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Where and How is AI Actually Being Adopted

Summary:  Adoption of AI/ML by larger companies has more than doubled since last year according to these survey results from McKinsey and Stanford’s Human-Centered AI Institute.  This new data gives us a much better idea of which global regions and which industries are adopting which AI/ML techniques.

1201667086We know we’ve entered the era of exploitation of AI/ML but the $64 Billion question is how far along the curve are we and who exactly has implemented and will implement?  By the way, $64 Billion is a reasonable estimate of global market spend in roughly four or five years, about 6 times where we are today.  And that investment should yield about $4 Trillion in business value in that same time frame according to Gartner.

Still, trying to point a finger at any particular company and determine to what extent they’re using AI/ML, what types they’re using, and in what functions remains pretty much a crap shoot. 

The best data we’ve seen so far shows that between 1/5th and 1/3rd of larger companies are implementing AI/ML ‘at scale’, meaning they’re putting on a full court press to use this as a competitive differentiator.  Does that mean that roughly 75% of companies are getting left behind?  And what about mid-size companies?

Now we have some new data sources that are both a little more current (surveys in 2018) and a little more granular.  For this we have to thank the good folks at McKinsey for their AI Adoption Survey, and the folks at Stanford’s Human-Centered AI Institute who for the last few years have been publishing the encyclopedic ‘AI Index’.  The 2018 AI Index brings together stats from a huge variety of sources including this McKinsey study to let us see the progress of AI along its many axes.

The Top Line

  • 47% say their companies have embedded at least one AI capability in their business processes. That’s up from 20% in the 2017 study giving some evidence that the expected 6X growth over the next four or five years is attainable.
  • Another 30% said they were piloting AI.
  • But only 21% said AI was embedded in several parts of their business indicating a piece meal approach to adoption instead of a coherent AI strategy.
  • 58% said that less than 10% of their companies’ overall spend on digital technologies was going to AI but 71% indicated that those expenditure will grow.

What AI/ML Applications are Being Used in What Processes?

The following charts are drawn from both reports but are all based on the McKinsey survey data from February 2018 and represents the responses of 2,135 participants globally.  In each chart the values in bars are the percentage of respondents who indicated they utilize the particular technique in at least one area of their business.  The underlying data also indicates where each technique is being used more widely if you want to drill down.

Techniques Adopted by Region

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Data for other regions appears in the source reports with surprising similarity in adoption rates and techniques.

What Business Processes Are Seeing the Biggest Impacts?

As expected at this stage of adoption, projects appear to be selected based on their expected business value, and that value varies significantly by industry.

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There are other fairly obvious correlations in the data.  For example,

  • Autonomous vehicle AI is of greatest importance in the automotive industry.
  • Physical robotics is most important in manufacturing.
  • Techniques enhancing risk mitigation are most important in financial services.

Factors Holding Back Adoption

Three of the top four reasons holding back adoption are all related to leadership and the lack of an AI strategy.  Again this shows that this stage of adoption seems to be driven by targets of opportunity rather than a well-planned organizational commitment. 

The second of four reasons is familiar to all of us, the difficulty in hiring or developing the talent necessary to drive these projects.

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How Much Can We Rely on this Data?

McKinsey and the folks at Stanford’s Human-Centered AI Institute are top notch thought leaders in trying to quantify adoption.  Still, before relying on these seemingly precise values in your decision making, it’s best to remember the potential pitfalls in all types of surveying.

  • The 2,135 respondents represent only about 10% of the 20,466 people invited to respond. This introduces a significant ‘self-selection’ bias as those most open to or experienced with AI are most likely to have responded.
  • Those invited were all registered users of McKinsey.com. Once again, those using this excellent resource are self-identifying as being receptive to new techniques like AI.  Also, while the size of the respondent’s companies is not part of the analysis it seems likely that these folks are from larger companies.
  • Finally, especially in larger companies, the ability of any one person to know the full scope of adoption of AI in all aspects in the organization is limited to that individual’s knowledge. Respondents included executives who might be expected to have broad knowledge, but also managers and individual performers whose knowledge may not be so broad.

The study unfortunately doesn’t show how many different techniques are being used in a single company.  For example, if a large company uses a chatbot somewhere in their business are we really going to give them credit for AI adoption?  This probably isn’t the case but the study doesn’t resolve the question.

I’m always on the lookout for any competent quantitative measures of adoption.  Across large and medium size organizations that are the most likely adopters I suspect these survey results come in on the high end of reality but any insight is valuable.

Other articles by Bill Vorhies

About the author:  Bill is Contributing Editor for Data Science Central.  Bill is also President & Chief Data Scientist at Data-Magnum and has practiced as a data scientist since 2001.  His articles have been read more than 2 million times.

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