Growing adoption of AI has to be balanced by improvements in tech governance to boost AI trust and address cyber liabilities.
In a global April 2022 survey of 700 senior IT leaders around the world with direct involvement in their organizationâs AI and/or ML plans or deployments, enterprises polled had largely moved past proof-of-concepts and limited trials, and were already implementing such tech across their organizations in the last 12 months.
However, the respondents indicated that a shortage of human talent and âimmatureâ governance policies continued to impede AI growth amid cybersecurity, data privacy and compliance issues.
In the Asia Pacific region (APAC), 92% of respondents indicated that their organization was already utilizing AIâcompared to 42% in the previous year, with 52% agreeing to prompts that the tech adoption will âassist in reducing risk and increasing qualityâ at work.
Report findings
The survey data showed 23% of APAC respondents indicated a heavy reliance on AI to perform tasks, which may indicate a possible lack of trust in the technology. Also, among global IT leaders surveyed, 95% agreed to prompts that âeffective policies are crucial to stay ahead of future legislationâ, and 61% of APAC respondents believed more needed to be done to effectively govern AI as its use grows.
Other findings:
- 51% of respondents reported their organizations were at a more advanced growing stage of AI governance maturity, higher than reported in EMEA and North American counterparts.
- 54% of IT leaders in APAC surveyed indicated that they felt AI will allow employees to focus on being more innovative, while 50% chose âincrease their engagementâ and 48% chose âgain new skillsâ.
- They indicated the top risks from inadequate oversight of AI as âaccelerated hacking or AI terrorismâ (44%); privacy (41%); regulation compliance (24%) and loss of human agency (27%).
- To keep up with AI growth, the leaders were providing the tools and opportunities to apply newly acquired AI skills (38%), updating performance metrics to include AI (45%), developing a workforce plan that identifies new skills and roles (40%), and changing learning and development frameworks (50%).
- 96% of IT leaders in APAC surveyed indicated that in the next 12 months, AI will assist in reducing risk and increasing quality within their organization, with Networking/Cloud (23%), IT Infrastructure (25%) and Supply Chain (13%) as the business functions thought to have the greatest potential to derive benefits from implementing AI.
According to Ming Kai Lee, Head of Systems Engineering (APAC), Juniper Networks, which commissioned the survey, while the technology has essentially been rolled out and adopted at healthy implementation rates, âthe critical next step is to manage organizationsâ readiness to use AI responsibly by implementing essential governance protocols that not only protect enterprises, but also augments employeesâ trust in the solution. It must be a cyclical process of execution with governance and policies updated regularly to address and reduce liabilities.â In benefiting from AI, enterprises need to prioritize managing the technologyâs usage growth with proper governance to stay ahead of regulation and minimize potential negative impacts.