As CEOs Race Towards Gen AI Adoption, Questions Around Workforce and Culture Persist: IBM Study
A new study by the
IBM Institute for Business Value found that surveyed CEOs are facing workforce,
culture and governance challenges as they act quickly to implement and
scale generative AI across their organizations.
The annual global study* of 3,000
CEOs from over 30 countries and 26 industries found that 64% of those surveyed
say succeeding with generative AI will depend more on people's adoption than
the technology itself. However, 61% of respondents say they are pushing their
organization to adopt generative AI more quickly than some people are
comfortable with.
The findings also
revealed that nearly two-thirds (63%) of surveyed CEOs say their teams have the
skills and knowledge to incorporate generative AI, but few understand how
generative AI adoption impacts their organization's workforce and culture. More
than half (56%) of respondents have not yet assessed the impact of generative
AI on their employees. Yet, 51% of CEOs surveyed say they are hiring for
generative AI roles that did not exist last year, while 47% expect to reduce or
redeploy their workforce in the next 12 months because of generative AI.
"There is
incredible excitement around generative AI, and CEOs want to move beyond the AI
hype to deliver business impact. Yet, without the right people and culture in
place, progress will be slow," said Matt
Candy, Global Managing Partner, IBM Consulting. "As they embed
generative AI in their enterprise strategy, it's critical that executives build
a cultural mindset that fosters adoption and lead people through the
changes."
Other key study findings include:
Workforces
are straining under the pressure of generative AI adoption
· 40% of CEOs surveyed plan to hire
additional staff because of generative AI.
· Yet, more than half (53%) of
respondents say they are already struggling to fill key technology roles.
· CEOs surveyed say 35% of their
workforce will require retraining and reskilling over the next three years
– up from just 6% in 2021.
CEOs
recognize it takes a cultural shift to successfully scale AI, but face
organizational collaboration and adoption challenges
· 65% of CEOs surveyed say their organization's
success is directly tied to the quality of collaboration between finance and
technology, yet nearly half (48%) say competition among their C-Suite
executives sometimes impedes collaboration.
· Most (81%) CEO respondents say that
inspiring their team with a common vision produces better outcomes. At the same
time, 37% acknowledge that their employees don't fully understand how strategic
decisions impact them.
· 57% of those surveyed acknowledge that
cultural change is more important to becoming a data-driven organization than
overcoming technical challenges1.
· CEOs cite generative AI adoption as
being critical to success, but nearly two-thirds (64%) of surveyed CEOs say
their organization must take advantage of technologies that are changing faster
than people can adapt.
CEOs
indicate the benefits of rapid technology adoption outweigh potential risks
· More than two-thirds (68%) of CEOs
surveyed agree that governance for generative AI must be established as
solutions are designed, rather than after they are deployed.
· Although 75% of CEOs surveyed say
trusted AI is impossible without effective AI governance in their organization,
only 39% say they have good generative AI governance in place today.
· At the same time, 62% of CEO
respondents say they will take more risk than the competition to maintain
competitive edge, with half (51%) agreeing that the risk of falling behind is
driving them to invest in some technologies before they have a clear
understanding of the value1.
· 67% of surveyed CEOs say the
productivity gains from automation are so great that they must accept
significant risk to stay competitive.
· While today 71% of surveyed CEOs are
no further than generative AI piloting and experimentation, 49% expect to be
driving growth and expansion by 2026.
Product
and service innovation is a top priority, but a focus on short-term targets
might be hindering long-term progress
· CEOs surveyed ranked product and
service innovation as their highest priority for the next three years – up from
sixth place in 2023.
· 41% of respondents say they are
willing to sacrifice operational efficiency for greater innovation.
· However, a majority of CEOs surveyed
point to a focus on short-term performance as their top barrier to innovation.
· Today, only 36% of the CEOs surveyed
are primarily funding their generative AI investments with net new IT spend,
with the remaining 64% reducing other technology spend1.
To view the full study, including
actionable strategies to help organizations navigate the complexity of
generative AI adoption, visit: https://www.ibm.com/thought-leadership/institute-business-value/en-us/c-suite-study/ceo
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