Enterprise leaders recognize generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) as a transformative force capable of reshaping industries. However, bridging the gap between this promise and organizational readiness is imperative.
In a roundtable co-hosted by Genpact, HFS convened executive leaders from diverse industries, including finance, insurance, pharmaceuticals, advertising, and more. Participants represented companies like Chubb, Dentsu, Estée Lauder, JPMorgan, Prudential Financial, Pfizer, and Tinuiti.
The conversation revolved around how leaders evaluate opportunities to implement GenAI effectively and harness its full potential.
The following highlights key insights from the discussion, offering actionable points to advance with GenAI.
Across our roundtable delegates, there is a clear recognition of the transformative potential of GenAI. Eighty percent of participants express genuine excitement about the profound impact GenAI could have on their organizations, and less than 7% feel anxious (see Exhibit 1). This collective optimism stems from the belief in the technology’s potential to enhance human abilities and transform every function, from financial risk management to drug development and beyond.
Sample: 15 Delegates
Source: HFS Research, 2024
Amidst this optimism, there was also a sobering realization of the gap between the potential of GenAI and the current state of organizational readiness. One delegate noted, “While the vision of the generative enterprise represents what’s possible, our current reality lags by five to 10 years. In achieving and deploying this vision, most companies are still in the experimental stages with RPA [robotic process automation].”
In fact, many executives see themselves in Stage 1 of GenAI maturity in HFS’ maturity model (see Exhibit 2).
“We are stuck in the early phases of maturity, and we aren’t getting to that fully integrated piece yet. It feels like we are squeezing lemons and are yet to move to the right-hand side of the diagram where you get new value,” noted one delegate.
In a survey we ran with attendees before the roundtable, we found that most organizations are still in the early stages of deploying GenAI. Specifically, a third of respondents are in the pilot stages, and 50% have deployed the technology across one business function. Only 17% have deployed GenAI across multiple business functions (see Exhibit 3).
Sample: 14 Delegates
Source: HFS Research, 2024
As enterprises begin their GenAI adoption journeys, they’ve taken a pragmatic approach by prioritizing productivity use cases. As the delegates highlighted, these use cases encompass enhancing productivity in technology teams, optimizing marketing strategies, improving financial management, facilitating risk assessments and legal support, and efficiently handling customer queries through chatbots.
This prioritization of internal improvement and productivity serves four essential purposes:
As organizations delve deeper into the GenAI landscape, they recognize that the technology’s highest-value use cases often exist in areas beyond productivity. These use cases involve improving the employee experience, enhancing customer satisfaction, contributing to societal impact, or even enabling the creation of entirely new business models.
Transitioning beyond productivity and moving up the GenAI maturity ladder requires a thoughtful approach to digital innovation. Our delegates highlighted some of the most common challenges and shared strategies to tackle those obstacles.
Leaders are undoubtedly excited about the limitless possibilities with GenAI. But first, they must bridge the readiness gap to capture its full value. This vision will empower organizations to handle adoption complexities more effectively while addressing challenges such as data quality, aligning use cases with business needs, regulatory compliance, and employee upskilling.
Ultimately, while productivity gains are important, acknowledging the broader impact of GenAI across the organization is essential.
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