Indian Companies Are Investing in AI for the Long Term, Intend to Use Open-Source Tools....: IBM
New research commissioned by IBM found
that companies surveyed are investing in AI for the long term, with a growing
interest in using open-source tools to drive ROI and innovation going forward.
The study of IT decision makers (ITDMs),
conducted by Morning Consult and developed in collaboration with Lopez
Research, revealed that 87% of Indian respondents report making significant
progress in executing their 2024 AI strategy, with 76% already seeing positive
ROI from their AI investments. In addition, Indian companies are experimenting
with AI to find new uses cases as 89% of those surveyed said that their
companies have started more than 10 pilots in 2024.
Moving forward, 93% of Indian respondents indicate they will increase their AI
investments in 2025, while 71% are planning to leverage open-source ecosystems
to optimize their AI implementations. The data also confirms that having the
right tools and strategy in place for responsible AI will be key to scaling its
implementation in 2025 as governance becomes the top concern for those surveyed
from India. Implementing responsible AI practices require a holistic,
end-to-end approach that addresses various stages of AI development and
deployment that prioritizes explainability, fairness, robustness, transparency
and privacy.
“India is rapidly embracing AI with a clear focus on driving innovation and
ROI. The growing use of open-source AI tools is crucial for improving productivity
and financial returns. However, it's clear that this technology needs to be
leveraged responsibly if we are to scale its use,” said Sandip Patel,
Managing Director, IBM India & South Asia. “At IBM, we're committed to
empowering businesses with solutions across the full AI stack to capitalize on
the AI opportunity, with an approach based on transparency, trust and choice,”
he added.
Study findings for India:
Enterprises are ramping up AI investment, but with a greater strategic focus
- 97% of surveyed Indian organizations are
planning to either increase or maintain their investment in AI in 2025.
- Surveyed Indian companies are focusing on
specific areas for allocating their AI investments in 2025, particularly
IT operations (83%), software coding (56%) and data quality management
(55%).
- When asked what strategic changes will be made
in 2025, surveyed ITDMs identify utilizing open source (71%), managed
cloud services (70%), and hiring specialized talent (66%) among the most
common ways they plan to optimize their AI investments.
Companies face a broad range of challenges as they implement AI, top of
which is the need for robust governance highlighting the need for responsible
AI.
- The top 5 barriers are lack of AI governance
(53%), lack of AI expertise (51%), technology integration (51%), data
management (41%) and failure to deliver business value (39%).
Open source is becoming crucial to companies’ AI strategies
- 48% of companies in India said that more than
half of the AI solutions they are using are based on open-source.
- As company size increases,
so does the likelihood that the majority of AI solutions are based on
open source.
Organizations report successfully advancing their AI projects, but often
through less traditional ROI metrics
- 87% of surveyed Indian ITDMs report making
progress in executing their AI strategy, while only 1% report no progress.
- 63% of Indian respondents say their company
typically moves from AI pilot to full production within 12 months.
- 62% of surveyed companies say their AI
investments are equally innovation and ROI driven; while 15% said its
driven mostly by innovation, and 13% said they are mostly ROI driven.
- Faster software development (34%), rapid
innovation (32%), and productivity time savings (17%) ranked as the three
most important metrics Indian ITDMs use to calculate ROI from AI
investments. Hard dollar/quantifiable savings was at 11%.
- More than three-fourth (76%) of surveyed
Indian companies say they are achieving positive ROI from their AI
projects; 19% say they are breaking even and just 4% say they are
recording negative ROI.
- Among Indian companies not yet achieving positive ROI, 33% expect to begin seeing dollar savings within the next 12 months; 100% believe they will turn a positive ROI within 3 years.
“As organizations begin to implement AI at scale, many are placing greater
stock in success metrics such as productivity gains, in part because
traditional hard-dollar ROI have yet to show up on the balance sheets,” said
Maribel Lopez of Lopez Research. “Yet, they continue to rapidly advance their
AI strategies, with no sign of slowing down. Companies seem to now recognize
the value of defining specific use cases and optimizing AI projects. They are
leveraging hybrid cloud strategies and open source to drive AI innovation and
deliver financial returns.”
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