefit to being an early AI adopter,” says Matthew
Unangst, Senior Director, Commercial Clients and Workstation, AMD. “IT leaders are seeing the benefits of AI-enabled solutions, but their enterprises need to outline a more focused plan for implementation, or risk falling behind. Open soſtware ecosystems
04 September 2023
www.electronicsworld.co.uk
MD recently commissioned a survey of 2,500 IT companies across the UK, US, Germany, France and Japan to establish how AI technologies are re-shaping the workplace, the plans companies have for AI technology and the biggest challenges they
with high-performance hardware are essential, and AMD believes in a multi-faceted approach of leveraging AI IP across our full portfolio of products to the benefit of our partners and customers.”
AI priority Te research also discovered that some 86% of businesses plan to prioritise AI in the next five years. Implementations could have taken place sooner if a clear roadmap exists, especially of the hardware infrastructure. Infrastructure readiness is one of the main concerns facing IT decision makers, with just over half (52%) of IT leaders saying their organisations don’t have the IT infrastructure to effectively handle AI workloads. Other key findings from the research include:
• Developments in AI are moving faster than companies do, despite global IT decision makers targeting a five-year AI rollout plan.
• 86% of businesses globally plan to prioritise AI in five years; in the UK, about 14% of businesses plan to prioritise AI implementations in the next six months.
• 54% of UK IT executives at companies with over 5,000 employees say their organisation is not willing/ready to adopt AI, highlighting a big gap between the current AI hype and the reality at the business level.
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