THISDAY

Accenture to Boost Nigeria’s Economy with Tech Innovation­s

- Emma Okonji

Having missed out in the previous industrial revolution­s that have continued to shape developed economies of the world, Accenture Nigeria, a leading global profession­al services company, with focus on digital technology has demonstrat­ed its new technology capabiliti­es that will help Nigeria leverage the fourth industrial revolution, which is about knowledge economy.

The company, last week at its Lagos office, showcased its latest technology capabiliti­es that will enable businesses across different sectors in the country, boost their productivi­ty and efficiency through its recent innovation­s and investment­s in Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI), Virtual Reality (VR), robotics and blockchain.

Addressing the media on its new technology initiative­s driven by AI, VR, robotics and blockchain, the Managing Director, Accenture Nigeria Mr. Niyi Tayo, said: “Early this year, we predicted that in five years, more than half of consumers and enterprise clients will select products and services based on a company’s AI, instead of the company’s traditiona­l brand. And in seven years, most interfaces will not have a screen and will be integrated into daily tasks. These two prediction­s alone strongly suggest that companies must act now on developing their AI Journey. ”We want businesses in Nigeria, from banking to manufactur­ing, health, constructi­on, education, retail, security, and other sectors to take advantage of the innovation­s we have created to improve their businesses. We believe as one of the biggest economy in Africa, the time to seize the future is now.”

Responding to the public fears that robots technology will lead to job losses, Tayo said there is clear evidence that points toward robotic automation in many cases being a complement for human labour, rather than a direct substitute. He asserted that mundane tasks were the ones being automated.

According to him, “Human effort becomes more valuable as it is focused on higher-level tasks, creativity, know-how, and thinking.”

Accenture early this year published a report, entitled the 2017 Technology Vision, which studied how artificial intelligen­ce will affect banks going forward. Over 600 of the world’s foremost bankers were surveyed and asked a series of questions about the new technology and how it will change the way banks operate internally and how they handle their customers externally.

According to the report, from among the three quarters of the bankers surveyed, four out of five, believed that AI will become the primary way banks interact with their customers.

This is in relation to customer service, and these bankers see AI technologi­es such as chatbots becoming increasing­ly essential for banks in the not-so-distant future.

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