- Microsoft UK CEO claims that AI can bring “radical changes”
- Half of Billions of Billions of Opportunity for the Economy of the AI and the Cloud UK during the next decade
- Microsoft is expected to celebrate 43 years in the United Kingdom in 2025
Microsoft UK’s new CEO has greeted the possible impact that AI can have on country organizations in a potentially difficult commercial landscape.
Speaking during the Microsoft AI Tour London event of the company, Darren Hardman explained how, “health care innovations in life to sustainable technologies that focus on improving social, economic and environmental impacts, AI opens the way.”
“For the United Kingdom as a whole, AI has the power to redesign the country’s growth ambitions and guarantee our position as a global actor in the launch of new AI companies, but also to cement our position in the industries, in which we are strong,” he said.
AI revolution
“Like the 19th century industrial revolution, our 21st century AI revolution represents the opportunity to make radical changes to the world economy,” said Hardman.
“For companies, it is to innovate more quickly, optimize processes and take better control over how we work, reduce digital chore, remove the commonplace and do more work than we love,” he added, “the efficiency of overeating, the improvement of services and the unlocking best results for citizens.”
Hardman’s speech was accompanied by new research by Microsoft who may have revealed that business leaders are enthusiastic about AI potential offers, many eager to deploy technologies such as AI agents.
Microsoft’s study revealed that almost three -quarters (72%) of managers expected the AI agents to be fully integrated into their operations soon, 21% providing that this is in the next 12 months and 39% in the two years.
However, the report also warned of an increasing “IA division” between corporate planning to adopt AI and those lacking in investment or membership, with more than half (54%) of business leaders admitting that their organization is not missing any strategy of form, and in a worrying manner, less than half (45%) say that their companies understand correctly IA skills.
Hardman has set an optimistic tone, declaring that there is an opportunity for half a bill of books for the ECC economy of AI and Cloud UK in the next decade.
“There is a clear and urgent demand for AI in its many forms, from developers to government, education and business decision-makers,” he said. “But more than that, economic growth depends on it.”




