Data Suggests Growth in Enterprise Adoption of AI is Due to Widespread Deployment by Early Adopters, But Barriers Keep 40% in the Exploration and Experimentation Phases

About 42% of enterprise-scale companies surveyed (> 1,000 employees) report having actively deployed AI in their business. An additional 40% are currently exploring or experimenting with AI but have not deployed their models. However, 59% of those companies surveyed already exploring or deploying AI say they have accelerated their rollout or investments in the technology. The top barriers preventing deployment include limited AI skills and expertise (33%), too much data complexity (25%), and ethical concerns (23%). 

Data Suggests Growth in Enterprise Adoption of AI

Data Suggests Growth in Enterprise Adoption of AI

ARMONK, N.Y., Jan. 10, 2024 – New research commissioned by IBM (NYSE: IBM) found that about 42% of enterprise-scale organizations (over 1,000 employees) surveyed have AI actively in use in their businesses. Early adopters are leading the way, with 59% of responding enterprises already working with AI intending to accelerate and increase investment in the technology. Ongoing challenges for AI adoption in enterprises remain, including hiring employees with the right skillsets, data complexity, and ethical concerns continue to inhibit businesses from adopting AI technologies into their operations.

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Data Suggests Growth in Enterprise Adoption of AI

“We’re seeing that the early adopters who overcame barriers to deploy AI are making further investments, proving to me that they are already experiencing the benefits from AI. More accessible AI tools, the drive for automation of key processes, and increasing amounts of AI embedded into off-the-shelf business applications are top factors driving the expansion of AI at the enterprise level,” said Rob Thomas, Senior Vice President, IBM Software. “We see organizations leveraging AI for use cases where I believe the technology can most quickly have a profound impact like IT automation, digital labor, and customer care. For the 40% of companies surveyed stuck in the sandbox, I am confident 2024 will be the year of tackling and overcoming barriers to entry like the skills gap and data complexity.”

Highlights from the “IBM Global AI Adoption Index 2023,” conducted by Morning Consult on behalf of IBM, include:

Over the last several years, AI adoption has remained steady at large organizations surveyed:

The majority of surveyed companies actively deploying or exploring AI have accelerated their rollout or investments in the past 24 months: 

Easier to use AI tools and the need to reduce costs and automate processes are driving AI adoption among surveyed companies:

The same set of barriers are keeping the next wave of surveyed companies from benefiting from AI:

Generative AI poses different barriers to entry from traditional AI models:

Among surveyed organizations, AI is already having an impact on the workforce: 

The need for trustworthy and governed AI is understood by IT professionals, but barriers are making it difficult for surveyed companies to put into practice:

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