Published
11 months agoon
New Salesforce research shows 85% of IT leaders expect AI to increase developer productivity at their organisations over the next three years — a welcome relief as they simultaneously report a 39% increase in IT requests in the last year alone.
However, 62% also say their organisation isn’t yet equipped to harmonise data systems to fully leverage AI, which is impeding the transition and further heightening the strain on their teams.
Adding to these concerns, 98% of IT organisations today report experiencing at least some degree of challenge with their digital transformation efforts, with 80% citing data silos as a concern and 72% grappling with systems that are overly dependent on one another.
Elsewhere, MuleSoft’s annual Connectivity Benchmark Report surveyed 1,050 chief information officers (CIOs) and IT decision makers around the world to understand these challenges and how organisations can use integration, automation, and APIs to build successful AI strategies.
Successful AI strategies rely heavily on strong data integration strategies in order to reap the benefits of improving operational efficiency, productivity, and employee and customer experiences.
Breaking down data silos can unlock AI’s full potential and provide a seamless user experience.
Data silos are significant barriers to progress and business value, with 81% of respondents reporting that silos are hindering digital transformation efforts.
As a result, there’s a greater need for better integration to unify all structured and unstructured business data to power and deploy trusted, relevant AI across all business functions.
Automation is essential as business users seek self-sufficiency, yet overburdened IT teams largely hold the keys.
IT teams are often responsible for automation adoption, but remain cautious to allow business stakeholders to self-serve — only 22% of IT leaders report that their strategy to help non-technical business users integrate apps and data sources via APIs is up to date. Simultaneously, a skills gap within IT teams poses a hurdle. Closing this gap through strategic collaboration and upskilling is essential for organisations to best use automation for both innovation and efficiency.