This study highlights the transformative nature with which emerging technologies—such as AI, blockchain, IoT, and automation—are impacting industries like manufacturing, healthcare, finance, and education. It shows the kind of benefits they are reaping, which have improved efficiency and enhanced patient care, led to the best choices on investment, and transformed educational outputs, yet it highlights how industry by industry has varied with these speeds and extents. Manufacturing is one of the leading industries that integrate technologies because of efficiency and cost-effectiveness. However, healthcare and education are two of the most significant industries with major barriers such as regulatory constraints, high initial costs, and concerns over data privacy, which hinder the adoption process. Context-specific strategies would be needed to overcome these barriers by improving organizational readiness, leadership support, workforce skills development, and regulatory frameworks. Besides these, the successful adoption of such emerging technologies relies on several influencing factors, especially including leadership commitment, organizational readiness, and return on investment. Such industries place these factors atop their priority lists to adopt the new technologies into a competitive position for long-term sustainability. However, there are still significant challenges, including lack of skilled workforce, high upfront costs, and integration with legacy systems, that remain barriers, especially in sectors like healthcare and education. The study calls for sector-specific strategies to accelerate the adoption of emerging technologies, especially in sectors that are currently lagging. Policymakers, industry leaders, and technology developers must work together to create conducive environments for technological innovation by focusing on infrastructure, data security, and workforce development so that all industries can benefit fully from the transformative potential of these emerging technologies.
Zenaida D. Calumpang (Wed,) studied this question.