Get All Access for $5/mo

How AI is Transforming Every Industry: The Investors Perspective The biggest application of AI nowadays is in customer experience. In the next 5-7 years, every enterprise and every startup will be an AI-native startup.

By Minakshi Sangwan

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

[L-R] Paromita Gupta, Kanika Mayar, Manoj Agarwal and Shubham Sandeep

A recent study conducted by IBM revealed that over 59% of India's enterprise-scale companies (over 1,000 employees) actively use AI in their operations. Early adopters are setting the standard, according to the "IBM Global AI Adoption Index 2023," with 74% of Indian firms already using AI and having increased their investments in the technology over the previous 24 months in areas like workforce reskilling and research and development.

During a panel discussion on 'Investors Perspective on AI', at the Tech and Innovation Summit in Bangalore, organised by Entrepreneur Media, various investors came together to share their perspective.

The biggest application of AI nowadays, according to Manoj Agarwal, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of SeaFund, is in customer experience. "The data showed us that about 38% of usage revolved around customer experience. Similarly, in health care and various other areas, the use of AI will grow in applications," he said.

Shubham Sandeep, Managing Director, pi Ventures, feels that ten years ago, cloud computing was a thing. Now every enterprise is a cloud-native company. "In the next five to seven years, every enterprise and every startup will be an AI-native startup."

The US is currently the home of artificial intelligence, claims Kanika Mayar, Partner, Investment, Vertex Ventures. "The majority of founders in India and Southeast Asia look to the US for ideas and inspiration because a large portion of deep tech research has its roots there," she said.

Currently, Sandeep is focusing on three main themes: AI tooling and infra. The second is foundation models, and the third is Edge AI. He emphasised that data security is going to be a challenge. "I think all nations will insist that all data flowing through foundation models reside in local data centres," he said.

Manoj claims that the government is acknowledging AI as a significant advancement. "There was an announcement by the minister for an INR 10,000 crore fund for AI to invest in infrastructure and in technologies, which is a positive sign," he remarked.

As far as the regulations are concerned Mayar sees this as a sign of improvement. According to her, regulation is starting to come in, which is actually a positive sign. "It means that there is enough activity now in the ecosystem that the government needs to think about it. If you look at all the other sectors, whether it's IT services, automotive, or energy, the government has largely been an enabler."

Investors also feel that India has to be careful in terms of what it regulates and what it doesn't. "I think if you try to cuff the hands of founders and enterprises, then a lot of the talent will actually move out and start winning. And we've actually seen that a lot of the infra and tooling companies either move to Singapore or the US," added Sandeep.

AI SaaS, or AI infrastructure, according to Sandeep might be the next big thing that the Indian tech industry exports to the rest of the globe, given the talent that India possesses and the abundance of capital that is chasing these founders.

Minakshi Sangwan

Junior Writer

News and Trends

Indigrid Technology and Hour4u Raise Early-Stage Funding

Here are the Indian startups that announced early-stage funding rounds.

Growing a Business

He Immigrated to the U.S. and Got a Job at McDonald's — Then His Aversion to Being 'Too Comfortable' Led to a Fast-Growing Company That's Hard to Miss

Voyo Popovic launched his moving and storage company in 2018 — and he's been innovating in the industry ever since.

Starting a Business

I Left the Corporate World to Start a Chicken Coop Business — Here Are 3 Valuable Lessons I Learned Along the Way

Board meetings were traded for barnyards as a thriving new venture hatched.

Business News

Joey Chestnut Is Going From Nathan's to Netflix for a Competition 15 Years in the Making

Chestnut was banned from this year's Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest due to a "rival" contract. Now, he'll compete in a Netflix special instead.

Health & Wellness

Get a Year of Unlimited Yoga Class Downloads for Only $23 Through June 17

Regular exercise has been proven to increase energy and focus, both of which are valuable to entrepreneurs and well-known benefits of yoga.

Business Culture

Why Remote Work Policies Are Good For the Environment

Remote work policies are crucial for ESG guidelines. Embracing remote work can positively impact your business and employees.