<p>Mumbai: Indians are most confident in adapting to changes due to tech innovations at work places and a large majority of professionals seem to be ready for any change in their roles, a report said on Tuesday.</p>.<p>The report by global job site <em>Indeed</em> said around 54 per cent workers in India predict a substantial shift in their roles within the next five years and 95 per cent expressed confidence in their ability to adapt to these changes.</p>.<p>The report - "Tomorrow's World: The Workplace and Workforce of the Future" - is based on an online survey across 11 countries, including India.</p>.How India can nurture top-ranked S&T clusters.<p>Global market research firm <em>YouGov</em> on behalf of <em>Indeed</em> collected data from November 30 - December 21, 2023, from 16,671 working professionals. The participants comprised 9,592 employees, 4,592 employers and 2,487 HR decision-makers.</p>.<p>The report revealed that India led the way in fostering optimism towards <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/technology-news">technology</a> and <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/artificial-intelligence">artificial intelligence (AI)</a>, with 75 per cent of respondents expressing confidence in the transformative potential of tech advancements.</p>.<p>India's zeal for tech and AI far outweighs any other nation such as Germany (41 per cent), Canada and France (42 per cent), it stated.</p>.<p>Over 44 per cent of respondents also felt that more jobs will be created by AI-related opportunities, the report said.</p>.<p>"India is at the forefront of embracing the future of work, driven by a profound belief in the power of technological innovation. Our findings underscore a remarkable readiness among the Indian workforce to adapt and evolve", <em>Indeed India</em> Head of Sales Sashi Kumar said.</p>.<p>According to the report, employees in India have adopted a proactive stance towards career learning and development to adjust to forthcoming shifts in the workplace with 53 per cent having upskilled to develop longer-term skills and learning in the last three years.</p>
<p>Mumbai: Indians are most confident in adapting to changes due to tech innovations at work places and a large majority of professionals seem to be ready for any change in their roles, a report said on Tuesday.</p>.<p>The report by global job site <em>Indeed</em> said around 54 per cent workers in India predict a substantial shift in their roles within the next five years and 95 per cent expressed confidence in their ability to adapt to these changes.</p>.<p>The report - "Tomorrow's World: The Workplace and Workforce of the Future" - is based on an online survey across 11 countries, including India.</p>.How India can nurture top-ranked S&T clusters.<p>Global market research firm <em>YouGov</em> on behalf of <em>Indeed</em> collected data from November 30 - December 21, 2023, from 16,671 working professionals. The participants comprised 9,592 employees, 4,592 employers and 2,487 HR decision-makers.</p>.<p>The report revealed that India led the way in fostering optimism towards <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/technology-news">technology</a> and <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/artificial-intelligence">artificial intelligence (AI)</a>, with 75 per cent of respondents expressing confidence in the transformative potential of tech advancements.</p>.<p>India's zeal for tech and AI far outweighs any other nation such as Germany (41 per cent), Canada and France (42 per cent), it stated.</p>.<p>Over 44 per cent of respondents also felt that more jobs will be created by AI-related opportunities, the report said.</p>.<p>"India is at the forefront of embracing the future of work, driven by a profound belief in the power of technological innovation. Our findings underscore a remarkable readiness among the Indian workforce to adapt and evolve", <em>Indeed India</em> Head of Sales Sashi Kumar said.</p>.<p>According to the report, employees in India have adopted a proactive stance towards career learning and development to adjust to forthcoming shifts in the workplace with 53 per cent having upskilled to develop longer-term skills and learning in the last three years.</p>