All Content from Business Insider 10月07日 17:23
美国CEO对AI投资回报信心增强,预示企业结构调整
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KPMG最新调查显示,近七成美国大型公司CEO预计将在1至3年内看到AI投资回报,较去年同期大幅提升。这种信心增长正促使CEO们重新思考企业结构和员工培训。许多领导者认为AI将颠覆各行各业的劳动结构,并可能导致企业组织形态趋向“沙漏型”。尽管AI对公司结构的影响尚不明确,但多数CEO认为AI代理将成为重要的团队成员。同时,部分CEO计划在未来几年内因AI而裁员,但也有观点认为AI最终将创造更多就业机会。除了AI,关税也是CEO们关注的焦点,影响着业务表现和定价策略。

📈 **AI投资回报预期显著提升:** KPMG的调查发现,近70%的美国大型公司CEO预计将在1至3年内实现AI投资回报,这一比例远高于去年的21%。这表明CEO们对AI技术及其商业应用前景的信心大幅增强,认为AI将带来切实的商业价值。

🔄 **企业结构与劳动模式的潜在变革:** AI的快速发展,特别是AI代理能力的提升,正促使CEO们考虑重塑企业组织结构。调查显示,近七成CEO认为其组织将更趋向“沙漏型”结构,即高层和基层扩大,中层缩减。这预示着中等技能岗位可能面临冲击,企业需要积极应对劳动力的转型和再培训。

🤖 **AI代理整合与员工再培训:** 绝大多数(86%)CEO预计AI代理将在明年成为“嵌入式团队成员”。虽然AI代理能提升效率,但许多CEO也认识到,AI的引入需要对员工进行新技能培训,以适应变化。KPMG的CEO Tim Walsh强调,AI带来的不是“淘汰”,而是“再培训”的机会,旨在帮助员工适应新的角色和工作方式。

⚖️ **AI对就业的长期影响存在争议:** 尽管AI的快速发展引发了对就业的担忧,部分CEO计划在未来2至5年内因AI而裁员,但也有观点认为AI最终将创造比取代更多的就业机会。核心在于企业如何引导和支持员工适应AI驱动的工作环境,实现人机协同。

🌍 **关税与宏观环境的双重挑战:** 除了AI带来的颠覆性变化,美国CEO们还面临宏观经济环境的挑战,尤其是关税问题。近九成的CEO认为关税将显著影响业务表现,并计划通过提高产品和服务价格来应对。CEO们普遍关注在不确定和快速变化的环境中如何保持前进。

Workers in downtown Manhattan

The only thing advancing faster than AI is the enthusiasm that many CEOs have for it.

Nearly seven in 10 chief executives expect to see returns on their AI investments within one to three years, compared with 21% who held this view in 2024, KPMG US found in a recent survey of 400 heads of large US companies.

The shift underscores that, in only a year, CEOs' confidence in investing in AI has swung "completely to the other extreme," Tim Walsh, the company's US chair and CEO, told Business Insider.

About two in 10 leaders now expect to see returns in just six months to a year, up from 1% last year. The latest survey took place from early August to mid-September.

That growing anticipation over what AI can do is already reshaping how companies think about their business, Walsh said.

KPMG US chair and CEO Tim Walsh said that AI will bring change to workers across industries.

"What I am confident in is that every single layer in that labor stack — and that regardless of what industry you're in — is being disrupted," he said.

The big question, Walsh added, is how fast that change will unfold.

The 'hourglass' look

What the rise of AI — and especially the spread of AI agents that can take on human work — will mean for corporate structures remains unclear, he said.

Almost seven in 10 CEOs in the survey said they expect their organizations to start looking more like an hourglass — larger at the top and bottom, with a thinner middle. It wouldn't be atypical with new technology to see the mid-skill level be disrupted first, Walsh said. Yet, it would mark a shift from the traditional pyramid, where most workers sit closer to the base.

He said it's too soon to say how a diet rich in AI might reshape companies. "Everyone said the pyramid has been going away for years and years and years, and the pyramid is still there," Walsh said.

Even so, he said it's possible that the look of many organizations could eventually shift.

"To what extent is the question," Walsh said, adding, "That is the conversation I'm having with CEOs. We do not know. Nobody knows yet."

Many leaders, Walsh said, are still trying to understand what kinds of agents and technologies they can integrate, and what the ripple effects will be once they do.

Walsh said a goal for "good leaders" — and one he embraces — is to ensure that when AI takes over certain tasks, the company helps affected workers develop new skills and move into new roles.

"It's not a get rid of — it is a retrain exercise," he said.

Walsh said the rapid pace of change is fueling concerns that AI could take people's jobs.

"There's a lot of apprehension out there in the way people are speaking about it," he said, referring to the impact of AI on employment. Ultimately, Walsh said, he expects that "there will be more opportunities," not fewer, for human workers.

A focus on uncertainty and change

Walsh, who took on the top job at KPMG US in July, said that many of his conversations with a range of executives focus on uncertainty: how AI will actually reshape companies and when it will happen. The reason, he said, is that the technology "hasn't plateaued" — it's still evolving and being woven into business operations.

Some chiefs nevertheless expect that AI agents to result in big changes in how their businesses operate. In the survey, 86% of CEOs said agents would be "embedded team members" next year. About one-third of respondents said they planned to cut jobs in some areas in the next two to five years because of AI.

Having AI agents on teams will mean processes get done differently, Walsh said. Often, he said, the technology will still require human oversight and management.

The result, he said, is that clients thinking about adding agents need to train employees in something that, a year ago, many companies "would never even have thought possible."

Moving faster

Tech isn't the only challenge for US leaders, Walsh added. Many are scrambling to remake supply chains to adapt to tariffs.

Nearly nine in 10 said tariffs would significantly affect their business performance and operations during the next three years. Nearly as many said they plan to boost prices on goods and services, as needed, to offset the impact.

More broadly, Walsh said CEOs are focused on moving faster to keep up with a relentless pace of change, as well as enormous disruption and uncertainty.

He said his conversations with fellow CEOs often involve how to move forward in an environment "where uncertainty and change" will be the norm.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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AI投资 CEO信心 企业结构 劳动模式 AI代理 员工培训 就业影响 关税 KPMG调查 AI investment CEO confidence corporate structure work models AI agents employee training employment impact tariffs KPMG survey
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