A new IDC survey of global organizations already using artificial intelligence (AI) solutions found only 25% have developed an enterprise-wide AI strategy. Coincidentally, 50% of surveyed organizations say AI is a priority while two-thirds emphasize an "AI First" culture. More than 60% of organisations reported changes in their business model in association with their AI adoption.
The IDC report, Artificial Intelligence Global Adoption Trends & Strategies, noted that IT operations is the number one business area for employing AI, followed closely by customer service and fraud/risk management.
Trust, bias, and ethics considerations are gaining importance: nearly 50% of organizations reported having a formalized framework to encourage considerations of ethical use, potential bias risks, and trust implications, and close to 25% have established a senior management position to ensure adherence.
"Organizations that embrace AI will drive better customer engagements and have accelerated rates of innovation, higher competitiveness, higher margins, and productive employees. Organizations worldwide must evaluate their vision and transform their people, processes, technology, and data readiness to unleash the power of AI and thrive in the digital era," said Ritu Jyoti, program vice president, Artificial Intelligence Strategies.
The primary drivers behind these organizations' AI initiatives were to improve productivity, business agility, and customer satisfaction via automation. Faster time to market with new products and services was another leading reason for implementing AI. The cost of AI solutions, a lack of skilled personnel, and bias in the data were identified as the primary factors holding back the implementation of AI technology in these organizations.
Problems ahead
Most organizations reported some failures among their AI projects with a quarter of them reporting up to 50% failure rate; lack of skilled staff and unrealistic expectations were identified as the top reasons for failure.
