Turning Ireland’s cloud and AI ambitions into action

By Ivan Jennings, Senior Solution Architect, Red Hat

Ireland’s cloud and AI ambitions are gaining momentum. Across industries, businesses recognise the potential of these interconnected technologies to support innovation, drive scale and deliver tangible value. Yet, while the opportunities are clear, the path forward isn’t always as simple.

Cloud has long been a driver of transformation, and the rise of AI has only accelerated this shift. AI increasingly stands out as the ultimate hybrid cloud workload, taking advantage of the scalability and flexibility of hybrid cloud infrastructure to enable advanced analytics and real-time decision-making.

Generative AI, in particular, is reshaping how businesses in Ireland approach their digital strategies. Its rapid adoption is pushing organisations to rethink not only their technology stacks but also the skills and processes needed to support them. Success isn’t just about investing in the latest technology; it’s about making the right strategic long-term decisions.

Red Hat recently ran a survey to explore the cloud and AI strategies of businesses in Ireland in 2025. The findings reveal ambitious intentions: 93% of IT managers surveyed plan to increase cloud technology investment, while 95% plan to up AI investment. Progress, however, is tempered by longstanding challenges, like fragmented processes and siloed teams. 

This piece will explore how, against the backdrop of Ireland’s growing role as a global technology hub, businesses can break through these barriers and unlock the potential of cloud and AI.

Breaking down silos, driving alignment
Nearly every IT manager we surveyed (96%) reported that siloed teams pose challenges when adopting cloud technologies, with more than half (51%) experiencing silos frequently. These challenges often stem from legacy organisational structures, where departments operate in isolation with little visibility of broader goals. A cautious stance from the C-suite on long-term investment often adds to the strain, as leaders face the tension between immediate pressures and the need to invest in future capabilities, including team integration and collaboration.

As cloud and AI technologies become more embedded in operations, this fragmentation is becoming unsustainable. Among the IT managers surveyed experiencing silos, the most common impacts on cloud strategy are increased costs (32%), limited control and visibility over cloud resources (32%), and operational inefficiencies such as duplicated efforts across teams (30%). Overcoming these challenges means bridging the gaps, so every team member understands the bigger picture and how their work drives the organisation forward.

Adopting an “automation-first” mindset is key to finding efficiencies and maintaining consistency, particularly when working across diverse tools, vendors and clouds. An enterprise-wide automation strategy that prioritises collaboration across teams – rather than isolated silos of automation – can help IT leaders establish centralised standards and guidelines for the use of cloud and AI. This approach fosters alignment, enabling organisations to maximise the value of their technology investments.

Breaking down silos, however, must extend beyond the technical level to the human level. A mix of top-down direction from leadership and bottom-up feedback from frontline employees helps build trust and alignment around shared goals. To support this cultural shift, organisations can implement modern corporate design principles, rethinking structures to promote open collaboration and dismantle traditional hierarchies that hinder innovation. For example, cross-functional teams with clear accountability can be established to ensure ongoing alignment between departments. Regular feedback loops, such as retrospectives or team-wide reviews, can help surface issues early and create a sense of shared purpose.

Modernising processes, increasing open collaboration
Many organisations in Ireland are working with processes and controls that were built for a different time, when stability and predictability were the primary focus. While these remain vital, in a rapidly changing environment shaped by cloud-native workflows and AI-driven decision-making, they are no longer enough on their own. 

The challenge for leaders is twofold: they must modernise how their organisations operate through new technology and process adoption, while ensuring their people have the skills and confidence to drive this change. Interestingly, the most cited skills gap among IT managers in Ireland was not in technical proficiency, but in strategic thinking and the ability to tackle business-level issues, mentioned by 44% of respondents. This highlights the need for upskilling and retraining workforces not only to navigate a cloud-based and AI-centric environment but also to approach these shifts with a strategic, business-first mindset. 

Part of the solution lies in making advanced technologies more accessible. Traditionally, implementing cloud and AI required the specialised expertise of highly trained data scientists – an expensive and scarce resource for many organisations. There are platforms and tools emerging that address this challenge, like the open source project InstructLab, which enables individuals with business expertise (i.e. not just data scientists) to contribute to model training and application development. Leaders can also take advantage of open source communities to enhance skills through shared resources, best practices and collaborative learning.

This spirit of collaboration is equally vital for modernising workflows. To move beyond rigid controls, organisations need systems built for transparency, interoperability and shared accountability – across teams, departments and entire ecosystems. Open source has these principles at its core.Modernising processes, empowering people and embracing collaboration form the framework for change. This is increasingly being recognised and acted upon, with two-thirds of IT managers surveyed (66%) prioritising adapting people, processes and controls in their cloud strategy over the next 18 months. 

Smaller AI, bigger impact
When it comes to generative AI, the focus is shifting. Businesses in Ireland are looking beyond generalised large language models (LLMs) to smaller, specialised LLMs designed to solve real-world problems with precision: 84% of IT leaders surveyed are moving toward domain-specific models over one-size-fits-all approaches.

This shift is both practical and strategic. Smaller models are easier to customise, require less computing power and can be trained with specific data and fine-tuned for specific purposes. In manufacturing, targeted AI models can predict machinery failures before they happen, while in finance, dedicated models can catch fraud in real-time without slowing legitimate transactions.

At the same time, transparency is coming to the forefront. 85% of IT leaders surveyed prioritise transparent, modifiable AI models with explainable sources. Open source plays a critical role in meeting these needs by enabling greater collaboration and visibility across platforms and models and supporting contributions from more people. This approach increases accessibility to evolving technologies and can improve consistency of compliance and security across the AI application lifecycle – key considerations for highly regulated industries.

For businesses in Ireland, this shift shows AI doesn’t need to be ‘big’ to make an impact. Smaller, purpose-built models can be more specialised, adaptable and practical – focusing on solving real, day-to-day challenges rather than tackling broad, theoretical tasks like writing Greek poetry or explaining weather patterns in Southeast Asia in the 1400s. These models bring AI into the tangible realities of business operations, where they deliver meaningful results.

Simplifying complexity, driving future progress
Ireland has the vision and infrastructure to drive cloud and AI innovation. But progress will come down to execution – breaking down silos, modernising processes and fostering collaboration both internally and with partners, ecosystems and communities. Leadership must identify what AI can do for their business specifically, make the most of hybrid cloud flexibility and scalability, and look at purpose-built AI solutions to address challenges in ways they can measure, trust and influence. What will set organisations apart will be their ability to turn complexity into simplicity, and ideas into action.

 

Ireland’s IT managers prepare for increased AI and cloud investment in 2025

A new survey from Red Hat shows the planned increase in investment for two key areas next year: cloud and AI. Polling 300 IT managers in Ireland from large businesses, the research sheds light on their strategic priorities and main challenges in adopting transformative technologies.

Cloud and AI investment on the rise

93% of IT managers surveyed say their organisation plans to increase investment in cloud technology by 2025, with a majority of them (43%) planning growth by 5-20%; 38% planning growth by 21-50%, while 10% plan an increase of 51% or more. 

While organisations hope to leverage cloud strategy for growth, it may also help them combat tightening purse strings. In fact, the top priority for cloud strategy for the next 18 months is cost optimisation, cited by 71% of respondents. Other priorities include cloud-native application development and DevOps (67%); security, compliance and sovereignty regulatory requirements (67%); and moving to hybrid / multi cloud, reducing dependence on a single provider (67%). 

Investment in AI is set to increase over the next year for 95% of organisations, according to respondents, with a majority (42%) planning an increase in the range of 5-20% and 33% planning a 21-50% increase, while 19% plan an increase of 51% or more. 

When it comes to selecting solutions for predictive and generative AI, all IT managers surveyed see benefits in adopting enterprise open source. They see the top advantage being enhanced agility in hybrid cloud environments (31%), followed by improved ecosystem collaboration and integration (30%).

Cloud innovation is a focus, yet siloed teams slow adoption

To prime their organisation for development amidst a competitive landscape, over a third (37%) of IT managers in Ireland are planning for a strong focus on innovation and new technologies in 2025. Meanwhile roughly a third (31%) will take a balanced approach, focusing equally on new technologies and enhancements to existing systems. 18% are focused on essential services only.

Regarding challenges when adopting cloud, 96% of respondents said they face siloed teams, with half (51%) saying this is a frequent issue. The most common impacts this has on cloud strategy are increased costs, limited control and visibility over cloud resources, operational inefficiencies and difficulty in implementing new technologies. 

Addressing AI readiness and challenges 

When asked about their ability to take advantage of the growing AI opportunity, 42% of IT managers surveyed state that their organisation has scalable, flexible and accessible IT platforms to support AI use and feel well positioned to benefit from them. This compares to 23% that have the necessary platforms but lack the right skills sets to fully harness AI’s potential. Meanwhile 34% still need new platforms.

As enterprises increasingly explore generative AI to solve existing problems or seize new opportunities, the survey looked to identify factors that determine trust in an enterprise model for generative AI. Multiple factors were shown to be important, in the 80-85% range, including: transparent, modifiable models with explainable sources; cost-effectiveness; domain-specific models (as opposed to generic LLMs); and compliance with data privacy and security standards. 

While organisations are keen to invest in AI for growth, there are some obstacles preventing CTOs or equivalent decision makers from advancing generative AI initiatives. The top listed challenges were integration with existing systems (30%); concerns about data privacy and security (27%); high costs of implementation and maintenance (23%) and sustainability concerns (23%).


Ireland’s tech talent pipeline

Respondents highlighted skills gaps in key areas like AI and cloud. However, there was less strength of agreement compared to respondents in other countries in another recent Red Hat survey, which could suggest that respondents in Ireland see greater progress in filling the tech talent pipeline. 

The top named skills gap from respondents in Ireland was not in technology itself, but in strategic thinking and ability to tackle business-level issues, cited by 44%. This compares to the top skills gap in the UK which was AI, cited by a majority of 88% respondents in the aforementioned survey. The next three top listed skills gap among respondents in Ireland were found to be cybersecurity (42%), AI (41%) and cloud computing (39%). 

Robbie Byrne, Country manager, Ireland at Red Hat, describes the balancing-act faced by IT leaders today. 

“The survey results reflect the challenging dynamics we are seeing with our customers: a keen focus on innovation as they look to drive their digital transformation to the next level, while also needing to optimise costs,” he commented. “Contemporary technologies such as automation, AI and cloud-native applications can bring efficiencies, but there are also headwinds such as internal silos, skills gaps and in some cases a lack of access to the right IT platforms.” 

Byrne described how Red Hat is supporting enterprises with their modernisation efforts: “we believe that having greater choice, flexibility and independence at a platform level is going to be crucial for businesses looking to harness AI’s potential and navigate unknown disruption ahead. We see enterprise open source playing a more important role than ever as organisations seek agility in a hybrid world.” 

Dell Technologies and Red Hat Announce Collaboration to Fuel Open Source AI Workloads on Dell PowerEdge and Red Hat Enterprise Linux AI

Dell Technologies and Red Hat, Inc., the world’s leading provider of open-source solutions, are bringing Red Hat Enterprise Linux AI (RHEL AI), a foundation model platform built on an AI-optimised operating system that enables users to more seamlessly develop, test and deploy AI and GenAI models, to Dell PowerEdge servers. This joint effort establishes RHEL AI as a preferred platform on the Dell PowerEdge R760xa server.

This collaboration helps organisations more readily implement successful artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) strategies to scale their IT systems and power enterprise applications across their businesses. Dell and Red Hat are providing a more consistent AI experience on optimised, AI-enabled hardware solutions, all delivered on the trusted platform of RHEL AI on Dell PowerEdge. This initiative aims to simplify the AI experience for users by continuously testing and validating hardware solutions, including NVIDIA accelerated computing, with RHEL AI.

RHEL AI brings together  open source-licensed Granite large language models (LLMs)  from IBM Research, InstructLab model alignment tools based on the LAB (Large-scale Alignment for chatBots) methodology and a community-driven approach to model development through the InstructLab project. The solution is packaged as an optimised, bootable Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) image for individual server deployments across the hybrid cloud and is included as part of Red Hat OpenShift AI, Red Hat’s hybrid cloud machine learning operations (MLOps) platform, for running models and InstructLab at scale across distributed cluster environments.

Joe Fernandes, vice president and general manager, Generative AI Foundation Model Platforms, Red Hat said “AI by nature requires extensive resources spanning enabled servers, compute power and GPUs. As organisations evaluate and implement GenAI use cases, it is imperative that they build on a platform that is able to scale with their business while also providing the agility to experiment and develop AI-driven innovations. By collaborating with Dell Technologies to validate and empower RHEL AI on Dell PowerEdge servers, we are enabling customers with greater confidence and flexibility to harness the power of GenAI workloads across hybrid cloud environments and propel their business into the future.”

Arun Narayanan, senior vice president, Dell Technologies said “Validating RHEL AI for AI workloads on Dell PowerEdge servers provides customers with greater confidence that the servers, GPUs and foundational platforms are tested and validated on an ongoing basis. This simplifies the GenAI user experience and accelerates the process to build and deploy critical AI workloads on a trusted software stack.”

Bob Pette, vice president, Enterprise Platforms, NVIDIA said “In today’s fast-paced market, it is critical for organisations to be equipped with validated and trusted AI-enabled solutions to kick-start their GenAI use cases. Red Hat and Dell will extend GenAI capabilities for customers with an optimized experience for NVIDIA accelerated computing, including NVIDIA H100 Tensor Core GPUs, with Dell PowerEdge servers and RHEL AI.”

Dell Technologies and Red Hat join forces to address AI complexity

Dell Technologies and Red Hat today announced a significant advancement in the Dell APEX Cloud Platform for Red Hat OpenShift, designed to streamline and accelerate the deployment of AI solutions. This enhanced platform delivers a fully integrated, automated infrastructure optimised for Red Hat OpenShift AI, setting a new standard in how organisations handle AI complexities.

In a rapidly evolving AI landscape, the Dell APEX Cloud Platform now supports an expanded range of GPUs, including the new NVIDIA L40S, to cater to the most demanding AI applications. The platform also introduces support for both Dell PowerFlex and Dell ObjectScale storage solutions, ensuring robust, scalable, and cost-effective management of massive datasets and AI workloads.

Key Enhancements Include:

  • NVIDIA L40S GPU Integration: The Dell APEX Cloud Platform now supports the NVIDIA L40S GPU, providing advanced computational power essential for handling the most demanding AI applications. This addition offers increased flexibility, allowing organisations to customise their infrastructure according to their specific AI needs, whether for high-performance computing or complex AI models.
  • Dell ObjectScale Storage: In addition to Dell PowerFlex storage, the platform now includes Dell ObjectScale storage, enhancing scalability and cost-effectiveness for managing vast amounts of data. ObjectScale is critical for efficiently handling AI workloads that involve large language models and extensive datasets, ensuring reliable and scalable data management.
  • Hosted Control Planes for Red Hat OpenShift: The APEX Cloud Platform now supports hosted control planes, which streamline cluster management and reduce associated costs. This feature optimizes deployment times, separates management and workload concerns, and allows organisations to concentrate on their applications rather than infrastructure management.
  • Updated Design for Digital Assistants: The Validated Design for deploying digital assistants has been upgraded from a 7B parameter model to a more robust 13B model. This design uses the retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) framework to augment large language models (LLMs) with company-specific data, enabling rapid adaptation and training with relevant information.
  • NVIDIA Riva Integration: The new solution incorporates NVIDIA Riva, a microservice designed for building GPU-accelerated speech AI applications. This integration facilitates automated speech recognition (ASR) and text-to-speech (TTS) capabilities, streamlining the deployment of natural language processing (NLP) solutions and opening new possibilities for AI-driven communication tools.

The updated validated design now includes a 13B parameter model for digital assistants utilising a large language model (LLM) with retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) framework, enabling businesses to rapidly adapt LLMs with domain-specific data. The new AI solution also features automated speech recognition (ASR) and text-to-speech (TTS) capabilities, powered by NVIDIA Riva.

Speaking on Dell’s collaboration with Red Hat, Caitlin Gordon, Vice President, Multicloud Product Management at Dell Technologies said: In the rapidly evolving landscape of artificial intelligence (AI), seizing opportunities amidst complexity is paramount. Collaboratively engineered with Red Hat, the Dell APEX Cloud Platform for Red Hat OpenShift offers a streamlined and automated turnkey solution that transforms how organizations run Red Hat OpenShift on-premises.”

Stefanie Chiras, senior vice president, Partner Ecosystem Success, Red Hat said, “The rise of AI has led customers to seek out hybrid cloud infrastructure that accelerates AI application development and delivers faster time to value. Innovation is at the heart of our continued collaboration with Dell and the updates announced today showcase why Dell APEX Cloud Platform for Red Hat OpenShift can empower organisations with a more consistent, reliable integrated, and automated platform for running Red Hat OpenShift AI on-premises.”