With artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics on the cusp of revolutionising global business, the defence industry could be at risk of falling behind if vendors cannot adapt at pace, according to a recent deep-dive study by Defence IQ.
The report, to be published in October, examines the role intelligent enterprise (IE) technologies β including AI, the internet of things (IoT, robotic process automation, machine learning and data analysis β within the future defence industry, looking at which providers are investing, which areas are not β and considering where opportunities might lie.
Almost half of the defence professionals surveyed said they expected the impact of intelligent technological innovation to significantly affect the wider defence industry over the next two years β however the majority of those surveyed anticipated major hurdles to implementation β with internal culture within the defence industry found to be a particularly debilitating factor.
Almost half of defence professionals surveyed said they expected the impact of intelligent technological innovation to significantly affect the wider defence industry over the next two years
Other concerns include organisationsβ struggles to keep up with the rapid pace of technological change and the inherent challenges involved in upgrading legacy systems.
The full report entitled βAI 2020: the future of defence and securityβ is being produced in association with AIIA.net, a new portal designed to help companies build the intelligent enterprise.
The report is part of IQPCβs cross-sector market study on the adoption of IE technologies, which includes deep-dive analysis of the oil and gas, pharmaceutical and customer experience sectors.
