The Malta Business Weekly

Mazars publishes Tech Train study revealing global technologi­cal familiarit­y, investment and implementa­tion levels

● China and India dominate across the board, France and the UK lag behind ● Artificial Intelligen­ce is the technology most leaders feel familiar with ● India has greatest appetite to increase technologi­cal investment

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Mazars, the internatio­nal audit and advisory firm, has announced the release of its new report Are you missing the Tech Train? Global investment and implementa­tion surroundin­g transforma­tive technologi­es. More than 600 Csuite executives based in six countries (China, France, Germany, India, the UK and the US) and working in different industries, sectors and organisati­on sizes share insight on these gamechangi­ng technologi­es, their investment appetites, the barriers they face to technologi­cal implementa­tion and how to overcome them.

China and India lead, France and the UK Lag

Familiarit­y: Leaders in China

are the most familiar with these five key technologi­es (79%), followed by Germany (71%), India (69%), the US (64%). France and the UK come bottom (53%, 44%.) AI is the technology most respondent­s feel familiar with.

Investment:

Respondent­s in India have the greatest appetite for increasing the budgets they dedicate to these five technologi­es. France and the UK respondent­s are most reluctant to increase their budgets (as below.)

Implementa­tion:

China and India are the most likely to have implemente­d at least one of the technologi­es and share the highest adoption rates for all five technologi­es. France and UK are the least likely to have implemente­d any of the technologi­es.

Sector splits

Insurance and manufactur­ing are the top sectors where the five technologi­es have already been implemente­d. Leaders in the public sector were least likely to have implemente­d any of the five – 50% of respondent­s working in the public sector said “nothing is happening” with the five technologi­es.

Benefits and barriers

Cost savings (27%), business model transforma­tion (26%) and improvemen­ts in quality (24%) are the top three expected benefits of the five technologi­es.

The most cited barriers globally to implementi­ng technologi­es are: obtaining necessary financial resources (25%), finding talent and skills that can fully grasp and exploit the technology (23%) and market maturity (22%) – whether it’s the right time for an organisati­on to adopt the technology or not.

Guillaume Devaux, Partner, head of Technology Sector at Mazars, comments: “Our findings show strong forward momentum in regard to these five game-changing technologi­es – with China and India leading the pack. Overall, familiarit­y levels are high, leaders see the impact these technologi­es can have, and they have plans to increase investment. But there are areas of concern and certain sectors and countries pale in comparison with others.”

Devaux adds: “Leaders who think they’re falling behind need to discover which technology will create significan­t competitiv­e advantage for their organisati­on. They should remember that successful tech transforma­tion journeys require broad backing – from a company’s leadership and the team at large. Leaders may set the vision, but they must work with others to realise it.”

 ??  ?? Exhibit 1: Familiarit­y levels of the five technologi­es – AI, Blockchain, ERP, IoT, RPA – by country
Exhibit 1: Familiarit­y levels of the five technologi­es – AI, Blockchain, ERP, IoT, RPA – by country
 ??  ?? Exhibit 2: Percentage of respondent­s who plan on increasing the share of the IT budgets in all five technologi­es by 10% or more
Exhibit 2: Percentage of respondent­s who plan on increasing the share of the IT budgets in all five technologi­es by 10% or more
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