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HomeNewsEnterprise ITIntel says, 70% Indian firms spend will increase on AI in 2018-19

Intel says, 70% Indian firms spend will increase on AI in 2018-19

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As many as 70% Indian organisation are expected to deploy artificial intelligence (AI) solutions before 2020, said a report from chip giant Intel

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As many as 70% Indian organisation are expected to deploy () solutions before 2020, said a report from chip giant . In a statement company said that it has commissioned a report with International Data Corporation () which surveyed 194 Indian organisations across sectors. The report indicate that there is an increasing appetite towards the adoption of AI, which in turn is expected to spike organisation spends on this technology, over the next 18 months in India.

Nearly 75% of the firms surveyed, anticipate benefits in business process efficiency and employee productivity with the use of AI, and 64% of the respondents believe that this technology can empower them in revenue augmentation through better targeting of offers and improved sales processes. While these present some great incentives for AI in India, the other side of the coin shows that 76% of the companies are or believe that they will face a shortage of skilled personnel to harness the power of AI.

“We all talk about the opportunity that India presents for AI, but often the types of industries that will embrace AI, the challenges that AI can address, and the roadblocks in implementation, are vague. This research is a small step towards comprehending this knowledge, and enabling companies such as ours, shape strategy and move ahead in the right direction,” said Prakash Mallya, Managing Director, Sales & Marketing Group, Intel India.

Intel claimed that it currently powers 97 percent of data centre servers running AI workloads worldwide, and has been strategically investing in the development of the ecosystem in India to propel ideation and innovative application of AI. Intel's approach to AI ensures that the solutions securely and seamlessly address the day-to-day needs of individuals and organisation across the board.

“Intel already has both hardware and software platforms for building AI applications. When you combine that with the efforts we are making towards democratising AI through developer education and deep industry collaborations, there is a huge opportunity for us to lead the next generation of computing transformations in India. The combination of our customised silicon offerings plus optimised software frameworks can unleash the next wave of AI development in everything from smart factories, sports and autonomous cars to name a few,” said Prakash.

Indian enterprises have been quick to adopt AI in the recent past, with nearly 1 in 5 organizations (22.2%) across the four verticals surveyed implementing the technology in some way. This number is anticipated to soar considerably by mid-2019 with nearly 7 in 10 firms (68.6%) anticipated to deploy

The most prominent function that is currently being impacted by AI in organisations, is information technology. As a part of the drive to boost efficiencies and reduce costs, already half of the larger companies, particularly in Telecommunications, Media, and Technology (TMT), and Banking, Financial Services & Insurance (BFSI), have implemented AI. 71% organisations are looking at increased process automation as a key benefit and almost equal number of firms (69%) are looking at increased employee productivity across several business functions.

Retail, and to some extent BFSI organisations, are leveraging AI to increase efficiency in their sales & marketing function, which has emerged as the second most popular use case. Businesses, particularly in retail (including e-commerce), and telecommunications are exploring mechanisms to boost their revenue by using AI for better targeting of offers and improved sales processes. Transforming customer experience to improve their loyalty ranks high on the list of benefits for retail and banking organizations. Banks have led the innovation journey as far as transformation of customer experience is concerned.

Financial services organisations (63.9%) are more focused on improving regulatory compliance and fraud reduction from AI implementation, while retail and automotive organizations are looking at improving consistency in the way decisions are made.

However, concerns around adoption of AI continue with high cost of solutions, acute shortage of skilled professionals, unclear return on investment, and cybersecurity emerging as the key hindrances. Regulatory compliance and lack of quality data are seen as other important challenges.

“As roadblocks in adoption and implementation of AI, and fears around AI subside, we can expect a new set of opportunities that India can gain from – ranging from higher business efficiency and revenue augmentation, to improved data insights and better customer experiences. Put together, these developments will propel evolution of the larger AI ecosystem and its applications in our lives. The government is driving the AI agenda as well – from a policy group set up for AI by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, to the Karnataka government's recent announcement of a data science and AI Centre of Excellence, said Prakash.

“AI has widespread implications for the Indian organizations and promises real benefits for the companies that have been quick to adopt the solution. Business leaders should have a clearly defined roadmap to realize the potential that Cognitive/AI technology can bring to the enterprise,” said Sandeep Sharma, Research Manager, Software and IT Services, IDC India.

Intel has aligned its AI strategy for India with the government's campaign and is invested in making AI accessible and relevant to all communities. To achieve this, Intel India has established deep industry collaborations on the lines of existing partnerships with Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Wipro, Julia Computing and Calligo Technologies, while also acquiring companies that can accelerate its AI solution development capabilities.

Intel India has been working on reducing entry barriers for developers, data scientists and students in India through Intel AI Academy Program that covers training on Intel's distribution of Python (leading AI programming language), tools, libraries, frameworks and platforms for AI. This program is targeted at educating 15,000 scientists, developers, analysts, and engineers on key AI technologies, including Deep Learning and Machine Learning; the Intel AI Academy also extends its reach to the AI community by a selection of the best analytics tools and additional resources that would enable the scientists and developers to shape lives in countless ways and accelerate the community's advancements.

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Sanjay Singh
Sanjay Singh
Sanjay Singh covers startups, consumer electronics and telecom for TechObserver.in
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