Under the theme Meeting of atoms and bits, the Accenture study heard the opinion of more than 300 Brazilian business leaders
The Brazil section of Technology Vision 2023, the twentieth edition of the survey on technology trends, was released today by Accenture, a management, information technology and outsourcing consultancy. Under the theme No meeting of atoms and bits, the study makes an in-depth analysis of the technological trends that will shape business, highlighting which of them tend to be applied with more or less force according to the peculiarities of our market.
The highlights raised among the more than 300 Brazilian business leaders heard in the survey are:
97% agree that the convergence of the digital and physical worlds over the next decade will transform their business;
79% agree that digital identity is becoming a strategic business imperative for their organizations;
94% agree that data transparency is becoming a competitive differentiator for their organizations;
99% think generative AI is ushering in a new era of corporate intelligence;
75% believe that emerging capabilities can help solve societal challenges such as inequality.
The study also shows that 92% of companies resist a complete technological revolution, while only 8% of them are adopting a strategy of total enterprise reivention. The study, led by Flvia Picolo, Technology leader at Accenture in Latin America, also shows that 86% of companies are concerned with transparency in business and that, according to her, 9 out of 10 business leaders that technology is now the core of good business.
Another data raised by the Brazil section of the Tecnology Vision 2023 is that still in this decade, 40% of the hours worked will be impacted by generative AI tools, such as ChatGPT. However, people will continue to run the business, AI will just be an accessory so that human beings no longer need to dedicate themselves to repetitive work. It will be increasingly present in our daily lives, but it will be just that: an accessory, human intelligence will continue to be in charge, says Flvia.