A survey of 1,213 IT decision-makers working for small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) in the U.S., United Kingdom and India published today found nearly half (45%) are worried about the impact artificial intelligence (AI) will have on their job.
Conducted by the research firm Propeller Insights on behalf of JumpCloud, a provider of an IT and cybersecurity management platform, the survey also found more than three quarters (76%) agree their organizations should be investing in AI, with 79% viewing AI as a net positive for their organization.
Most respondents also agree their organizations are approaching AI at exactly the right speed (55%), compared to 22% who said their organization is moving too quickly and 19% who said their organization is moving too slowly.
However, a full 62% also noted that AI is outpacing their organization’s ability to protect against threats, the survey finds.
Tom Bridge, a principal product manager for JumpCloud, said while there is no doubt that AI will change roles within organizations, it’s not likely to replace the need for IT administrators. Instead, IT administrators will be able to manage complex IT environments at much higher levels of scale as AI becomes a force multiplier for managing IT. Many of the low-level tasks that conspire to make managing IT tedious, such as generating reports, will become increasingly automated, noted Bridge.
It’s not clear what impact AI will have on IT roles, but it is arriving at a time when IT organizations are being challenged on several fronts. For example, the survey finds that 56% of respondents are more concerned about their organization’s security posture than they were a year ago. Nearly three-quarters (72%) said any cuts to their security budget would increase organizational risk.
More than half (56%) identified security as their biggest IT challenge, followed by new services and application rollouts (45%), increased work burden (44%) and the cost of remote work solutions (42%). Respondents said network attacks were their biggest challenge (40%), followed by software vulnerability exploits (34%) and ransomware (29%). A full 83% also now require multi-factor authentication (MFA), while two-thirds require biometrics (66%) to access some portion of their IT resources. A total of 83% are also still managing passwords.
More than three quarters (76%) also report increased compliance and regulations requirements in their region.
In addition, a full 88% noted increased vendor prices over the last six months, the survey finds. More than a third of respondents need five to 10 applications to manage worker life cycle (37%), but 22% require 11 or more. Three-quarters (75%) said they would prefer a single tool to do their job over several point solutions.
More than three-quarters (76%) rely on a managed service provider (MSP) to manage some portion of their IT environment, with 42% now relying on an MSP to manage their IT environment completely.
Finally, 57% said their organization has experienced layoffs in the last year. In addition to having to offboard those employees, IT professionals will naturally become more uneasy about their own job security.
Arguably, when it comes to managing IT, there is less certainty today than at any time in recent memory. The challenge, as always, is to aggressively embrace automation as much as possible to reduce a level of IT complexity that is rapidly becoming too complex to manage otherwise.