How artificial
intelligence can deliver real value to companies
Companies
new to the space can learn a great deal from early adopters who have invested
billions into AI and are now beginning to reap a range of benefits.
After decades of extravagant promises and
frustrating disappointments, artificial
intelligence (AI) is finally starting to deliver real-life
benefits to early-adopting companies. Retailers on the digital frontier rely on
AI-powered robots to run their warehouses—and even to automatically order stock
when inventory runs low. Utilities use AI to forecast electricity demand.
Automakers harness the technology in self-driving
cars.
A confluence of developments is driving this new wave of
AI development. Computer power is growing, algorithms and AI models are
becoming more sophisticated, and, perhaps most important of all, the world is
generating once-unimaginable volumes of the fuel that powers AI—data.
Billions of gigabytes every day, collected by networked devices ranging from
web browsers to turbine sensors.
The entrepreneurial activity unleashed by these
developments drew three times as much investment in 2016—between $26 billion
and $39 billion—as it did three years earlier. Most of the investment in AI
consists of internal R&D spending by large, cash-rich digital-native
companies like Amazon, Baidu, and Google.
For all of that investment, much of the AI adoption
outside of the tech sector is at an early, experimental stage. Few firms have
deployed it at scale. In a McKinsey Global Institute discussion paper, Artificial
intelligence: The next digital frontier?, which includes a survey of more than
3,000 AI-aware companies around the world, we find early AI adopters tend to be
closer to the digital frontier, are among the larger firms within sectors,
deploy AI across the technology groups, use AI in the most core part of the
value chain, adopt AI to increase revenue as well as reduce costs, and have
the full support of
the executive leadership. Companies that have not yet adopted
AI technology at scale or in a core part of their business are unsure of a
business case for AI or of the returns they can expect on an AI investment.
However, early evidence suggests that there is a
business case to be made, and that AI can deliver real value to companies
willing to use it across operations and within their core functions. In our
survey, early AI adopters that combine strong digital capability with proactive
strategies have higher profit margins and expect the performance gap with other
firms to widen in the next three years.
This adoption pattern is widening a gap between
digitized early adopters and others. Sectors at the top of MGI’s Industry
Digitization Index, such as high tech and telecoms or financial services, are
also leading AI adopters and have the most ambitious AI investment plans. These
leaders use multiple technologies across multiple functions or deploy AI at the
core of their business. Automakers, for example, use AI to improve their
operations as well as develop self-driving vehicles, while financial-services
companies use it in customer-experience functions. As these firms expand AI
adoption and acquire more data, laggards will find it harder to catch up.
Governments also must get ahead of this change, by
adopting regulations to encourage fairness without inhibiting innovation and
proactively identifying the jobs that are most likely to be automated and
ensuring that retraining programs are available to people whose livelihoods are
at risk from AI-powered automation. These individuals need to acquire skills
that work with, not compete against, machines.
The future of AI will be innovative, but may not be
shared equally. Companies based in the United States absorbed 66 percent of all
external investments into AI companies in 2016, according to our global
review; China was
second, at 17 percent, and is growing fast. Both countries have grown AI
“ecosystems”—clusters of entrepreneurs, financiers, and AI users—and have
issued national strategic plans in the past 18 months with significant AI
dimensions, in some cases backed up by billions of dollars of AI-funding
initiatives. South Korea and the United Kingdom have issued similar strategic
plans. Other countries that desire to become significant players in AI would be
wise to emulate these leaders.
Significant gains are there for the taking. For many
companies, this means accelerating the digital-transformation journey. AI is
not going to allow companies to leapfrog getting the digital basics right. They
will have to get the right digital assets and skills in place to be able to
effectively deploy AI.
By
Jacques Bughin, Eric Hazan, Sree Ramaswamy, Michael Chui, Tera Allas, Peter
Dahlström, Nicolaus Henke, and Monica Trench
http://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/mckinsey-analytics/our-insights/how-artificial-intelligence-can-deliver-real-value-to-companies?cid=other-eml-alt-mgi-mgi-oth-1706&hlkid=0223fce6a8d043d289fb716aa793d663&hctky=1627601&hdpid=f7de7152-7ef5-479a-94a6-cc3b47442a58
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