Organisations bullish on AI adoption

Research by Fivetran and Vanson Bourne highlights the importance of data quality and addressing the AI skills gap.

Fivetran has published the results of a survey which shows 81 percent of organisations trust their AI/ML outputs despite admitting to fundamental data inefficiencies. Organisations lose on average six percent of their global annual revenues, or $406 million, based on respondents from organisations with an average global annual revenue of $5.6 billion (USD). This is due to underperforming AI models, which are built using inaccurate or low-quality data, resulting in misinformed business decisions.

Conducted by independent market research specialist Vanson Bourne, the online survey polled 550 respondents across the US, UK, Ireland, France and Germany from organisations with 500 or more employees. It found that nearly nine in 10 organisations are using AI/ML methodologies to build models for autonomous decision-making, and 97 percent are investing in generative AI in the next one to two years. At the same time, organisations express challenges of data inaccuracies and hallucinations, and concerns around data governance and security. Organisations leveraging large language models (LLMs) report data inaccuracies and hallucinations 42 percent of the time.

“The rapid uptake of generative AI reflects widespread optimism and confidence within organisations, but under the surface, basic data issues are still prevalent, which are holding organisations back from realising their full potential,” said Taylor Brown, co-founder and COO at Fivetran. “Organisations need to strengthen their data integration and governance foundations to create more reliable AI outputs and mitigate financial risk.”

Different “AI realities” exist across various job roles

Approximately one in four (24 percent) organisations reported that they have reached an advanced stage of AI adoption, where they utilise AI to its full advantage with little to no human intervention. However, there are significant disagreements between respondents who work more closely with the data and those more removed from its technical detail.

Technical executives – who build and operate AI models – are less convinced of their organisations’ AI maturity, with only 22 percent describing it as “advanced,” compared to 30 percent of non-technical workers. When it comes to generative AI, non-technical workers’ high level of confidence is coupled with more trust, too, with 63 percent fully trusting it, compared to 42 percent of technical executives.

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