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November 19, 2024
Pressure on AI Adoption
The majority of leaders feel an increasing urgency to implement AI, with 98% reporting heightened pressure to act on AI, and 85% believing they have less than 18 months to demonstrate its impact. However, despite this urgency, companies are struggling with preparedness.
Infrastructure and Readiness Challenges
Only 21% of companies report having the necessary GPUs for current and future AI workloads, underscoring infrastructure readiness as a major barrier. Additionally, only 13% of companies are fully ready to capture AI’s potential, down from 14% last year. This decline in readiness includes challenges related to compute resources, data center network performance, and cybersecurity.
Cisco AI Readiness Index
The Cisco AI Readiness Index, announced by Cisco on November 19, 2024, assesses organizational preparedness to invest in, deploy, and use AI. Nearly 8,000 organizations participated, and the report reveals a significant gap between urgency and readiness. The Index considers six pillars: strategy, infrastructure, data, talent, governance, and culture, with companies evaluated on 49 metrics across these areas. Cisco categorized organizations into four readiness groups: Pacesetters, Chasers, Followers, and Laggards.
Key Findings
- Urgency
- Companies feel immense pressure to demonstrate AI impact within 18 months, with 85% citing this urgency and 59% giving it just 12 months.
- Strategy
- A clear AI strategy is crucial for effective deployment, with cybersecurity as the top AI deployment priority (42% achieving advanced security deployment). This is followed by infrastructure readiness (40%), and data management and analysis (both at 39%).
- Investment
- Companies continue investing in AI despite lukewarm results. Over the next five years, companies expect roughly 30% of IT budgets to go toward AI, nearly double current spending. However, nearly half of companies report that current AI projects have underperformed expectations.
- Infrastructure
- There is a major shortfall in infrastructure readiness, with only 21% of organizations equipped with sufficient GPUs and 30% able to secure AI models with end-to-end encryption and continuous monitoring.
- Data Readiness
- Readiness to manage data for AI initiatives has declined, with 32% reporting high readiness. Data pre-processing and consistency remain issues, with 80% of companies reporting shortcomings.
- Talent Shortage
- A lack of skilled AI professionals remains a key challenge. Only 31% of organizations feel their talent is ready to leverage AI fully, and 24% report a lack of in-house expertise. The market also lacks sufficient talent in AI governance, law, and ethics.
- Governance
- AI governance readiness has become more difficult, with only 31% of companies having comprehensive AI policies. A lack of skilled talent in governance, law, and ethics is a key barrier for 51% of respondents.
- Cultural Barriers
- Cultural readiness for AI has declined, with only 66% of boards highly or moderately receptive to AI, down from 82% last year. Additionally, 30% of organizations report resistance among employees to adopt AI.
Overall, Cisco’s report highlights a stark contrast between the urgency companies feel regarding AI adoption and their actual readiness to execute on it effectively. The findings emphasize the need for organizations to address infrastructure, data management, talent acquisition, and governance to bridge the gap between ambition and capability.