CLOUD COMPUTING
turnover and serve as major training grounds for the workforce. The primary barrier to faster adoption appears to be talent-related.
“ This has been, I think, the second or third report we’ ve seen over the last two to three years – and the biggest issue by far is digital skills, from the executive all the way down to the shop floor,” says Phil.“ 38 % of businesses are saying what’ s holding them back is the ability to find the right people to bring into their organisation.”
This skills challenge is expected to intensify as AI literacy becomes a baseline requirement for employment.“ We expect AI literacy to be a basic requirement for half the jobs in the next three years. And yet, it’ s just over a quarter of businesses that feel prepared for that.
“ Everyone’ s after the same skills. This is no longer constrained to IT – this isn’ t a case of IT hiring folks with AI skills; it’ s really a case of how do we broaden the knowledge of technology across organisations, from the CEO down through every function.” WATCH NOW
AWS: The Need to Tackle the Enterprise AI Imagination Gap, ft. Phil Le-Brun
Cloud adoption and AWS AI implementation remain in early stages Despite the attention AI receives, enterprise cloud adoption remains at relatively early stages, suggesting substantial growth potential in both cloud and AI implementation.“ About 15 % of workloads that could be in the cloud today are in the cloud. So, we’ re still in the early days,” Phil observes.
technologymagazine. com 45