According to a survey conducted by HLB International, a global network of independent advisory and accounting firms, AI was identified as the leading technology crucial for business success.
The HLB Survey of Business Leaders 2024, released in January 2024, highlights the significance of emerging technologies in fostering innovation, creativity, and productivity for long-term growth and prosperity. A snapshot of key findings is available here.
In the five years since the inception of the HLB Survey of Business Leaders, organisations have faced numerous unprecedented events. While inflation, geopolitical risks, and economic uncertainty remain top concerns for the business environment, there is a distinct change in attitude among business leaders. They now express high confidence in their ability to boost revenue in the next twelve months, driven by improved agility and the adoption of new technologies nearly doubling over the five-year survey period.
Marco Donzelli, Global CEO HLB said: “Recent years have brought a slew of challenges for businesses. The resilience and adaptability shown in these times have been nothing short of remarkable and testament to the enduring spirit of leadership that adapts, innovates, and thrives even in the face of adversity. Technology is advancing rapidly, shaping the future of business through innovative adoption and progress. The accelerated embrace of new working models, mobile, and cloud-enabled, marks a departure from the norms of the past decade. Undoubtedly, AI will play a pivotal role in the future of business, and I look forward to what lies ahead.”
From almost 1,000 global responses, HLB examined barriers, use cases, and AI maturity across various stages in the AI adoption journey. As a result, leaders have been segmented into three categories: the Innovators, the Explorers and the Conservatives.
The Innovators - harnessing the competitive edge: 44% of survey respondents are already using or eager to implement AI to gain a competitive edge. However, Innovators face a critical task of translating innovation to business impact. Compared with all respondents, Innovators are more concerned over present-day risks yet are still motivated to move forward, with 49% very confident in their ability to grow revenues this year.
The Explorers - seeking a business case: The Explorers are willing to try AI technologies if a convincing use case comes up, but do not see adoption as an immediate priority. Only 10% strongly believe that emerging technologies will be key to driving innovation, creativity and productivity for their business. Compared with Innovators, Explorers are more likely to think that the global growth levels will stay the same (39% vs 25% of Innovators).
The Conservatives - AI not yet a priority: Although AI is a strong growth momentum, not all companies have jumped on board. Perhaps more sceptical in general, only 30% of this group are very confident about their ability to grow revenues over the next 12 months. Conservatives prioritise other growth strategies over AI. Only 37% think that emerging technologies (including AI) are key to driving innovation, creativity, and productivity for the business vs 91% of Innovators.