CEOs Pushing Gen AI Adoption More Quickly Than Employees' Comfort: IBM Study
The study of 3,000 CEOs from over 30 countries and 26 industries found that 64% said succeeding with generative AI will depend more on people's adoption than the technology itself.
CEOs are facing workforce, culture and governance challenges as they act quickly to implement and scale generative artificial intelligence across their organisations, a study by the IBM Institute for Business Value shows.
The study of 3,000 CEOs from over 30 countries and 26 industries found that 64% said succeeding with generative AI will depend more on people's adoption than the technology itself. However, 61% of respondents said they are pushing their organisation to adopt generative AI more quickly than some people are comfortable with.
Of the surveyed CEOs, 63% said their teams have the skills and knowledge to incorporate generative AI, but few understand how generative AI adoption impacts their organisation's workforce and culture. More than half (56%) have not yet assessed the impact of generative AI on their employees. Yet, 51% of CEOs said 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 the technology.
Workforces Under Pressure Of Generative AI Adoption
Of the CEOs surveyed, 40% plan to hire additional staff because of generative AI. Yet, more than half (53%) are already struggling to fill key technology roles. CEOs said 35% of their workforce will require retraining and reskilling over the next three years, up from just 6% in 2021.
CEOs Face Organisational Collaboration And Adoption Challenges
Around 65% CEOs agreed their organisation's success is directly tied to the quality of collaboration between finance and technology, yet 48% said competition among C-suite executives sometimes impedes collaboration.
Of those surveyed, 57% acknowledged that cultural change is more important to becoming a data-driven organisation than overcoming technical challenges. CEOs cited generative AI adoption as being critical to success, but 64% said their organisation must take advantage of technologies that are changing faster than people can adapt.
Benefits Of Rapid Technology Adoption Outweigh Potential Risks
More than two-thirds (68%) of CEOs agreed that governance for generative AI must be established as solutions are designed, rather than after they are deployed. Although 75% said trusted AI is impossible without effective AI governance, only 39% have good generative AI governance in place.
Around half (51%) agreed that the risk of falling behind is driving them to invest in some technologies before they have a clear understanding of the value. Of the surveyed CEOs, 67% are willing to take risks because of productivity gains from automation.
Even though today 71% of CEOs are no further than generative AI piloting and experimentation, 49% expect to be driving growth and expansion by 2026.
Focus On Short-Term Targets Might Hinder Long-Term Progress
CEOs ranked product and service innovation as highest priority for the next three years, and 41% said they are willing to sacrifice operational efficiency for greater innovation. However, a majority of CEOs point to a focus on short-term performance as their top barrier to innovation.
Today, only 36% of CEOs are primarily funding their generative AI investments with net new IT spend, with the remaining 64% reducing other technology spend.