Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Deloitte Study Says Few Canadian Businesses Ready For Next Wave Of Tech Change

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Apr, 2015 10:42 AM
    TORONTO — A new study by Deloitte has found that most Canadian companies aren't prepared for how quickly they'll be affected by major advances in technology such as robotics and artificial intelligence.
     
    The Canadian arm of the international consulting firm says only 13 per cent of the 700 companies in its study scored well, while 87 per cent were partially or completely unprepared for the magnitude and speed of change ahead.
     
    In fact more than one-third — 35 per cent — scored poorly on all four of the key criteria that Deloitte used to measure preparedness: awareness, innovation, agility and the ability to channel resources.
     
    The study's findings are consistent with other Deloitte research on Canadian productivity, said Terry Stuart, a co-author of the 42-page report released Tuesday.
     
    "Canadian companies are generally risk-adverse," Stuart said in an interview ahead of the study's publication. 
     
    "They're not investing as much as they need to in the technologies and capabilities and we're seeing that applied directly in these technology areas that we studied."
     
    The study was especially interested in how Canadian companies were responding to five types of technology with the potential to cause widespread disruption to what has become the usual manner of doing business: robotics, artificial intelligence, communications networks, manufacturing tools such as 3D printers and platforms for collaboration. 
     
    Although many of these technologies have been around for decades, they had been advancing at a relatively slow pace — which Deloitte expects will surge exponentially in the very near term.
     
    "Disruption is not going to happen in some distant future. It is happening now," the study concludes.
     
    Stuart, who is Deloitte Canada's chief innovation officer, said the majority of companies in the study weren't spending enough time thinking about the new technologies, understanding them and preparing for the implications.
     
    "There was no difference between industry segments or size of company. That was a little bit surprising to us," Stuart said.
     
    But the study did find 74 per cent of the most prepared companies had experienced revenue growth over a five-year period, much higher that among unprepared companies.
     
    The most prepared companies were also spending more on research and development over sustained periods and were more internationally focused.
     
    Stuart said the underlying causes for the Canadian caution are complex and there is a role to be played by the academic and government sectors, although the main audience for the study is business leaders.
     
    "You have to look at a variety of factors. They way that our culture has grown up, how we're educated and trained, et cetera.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Woman Who Ordered Pitbulls To Attack Friend Sentenced To 4 Years In Jail

    Alberta Woman Who Ordered Pitbulls To Attack Friend Sentenced To 4 Years In Jail
    CALGARY — A central Alberta woman who ordered her pitbulls to attack her friend during an argument has been sentenced to four years in prison.

    Alberta Woman Who Ordered Pitbulls To Attack Friend Sentenced To 4 Years In Jail

    RCMP Charge Alberta Teenager With Attempting To Travel For Terrorism

    RCMP Charge Alberta Teenager With Attempting To Travel For Terrorism
    EDMONTON — RCMP say a teen has been arrested in Alberta and charged with terror-related offences. The young person was taken into custody Thursday in Beaumont, a bedroom community south of Edmonton.

    RCMP Charge Alberta Teenager With Attempting To Travel For Terrorism

    Weaning Canada Off Fossil Fuels: Scholars Says Low Carbon Economy Within Reach

    Weaning Canada Off Fossil Fuels: Scholars Says Low Carbon Economy Within Reach
    Dozens of Canada's top scholars are urging a sweeping remake of how the country produces and uses its energy in a necessary effort to wean itself off fossil fuels.

    Weaning Canada Off Fossil Fuels: Scholars Says Low Carbon Economy Within Reach

    Harper And Netanyahu To Talk Sunday For First Time Since Israeli Election

    Harper And Netanyahu To Talk Sunday For First Time Since Israeli Election
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper is planning a Sunday telephone call to his Israeli counterpart and friend, Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Harper And Netanyahu To Talk Sunday For First Time Since Israeli Election

    Toronto Transit Driver Dhanbir Shergill Charged In Death Of 14-year-old Girl

    Toronto Transit Driver Dhanbir Shergill Charged In Death Of 14-year-old Girl
    Police say 28-year-old Dhanbir Shergill of Bowmanville, Ont., is charged with dangerous driving causing death and failing to stop at the scene of an accident.

    Toronto Transit Driver Dhanbir Shergill Charged In Death Of 14-year-old Girl

    Cheap Gas Prices Keep February Inflation Rate Low At 1.0%: Statistics Canada

    OTTAWA — The country's annual inflation rate held steady for the second straight month as higher price tags nearly across the board met headwinds created by low gasoline prices, Statistics Canada said Friday.

    Cheap Gas Prices Keep February Inflation Rate Low At 1.0%: Statistics Canada