Dell Technologies research: High-growth firms expect AI and GenAI to transform industries

GenAI and AI will significantly transform industries in the future, according to 95% of Indian respondents to the Dell Technologies Innovation Catalyst Research. This rises to 91% for organisations reporting high (+25%) 2023 revenue growth and dips to 75% for those reporting low growth (1-5%), flat revenue or decline.

Based on responses from 6,600 IT and business decision makers across 40 countries, the research suggests that while there is broad optimism for AI and GenAI, the extent to which organisations are prepared for the rapid pace of change varies greatly. Ninety-Six percent of the Indian respondents say they are well positioned competitively and have a solid strategy. At the same time, nearly half (47%) of the respondents are uncertain what their industry will look like in the next three to five years and nearly six in 10 (57%) report struggling to keep pace. They cite the lack of the right talent (43%), data privacy and cybersecurity concerns (35%) and lack of budget (34%) as challenges they face in driving innovation.

GenAI Moving from Ideation to implementation

Respondents cite GenAI’s transformative or significant potential to deliver value in improving IT security posture (74%), productivity gains (73%) and to improve customer experience (76%). They are also aware of challenges to overcome Sixty-eight percent fear GenAI will introduce new security and privacy issues and 89% agreed that their data and IP is too valuable to be placed in a GenAI tool where a third party may have access.

More broadly, responses suggest that organisations are working through GenAI practicalities as they transition from ideation to implementation, with 39% saying they have begun implementing GenAI. As organizations increase adoption, concern centers around understanding where risks reside and who is responsible for them. Ninety-Three percent agree that the organization, rather than the machine, the user or the public, is responsible for any AI malfunction or undesired behaviour.

Anil Sethi, Vice President, Infrastructure Solutions Group, Dell Technologies India said, “Recent research indicates that while there’s widespread optimism regarding AI and GenAI, organizational preparedness for rapid change varies significantly. The research highlights insecurity around challenges such as insufficient talent, concerns about data privacy and cybersecurity, and limited budgets. With the right infrastructure GenAI possesses the capability to deliver substantial value in enhancing the IT security stance.”

Organizations are rising to the challenge of today’s threat landscape

Cybersecurity more broadly continues to be a pain point for organisations. These concerns are well-founded, as 89% of respondents say they have been impacted by a security attack in the past 12 months. The majority (89%) are pursuing a Zero Trust deployment strategy and 90% say they have an Incident Response Plan in place to recover from a cyberattack or data leakage.

The top three cited issues included malware, phishing, and data breaches. Issues with phishing are indicative of a wider problem highlighted in the report, which is the role employees play in the threat landscape. For example, 84% of respondents believe some employees go around IT security guidelines and practices because they delay efficiency and productivity, and 65% say that insider threats are a big concern. This indicates a need to focus on training as employees are the first line of defence.

The Right Technology Infrastructure will help Organisations to Succeed

The research also reveals modern data infrastructure’s critical role as technologies like GenAI gather pace and data volumes increase. Investing in a modern, scalable infrastructure was cited as the number one area of improvement for businesses to accelerate innovation. Most IT decision makers (73%) say they prefer an on-prem or hybrid model, to address the challenges they foresee with implementing GenAI.

The ability to share data across the business is also a key part of the innovation puzzle, with only 1 in 3 (33%) saying they can turn data into real-time insights today to support innovation efforts. However, responses suggest organisations are acting on this challenge, with 94% saying that data is the differentiator and their GenAI strategy must involve using and protecting that data. Almost half (42%) also claim they anticipate that the bulk of their data will come from the edge in the next five years.

Other research findings include:

  • Skills: Two-thirds (67%) claim there is currently a shortage of talent required for innovation in their industry. Learning agility and desire, AI fluency, and creativity & creative thinking rank as the top skills and competencies for the next five years
  • Sustainability: Fifty-six percent believe “driving environmentally sustainable innovations” is an important improvement area. Energy efficiency is high on the agenda, with 95% experimenting with as-a-Service solutions to manage their IT environment more efficiently and 91% actively moving AI inferencing to the edge to become more energy efficient (e.g., smart buildings)
  • Making IT a strategic partner: Currently, 81% of business decision makers have reasons to exclude IT decision makers from strategic conversations, yet both departments ranked a stronger relationship as the second most important improvement area.
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