INFOGRAPHIC running or in pilot , in stark contrast to 36 % in AIlagging countries ( Spain , Australia / New Zealand , Germany , Japan ).
• Industries : Technology leads with 70 % of AI projects up and running or in pilot , while banking and financial services and manufacturing follow with 55 % and 50 %, respectively . However , healthcare ( 38 %) and media and entertainment ( 25 %) are trailing .
• Company size : Larger companies ( with more than 250 employees ) are more likely to have AI projects in motion , with 62 % reporting projects up and running or in pilot , versus 36 % of smaller companies ( with fewer than 250 employees ).
Both AI leaders and AI laggards show a difference in their approach to AI :
Methodology
In March 2024 , market research firm Savanta fielded a quantitative study , on behalf of NetApp , of 1,300 IT executives from key markets across the world including US , UK , France , Germany , Spain , Australia / New Zealand , Japan , Singapore and India .
block AI progress . Instead , AI leaders will scale back , cut other IT operations , or reallocate costs from other parts of the business to fund AI initiatives .
• Globally , 67 % of companies in AI-leading countries report having hybrid IT environments , with India leading ( 70 %) and Japan lagging ( 24 %).
• AI leaders are also more likely to report benefits from AI , including a 50 % increase in production rates , 46 % in the automation of routine activities , and a 45 % improvement in customer experience .
• AI leaders will also increase their cloud operations ( CloudOps ), data security and AI investments throughout 2024 , with 40 % of large companies saying AI projects have already increased IT costs .
• Year over year , ‘ increased cybersecurity risk ’ jumped 16 % as a top concern from 45 % to 61 %, while all other concerns decreased .
“ The rise of AI is ushering in a new disrupt-or-die era ,” said Gabie Boko , Chief Marketing Officer at NetApp . “ Data-ready enterprises that connect and unify broad structured and unstructured data sets into an intelligent data infrastructure are best positioned to win in the age of AI .”
AI laggards must swiftly innovate to stay competitive
Despite the divide , there is notable progress among AI laggards in preparing their IT environments for AI , but the window to catch up is closing rapidly .
• A significant number of companies in AIlagging countries ( 42 %) have optimised their IT environments for AI , including Germany ( 67 %) and Spain ( 59 %).
• Companies in some AI-lagging countries already report they see the benefits of a unified data infrastructure in place , such as :
• Easier data sharing : Spain ( 45 %), Australia / New Zealand ( 43 %), Germany ( 44 %).
• Increased visibility : Spain ( 54 %) and Germany ( 46 %).
IT costs and data security emerge as top challenges but won ’ t impede AI progress
Rising IT costs and ensuring data security are the two of the biggest challenges in the AI era , but they will not
• To manage AI project costs , 31 % of companies globally are reallocating funds from other business areas , with India ( 48 %), UK ( 40 %) and US ( 35 %) leading this trend .
Security , AI and CloudOps drive 2024 cloud investments
As global companies , whether AI leaders or AI laggards , increase investments , they are relying on the cloud to support their goals .
• Companies reported that they expect to increase AI-driven cloud deployments by 19 % from 2024 to 2030 .
• 85 % of AI leaders plan to enhance their CloudOps automation over the next year .
• Increasing data security investments is a global priority , jumping 25 % from 33 % in 2023 to 58 % in 2024 . p
Pravjit Tiwana , General Manager and Senior Vice President of Cloud Storage at NetApp
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