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Pegasystems Inc

A lack of accountability within the private sector will lead to governments taking over responsibility for AI regulation over the next five years, according to new research by Pegasystems Inc. (NASDAQ: PEGA), the software company that crushes business complexity. The global study, conducted by research firm iResearch, surveyed 1350 C-level executives across seven different industries in 12 countries to examine how growing technology trends such as artificial intelligence (AI) governance, hyper-automation, extended reality (XR), extended edge, and distributed cloud will evolve over the next five years.

The research identified a growing need for business leaders to take stronger accountability for the governance, integration, innovation, and adoption of emerging technologies so they can better enact change within their organizations. Key findings from the study included:

  • The public sector is poised to fill the AI governance gap: Three quarters (65 per cent) of respondents feel the current level of external AI governance isn’t sufficient to manage its explosive growth. However, over a quarter (27 per cent) report they have no designated AI governance leader and only 25 per cent are managing a formal policy at the C-suite level.  So who will fill the AI governance leadership void – the public or private sector? Though the vast majority (78 per cent) of respondents prefer full or equally shared responsibility for regulation, the numbers flip when asked about expectations for five years out, when 75 per cent expect the government will be largely or fully responsible for governance, which is clearly far from what respondents feel is the most appropriate balance. Whatever the future actually brings,  the stakes are high: more than half (53 per cent) are concerned that external and/or government regulation will stifle their innovation.

  • Successful integration will be key to the dawn of the age of hyper-automation: More than half (52 per cent) of respondents say the pandemic has forced them to identify more opportunities to infuse automation into their businesses. This is particularly true in areas like workflow and case management – typical areas where companies focus their efforts to reduce costs and increase efficiencies in difficult times.


However, the study suggests that this shift to hyper-automation is more than just a short-term measure borne out of necessity; today, only 32 per cent see hyper-automation helping their business improve workflow and case management, but this number almost doubles to 61 per cent when asked to look five years ahead. Meanwhile, in supply and distribution chains, only 26 per cent see a current hyper-automation impact – a figure that stretches to 64 per cent when respondents were asked to estimate its impact in five years’ time.

Also Read: Pega Introduces First RPA Auto-balancing Feature for Hands-Free Bot Workload Management

For hyper-automation to become a reality, concerns around integration must be addressed. 58 per cent of respondents cite integration with existing legacy systems as the biggest automation challenge, while 40 per cent point to compatibility with third-party technologies as their biggest concern.

  • Extended Reality (XR) will add new dimensions to customer experiences… eventually: Though XR is one of the biggest emerging technology trends for consumers, just 35 per cent of business leaders said XR is currently changing the way the industry is providing a customer experience. However, the picture could look very different in five years, when 30 per cent of respondents say XR will become essential to customer engagement and over half (52 per cent) believe XR will eventually become a competitive differentiator.

  • Distributed cloud and the extended edge will maximize application effectiveness – provided the technology infrastructure matures around it: 73 per cent of respondents said remote and mobile work trends have made cloud deployments a high priority, while more than half (51 per cent) said mobile and remote functionality will continue to be one of several drivers for extended edge technology adoption. But to achieve their full potential, the cloud and extended edge will need some help: 41 per cent of respondents say maturation of AI, automation, and machine learning are necessary to achieve deeper success. Today, only 22 per cent rated their distributed cloud technology as ‘intelligent’ or ‘mature’, while 18 per cent of respondents said the same of extended edge technology, demonstrating the extent of the challenge ahead.

“If you want a real competitive advantage, you have to take an active, deliberate approach to adopt new digital technology now,” said Don Schuerman, CTO & vice president, product strategy & market, Pegasystems. “Technology keeps advancing and is not going to slow down for organizations to catch up. Business leaders who are willing to embrace emerging technologies including AI, XR, extended edge, hyper-automation and distributed cloud will be the most likely to come out on top over the next five years.”

Also Read: Pega introduces Value Finder for better engagement of neglected customers

 

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