Generative AI: The 21st-century power play
The August issue of s+b explores how GenAI is sparking a surge of innovation akin to the advent of electricity. Discover how to channel its reinvention potential.
The August issue of s+b explores how GenAI is sparking a surge of innovation akin to the advent of electricity. Discover how to channel its reinvention potential.
Over a year of Generative AI (GenAI) excitement has translated into palpable momentum, with 60% of organisations seeing GenAI as an opportunity rather than a risk, and many launching GenAI-enabled capabilities, investing in GenAI skills and pursuing ambitious strategies.
GenAI’s disruptive potential and adoption enablers will shape the pace at which companies in each industry pursue efficiency and reinvention opportunities.
Learn how CIOs can leverage generative AI to reinvent IT, enable productivity and drive business transformation.
A significant finding from PwC’s 27th Annual Global CEO Survey strengthens the hand of CTOs seeking to leverage generative AI for their business.
Businesses that prioritize generative AI use cases can maximize their value capture, speed, and efficiency.
“We are at a tipping point in business and society where AI will revolutionise how we work, live and interact at scale”
Mohamed Kande,Global Chair, PricewaterhouseCoopers International LimitedLearn more about generative AI and how it can impact business.
AI is bringing limitless potential to push us forward as a society — but with great potential comes great risks.
When you use AI to support business-critical decisions based on sensitive data, you need to be sure that you understand what AI is doing, and why. Is it making accurate, bias-aware decisions? Is it violating anyone’s privacy? Can you govern and monitor this powerful technology? Globally, organisations recognise the need for Responsible AI but are at different stages of the journey.
70% of CEOs believe generative AI will significantly change the way their company creates, delivers, and captures value in the next three years.
PwC,CEO Survey 2024As TED's Strategic AI Partner, we’re working together to lead the global conversation on AI.
AI is rapidly impacting the ways in which we interact, create, work, run our businesses and our homes. This moment needs bold leadership, thoughtful examination and fearlessness to ask hard questions. As the Strategic AI Partner at TED2024, PwC is working together with TED to ask these questions and show how AI can create real value for businesses, individuals and our wider societies.
Businesses that prioritize generative AI use cases can maximize their value capture, speed, and efficiency.
Developing a strategy to take full advantage of cloud-native app development can help better drive transformation and new business models.
In episode two of Voices in Tech, CEO Harry Keen introduces us to his synthetic data startup, Hazy, and we hear from PwC’s Marcus Hartmann on how companies can safely use their data to create value.
Read how a blockchain-based technology, tokenization, can help financial institutions drive value through operations today and unlock opportunities for tomorrow.
This article explores how businesses, who have extensively adopted cloud technologies, are leading the way in making security a priority.
In today's rapidly evolving digital landscape, it has become imperative for organisations to establish a mature cybersecurity function to tackle the evolving cyber threat landscape. Cyber attacks can have a significant impact on businesses, particularly as our world becomes more interconnected. Findings from our 27th Annual CEO Survey indicate that cyber risks are a concern for business leaders in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with 40% revealing they were moderately exposed and 20% highly exposed to it in the next 12 months.
The automotive industry is witnessing a technological and transformative revolution. Electric mobility and digitalisation have grown exponentially to gain prominence in the automotive sector in the last decade, so much so that the largest value pools by 2030 are now expected to be Software and EVs. Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology is an essential segment of digitalisation and has existed in the form of autonomous driving, predictive services, and in-car personalisation features for quite some time now.
Tech CEOs are investing to build their workforce and capitalise on new opportunities from generative AI. That’s a sharp contrast to how their peers view it.
Joe Atkinson
Global Chief AI Officer for the PwC Network of Firms, PwC US
Tel: +1 215-704-0372