City
Epaper

Just 12% firms utilising AI to outpace their rivals: Report

By IANS | Updated: June 14, 2022 13:20 IST

Bengaluru, June 14 Only 12 per cent of organisations that use artificial intelligence (AI) are doing it at ...

Open in App

Bengaluru, June 14 Only 12 per cent of organisations that use artificial intelligence (AI) are doing it at a maturity level to achieve a strong competitive advantage while the rest are still experimenting with the technology, a new report said on Tuesday.

The research from Accenture puts the median AI maturity of organisations at a moderate score of 36, revealing most companies have significant opportunities to generate greater value with AI.

Tech firms globally already have a high AI maturity score of 54, which will rise moderately to 60 in 2024.

In contrast, carmakers and suppliers will leap from a moderate 39 today to 57 in two years betting on a significant surge in sales of AI-powered self-driving vehicles.

Similarly, retail companies will evolve in their AI Maturity from 38 today to 54 in 2024.

The 12 per cent of firms that are using AI to its maximum to outpace their competitors is dubbed "AI Achievers", with a score of 64 on the maturity scale.

"AI adoption rapidly matured during the pandemic, yet to create more value with AI and use it to reinvent the enterprise, companies require a clear leadership vision combined with effective change management and human capital reinvention," said Piyush N Singh, India Business Lead at Accenture.

According to the research, AI maturity is the degree to which organisations outperform their peers in a combination of AI-related foundational and differentiating capabilities.

These capabilities include the technology (data, AI, cloud) as well as organisational strategy, Responsible AI, C-suite sponsorship, talent and culture.

"To successfully scale the use of AI, the companies need to industrialise AI tools and teams and also nurture a culture of responsible AI design. But most importantly, they must invest in talent," said Prithvijit Roy, Managing Director, Applied Intelligence, Accenture in India.

Besides hiring for multidisciplinary AI-related skills, it is imperative to create data and AI fluency across the workforce through skilling and reskilling for a majority of employees.

The report showed that most companies (63 per cent) are 'AI Experimenters', barely scratching the surface of AI's potential with an AI maturity score of 29.

"We believe every part of every business must be transformed by technology, data and AI, in some cases resulting in total enterprise reinvention," said Sanjeev Vohra, global lead for Applied Intelligence at Accenture.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Prithvijit roySanjeev vohraAccentureApplied Intelligence
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessAccenture CEO Julie Sweet Reveals Breast Cancer Diagnosis, Shares Emotional Message with Employees

NationalAtul Subhash Suicide Case: Protest at Accenture Demanding to Terminate Bengaluru Techie's Wife Nikita Singhania (Watch Video)

TechnologyCloud, Big Data & AI sectors continue hiring trend in Q1 2023: Report

TechnologyAccenture rejigs top India leadership, Chairperson Rekha Menon to retire

BusinessInnovative Strategies for the Digital Age: The Story of Traffic Tail and Damandeep Singh

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyAdani Green surpasses $1 bn in EBITDA in FY25, RE capacity up 30 pc to 14.2 GW

TechnologyPM Modi to address YUGM innovation conclave tomorrow

TechnologyNeed to target 1 billion UPI transactions a day in 2-3 years: FM Sitharaman

TechnologyCentre rolls out projects to boost fisheries in 7 coastal states

Technology34 supercomputers with 35 Petaflops capacity deployed across India: IT Ministry