Cisco Research: Industrial AI Moves into Physical Operations, Readiness Gaps Determine Scale

07.04.2026

News Summary

  • Two‑thirds of industrial organizations have moved to active AI deployments in live operational environments.
  • Network readiness and security posture are cited as the primary factors shaping how quickly and safely organizations scale AI across connected assets, machines, and sites.
  • Strong IT/OT collaboration correlates with greater confidence in scaling AI, more stable network infrastructure, and stronger emphasis on cybersecurity.

SAN JOSE, Calif., April 7, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) today announced the release of its latest annual industrial research report, the State of Industrial AI Report, examining how critical infrastructure like factories, utilities, and transportation systems are accelerating their direct deployments of AI. The report provides a data‑driven view into how industrial organizations are adopting AI, the challenges they face as AI moves into live operations, and the opportunities created as AI becomes embedded in physical systems, infrastructure, and workflows.

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The double-blind global study surveyed more than 1,000 operational technology (OT) decision‑makers across 19 countries and 21 industrial sectors. The findings show that AI is now delivering measurable operational benefits in use cases such as process automation, automated quality inspection, predictive maintenance, logistics, and energy forecasting. However, many organizations are increasingly constrained by readiness gaps in networking infrastructure, cybersecurity, and IT/OT operating models as AI shifts into real‑time, production‑grade use in physical environments.

"Industrial AI is moving from experimentation into production, where AI systems sense, reason, and act in the real world," said Vikas Butaney, SVP/GM of Secure Routing and Industrial IoT at Cisco. "At this stage, success is no longer determined by models alone, but by whether networks, security, and teams are ready to support AI at the edge, in motion, and at scale. The research shows that organizations confident in scaling AI are those treating infrastructure, cybersecurity, and IT/OT collaboration as foundational, not optional."

Key Takeaways from the State of Industrial AI Report

The survey shows industrial AI has moved from a future consideration to active deployment, with 61% of organizations now using AI in live industrial operations where performance, reliability, and security have direct physical consequences, and 20% reporting scaled, mature deployments. Across manufacturing, transportation, and utilities, AI is powering machine vision, robotics, mobility, and safety‑critical operations. Most organizations plan to increase AI spending (83%), and nearly nine in ten expect meaningful outcomes within the next two years (87%). Yet as adoption accelerates, many are struggling to sustain and expand deployments, with readiness across network infrastructure, security, and skills increasingly determining whether AI can scale consistently across core physical environments.

  • Infrastructure readiness is emerging as a primary determinant of scale. As AI becomes embedded in machines, sensors, vision systems, and autonomous operations, organizations face rising demands for reliable connectivity, wireless mobility, predictable latency, edge compute, and power, making network readiness a gating factor for physical AI deployments.
    • 97% expect AI workloads to impact their industrial network requirements
    • 51% of organizations expect AI workloads to increase connectivity and reliability requirements in their industrial networks
    • 96% say wireless networking is essential to enabling AI
  • Cybersecurity is shaping both the pace and confidence of AI adoption. As AI expands connectivity and data flows across industrial environments, security remains the top barrier to scale. At the same time, organizations increasingly view AI as part of the solution, with a majority expecting AI to strengthen monitoring, detection, and operational resilience.
    • 98% say cybersecurity is foundational for AI-ready infrastructure
    • 40% cite cybersecurity as the biggest obstacle to scaling AI
    • 85% expect AI to improve their cybersecurity posture
  • IT/OT collaboration is proving critical to operationalizing AI at scale. Organizations with closer collaboration between IT and operational teams report greater confidence in expanding AI, more stable networks supporting physical operations, and a stronger emphasis on cybersecurity as a baseline requirement, underscoring the need to build the skills required for scalable AI adoption.
    • 57% report some level of IT/OT collaboration
    • 43% report limited or no collaboration
    • 47% of organizations with limited IT/OT collaboration cite network instability as a top operational challenge to scale AI

Background:

  • The State of Industrial AI Report is based on data from a global survey of more than 1,000 operational technology decision‑makers, conducted by Cisco in association with Sapio Research.
  • Survey respondents were from 19 countries and across 21 industry sectors, representing a range of industries including manufacturing, transportation/logistics, energy/utilities and more.
  • The report aggregates findings from decision-makers at companies with annual revenues of more than $100 million.

Additional Resources:

About Cisco

Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) is the worldwide technology leader that is revolutionizing the way organizations connect and protect in the AI era. For more than 40 years, Cisco has securely connected the world. With its industry leading AI-powered solutions and services, Cisco enables its customers, partners and communities to unlock innovation, enhance productivity and strengthen digital resilience. With purpose at its core, Cisco remains committed to creating a more connected and inclusive future for all. Discover more on The Newsroom and follow us on X at @Cisco.

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Bossard-Aktionäre kassieren 3.90 Franken – höhere Rendite, weniger ausgeschüttetes Volumen

13.04.2026

Die Aktionäre der Bossard Holding AG setzen weiter auf Verlässlichkeit bei der Ausschüttung: Die Generalversammlung des Innerschweizer Verbindungstechnik-Spezialisten hat am 10. April 2026 eine unveränderte Dividende von 3.90 Franken je Aktie für das Geschäftsjahr 2025 beschlossen. Im Vergleich zum Vorjahr bleibt der Betrag pro Titel damit stabil, während sich die gesamte Ausschüttungssumme dennoch leicht verringert. Bossard zahlt insgesamt 30.06 Millionen Franken an seine Anteilseigner aus – ein Rückgang um 2.43 Prozent gegenüber dem Vorjahr.

Am Tag der Hauptversammlung schloss die Bossard-Aktie an der SIX Swiss Exchange bei 156.00 Franken. Seit Montag wird das Papier ex Dividende gehandelt, was optisch zu teils deutlichen Kursabschlägen führen kann, ohne dass sich an den fundamentalen Daten unmittelbar etwas ändert. Auf Basis des beschlossenen Ausschüttungsbetrags ergibt sich für 2025 eine Dividendenrendite von 2.49 Prozent. Damit ist die Rendite höher als im Vorjahr, als sie 2.04 Prozent betrug – ein Effekt, der auch auf den gefallenen Aktienkurs zurückzuführen ist.

Die Kursentwicklung der vergangenen Jahre fällt für Investoren ernüchternd aus: Auf Drei-Jahres-Sicht hat die Bossard-Aktie rund 33.05 Prozent an Wert eingebüsst. Einschliesslich Dividenden summiert sich die tatsächliche Rendite auf minus 30.33 Prozent und liegt damit leicht über der reinen Kursentwicklung, bleibt aber deutlich im negativen Bereich. An der Börse kommt das Unternehmen derzeit auf eine Marktkapitalisierung von 1.202 Milliarden Franken. Auf Basis der aktuellen Bewertung weist Bossard ein Kurs-Gewinn-Verhältnis von 16.79 auf.

Operativ bleibt der Blick auf den Geschäftsverlauf gerichtet. Das Unternehmen hat für den 10. April eine Ad-hoc-Mitteilung zum Umsatz im ersten Quartal 2026 nach Richtlinie Art. 53 des Kotierungsreglements veröffentlicht. Details sind über die Investor-Relations-Seite von Bossard abrufbar. Im Geschäftsjahr 2025 erzielte die Gruppe einen Umsatz von 1.069 Milliarden Franken. Parallel dazu signalisieren Analysten Vertrauen in die Ausschüttungsfähigkeit: Laut FactSet-Prognosen dürfte die Dividende für 2026 auf 4.25 Franken steigen, was einer geschätzten Dividendenrendite von 2.71 Prozent entspräche.

Mit der Kombination aus stabiler Dividende, moderater Bewertung und schwacher historischer Kursbilanz positioniert sich Bossard als klassischer Qualitätswert mit Ertragsfokus, dessen weitere Entwicklung eng von der Nachfrage im Industrie- und Fertigungssektor abhängen dürfte. Wie stark sich der jüngste Quartalsumsatz und das konjunkturelle Umfeld auf Margen und Ausschüttungspolitik auswirken, werden die kommenden Berichtsperioden zeigen.