- About 60 per cent of Canadian organizations that have
adopted AI, have limited to no AI strategy in place to guide
deployment, risks and expected value.
- Reducing and automating tasks is the top GenAI use case
amongst Canadian businesses, followed by drafting and editing
documents.
- Improved quality of product (54 per cent) and a decreased
time to market (52 per cent) have been cited as key return on
investment areas for early GenAI adopters.
MONTRÉAL, Nov. 14,
2024 /CNW/ - According to a new Bell study released
today, about 60 per cent of Canadian businesses that have adopted
AI have limited to no AI governance strategy in place to guide
deployment, risks and expected value. While more professionals are
leveraging AI at work, there is a growing need for Canadian
businesses to have strategic support to maximize the benefits and
manage risks.
Bell's study, "Navigating the Generative AI and Cybersecurity
Journey" brings together survey findings from 600 business
leaders, information technology and security professionals of
medium to large-scale enterprises from diverse industries. The
findings illustrate how organizations have adopted GenAI in the
workplace, and where they have found the technology most
beneficial. The report also offers a clear view of the apparent
threats AI may bring to businesses, and how organizations can
implement early safeguards to avoid pitfalls.
The 2024 study found:
- Canadian professionals have warmed up to using
GenAI. Tools like ChatGPT, have made the use of AI a
habit. Bell found 71 per cent of professionals at medium to large
enterprises are using GenAI to some degree, and 41 per cent use it
on a regular basis.
- The retail industry leads in GenAI adoption. While
some industries are still in the exploratory phase
of determining the best use cases for GenAI, retail has
leaned in, adopting the technology for production use, including
customer-facing applications and inventory management. Retail is
followed by manufacturing and infrastructure/media, together making
up the top three industries of early GenAI adopters.
- Early GenAI adopters are concerned about cybersecurity
threats. One third of Canadian organizations are concerned
that bad actors may access and tamper with their AI systems. Early
adopters also expressed concerns that bad actors may steal
sensitive data (25 per cent) or leverage their AI systems to inject
or manipulate input to bypass filters (10 per cent).
- Professionals are focused on proactively mitigating the
security, legal and reputational risks that GenAI may present
before fully adopting. About three in four professionals say
potential risks have slowed the adoption of GenAI in the workplace
fairly significantly, while other organizations have moved ahead by
implementing safeguards like classifying data; but 60 per cent of
the surveyed organizations report they have classified less than 50
per cent of their sensitive data, which will pose a challenge as AI
adoption flourishes and risks grow.
It's clear that GenAI is set to revolutionize the workplace,
optimizing nearly all business processes and functions. Adopting AI
does bring clear benefits but should be implemented using a
methodical approach to avoid risks. Organizations that prioritize
governance, a multi-dimensional approach to security risk, and
improving threat detection using AI to manage risks will see the
best outcomes. This is something that Bell's professional
governance, risk and compliance cybersecurity services have been
successful at supporting enterprise customers in achieving.
"Bell's study confirms that as adoption of generative AI
continues to increase, it is more important than ever for
organizations to have strong governance, safeguards and data
security. With this in place, the benefits of AI are
unlimited."
- John Watson, Group President,
Business Markets, AI & FX Innovation, Bell
The full report can be found
at Bell.ca/Cybersecurity.
About the survey
Bell conducted the AI security
survey with the help of Maru Research, collecting 600 responses
from business leaders, IT and security professionals working at a
company of at least 100 employees in size. The survey was fielded
between Sept. 3, 2024, to
Sept. 13, 2024, in both English and
French. The survey is a diverse representation of Canada's
organizations across the country in various industries. Respondents
were evenly split between IT/Security professionals and business
leaders.
About Bell
Bell is Canada's largest communications
company,1 providing advanced broadband Internet,
wireless, TV, media and business communication services. Founded in
Montréal in 1880, Bell is wholly owned by BCE Inc. To learn more,
please visit Bell.ca or BCE.ca.
Through Bell for Better, we are investing to create a
better today and a better tomorrow by supporting the social and
economic prosperity of our communities. This includes the Bell
Let's Talk initiative, which promotes Canadian mental health with
national awareness and anti-stigma campaigns like Bell Let's Talk
Day and significant Bell funding of community care and access,
research and workplace leadership initiatives throughout the
country. To learn more, please visit Bell.ca/LetsTalk.
1 Based on
total revenue and total combined customer connections.
|
Media inquiries:
Tianna
Goguen
media@bell.ca
Investor inquiries:
Richard
Bengian
richard.bengian@bell.ca
SOURCE Bell Canada