MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-05-21
Tan Kiat How 高级政务部长在 ATxEnterprise 2026 开幕式的讲话
Tan Kiat How 高级政务部长在 ATxEnterprise 2026 开幕式的讲话
要点
- • 截至2026年5月,逾26,000家中小企业已受惠于《数字企业蓝图》(DEB)计划,提前超越五年目标50,000家的中途里程碑。
- • 新加坡企业数字采用率近乎全面普及:2025年96.4%企业采用至少一项数字方案,人工智能采用率从2023年的4.3%跃升至2025年的23.5%。
- • 现有13家DEB合作伙伴覆盖四大支柱,合计惠及逾6,000家中小企业(AI项目)、逾2,400家(云端项目)及近2,800家(网络安全项目)。
- • 网络安全威胁持续升级:2024年新加坡共录得约6,100宗网络钓鱼事件(按年增49%),2025年商业电邮诈骗(BEC)造成损失达3,530万新元。
- • Grab与新加坡资讯通信媒体发展局(IMDA)联合推出AI能力计划,目标协助10,000家餐饮、电商及零售中小企业提升AI素养,包括与新加坡科技设计大学(SUTD)共同开发为期两天的AI培训课程。
- • RSM Stone Forest IT成为新DEB合作伙伴,推出"RSM Cyber2SME"计划,向多达2,000家中小企业提供免费定制网络钓鱼模拟演练及一对一网络安全顾问咨询。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21
早上好。欢迎来到ATxEnterprise 2026。很高兴再次回到这里,见到这么多人。
今天,我想谈谈我们如何与合作伙伴携手,超越流行词汇,让AI真正落地于企业,尤其是我们的中小企业。
两年前,我们与业界共同制定并推出了《数字企业蓝图》。
《数字企业蓝图》(DEB)为我们的企业在AI时代确定了四大领域。
第一,善用AI,变得更智慧。随着更多数字工具具备AI功能且日益普及,企业可借助AI提升生产力,创造新价值。
第二,通过整合数字方案,实现更快规模扩张。从孤立的单点解决方案转向整合系统与数据,企业可改善运营,更迅速地响应市场需求。
第三,通过网络韧性,变得更安全。随着中小企业数字化程度不断提升,它们需要强化网络安全态势,以应对网络风险。
最重要的是,企业必须提升员工技能,以充分释放数字化转型的潜力。
令我深感欣慰的是,自2024年5月DEB推出以来,已有逾26,000家中小企业从中受益。不到两年,我们已超越五年目标(50,000家中小企业)的中点。这些数字代表着切实迈出步伐的企业。这是令人鼓舞的进展。
根据我们的最新统计数据,新加坡企业的数字化采用率目前已接近全面普及。
2025年,96.4%的企业采用了至少一项数字解决方案,高于2019年的84.6%。
每家企业平均采用的数字技术数量也从2019年的1.7项增加到2025年的2.5项。
此外,2024年,97%的中小企业在IMDA行业数字化计划下采用了至少一项行业专属数字解决方案,高于2023年的85%。不仅有更多企业在不同行业大规模采用数字解决方案,它们所采用的也是更为精密、先进的行业专属方案。
这些趋势表明,企业不仅在走向数字化,还越来越多地采用更为精密、行业定制化的解决方案。企业AI采用率迅速加速,从2023年的4.3%跃升至2025年的23.5%,增长超过五倍。
企业也在进行长期投资:
68%使用AI的企业计划培训员工并提升其AI能力。
63%的企业计划围绕AI重新设计岗位和工作流程。
令人鼓舞的是,员工对AI的使用情况同样良好。2025年,73.8%的受访员工在工作中使用了AI工具,其中大多数人每周使用数次或每天使用。
让我举几个例子:
Castlery是一个本土家具品牌,其客户遍及美国、澳大利亚、英国和加拿大。该公司通过与AWS及合作伙伴Axrail的技术探索,打造了一款由GenAI驱动的个人购物助手。客户响应时间缩短了34%,客户体验团队节省了13%的时间。
另一个例子是UEI Logistics。在ST Engineering的免费网络威胁扫描发现漏洞后,该公司采取措施提升了网络韧性。他们意识到,提早主动应对的成本远低于事后亡羊补牢。UEI Logistics随即实施了持续监控及预先获批的端点检测方案——这比只能识别已知威胁的标准杀毒软件有了显著提升。
我分享这几个例子,是为了说明有意义的转型可以呈现出怎样的面貌。这些都不是前沿科技公司,而是与许多其他企业面临同样限制与机遇的普通企业。
重要的是建立势头——采取切实步骤,持续强化能力、创造价值。如果他们能做到,你们同样可以。
新加坡中小企业并非独自踏上数字化和AI之旅。作为DEB的组成部分,我们已与生态系统中的行业合作伙伴携手,共同协助中小企业让AI真正落地。
近6,000家中小企业通过Salesforce、DBS、新加坡工商联合总会(SBF)和保诚等合作伙伴的AI计划受益。
逾2,400家企业通过阿里云、AWS和微软的云计划受益。
近2,800家企业通过新电信(Singtel)和ST Engineering采取步骤加强了网络防御。
目前,我们拥有13家DEB合作伙伴,共同参与四大支柱的建设。让我介绍一下合作伙伴贡献在实践中的具体面貌。
新加坡中华总商会(SCCCI)与IMDA合作,推出了面向中小企业的AI体验计划,让企业主亲身接触预先获批的AI解决方案,并获得专家指导,了解如何将其应用于自身具体情境。
新电信(Singtel)与新加坡企业发展局(Enterprise Singapore)及IMDA合作,通过新电信网络保护计划(Singtel Cyber Protect Programme)协助中小企业强化网络防御,企业可免费享有十二个月的企业级移动及宽带安全防护——这对许多中小企业而言尚属首次。
这些都是切实、有针对性的贡献,使 DEB 不只是纸面上的框架。中小企业可根据自身业务需求及所处发展阶段,向相关合作机构寻求协助。总体而言,自 DEB 两年前推出以来,我们在多个方面都取得了良好进展。
然而,世界并未停步。我们也不能原地踏步。我想谈谈未来几年对企业而言至关重要的三大趋势。
第一,全球紧张局势正在重塑供应链和贸易关系。这种不确定性使企业更难自信地制定计划、进行长期投资。
对中小企业而言,风险敞口是即时的。若关键供应商出现中断,或关键客户撤退,影响将波及整个业务。企业缺乏规模缓冲来吸收冲击。
这正是数字化能力发挥作用的地方。拥有数字化系统的企业适应性更强、韧性更好。它们能更快找到新供应商,更迅速地调整客户策略,保持竞争力和市场价值。
第二,人工智能也正在改变各行各业。这不仅仅是技术升级,而是关乎企业能够实现哪些过去无法做到的事情——在人力资源有限的情况下,以更快速度处理客户咨询、生成报价、处理订单。
人工智能本身也在快速演进。我们如今谈论的是智能体 AI(agentic AI)——这类系统不仅提供辅助,还能主动行动,自主执行多步骤任务并持续运转。对于善加利用的企业而言,生产力提升将十分显著;而对于那些不积极参与、未能合理使用的企业,差距将不断扩大。
上述发展态势为我们对 AI 提升雄心奠定了背景。
第三是网络安全。我们许多人都在加快使用数字化和 AI 工具,但数字化程度越高,网络安全态势就越重要。使用数字工具与保障网络安全,两者并非相互独立的话题。
中小企业网络安全事件的数据触目惊心。根据 CSA 发布的《新加坡网络安全态势报告》,2024 年共报告约 6,100 起网络钓鱼事件,较前一年增加 49%。
商业电子邮件诈骗(Business Email Compromise)是指攻击者冒充供应商、经销商或高管,诱骗员工进行欺诈性付款。仅 2025 年,此类诈骗案件就达 377 起,造成损失高达 3,530 万元。
这些攻击之所以得逞,并非因为企业缺乏技术,而是因为它们利用了人类行为。最常见的入口是看似合法的网络钓鱼邮件,看起来好像来自您的银行、供应商,甚至您本人。如今经过 AI 加持,这些邮件更具个性化、时机更精准、也更难识别。一次错误的点击,整个机构便可能遭到入侵。
一旦发生此类事件,后果不仅限于财务损失。几乎所有受影响者都承受了业务损失、声誉损害或运营中断。
而且,您的公司甚至可能并非攻击者的直接目标。勒索软件攻击会通过供应链和共享系统蔓延扩散。如果您是遭受攻击的公司的供应商,您自身的运营也可能陷入瘫痪——尽管您并非被直接针对的对象。
这正是「Be Safer」(更加安全)成为 DEB 核心支柱而非附加项目的原因所在。这也是我们与 DEB 合作伙伴共同开展的网络安全工作需要持续扩展的原因。
衡量成效的一个指标是:已有逾 14,000 家中小企业采纳了涵盖 AI、云计算、综合数字解决方案及网络安全的预先批准解决方案。我们持续提升所提供方案的质量——与 SGTech、新加坡电脑学会等专业机构合作,提升科技人才和企业的能力,以便为广大中小企业扩大 AI 解决方案的规模与影响力。这是我们与业界携手推动 AI 影响力覆盖整个经济体的方式。
为支持中小企业善用 AI 带来的好处并加强网络安全韧性,我很高兴欢迎两家新的 DEB 合作伙伴加入。
第一家是 Grab。相信在座许多人都对其商户网络并不陌生。
Grab 携手 IMDA,正在帮助 10,000 家餐饮、电子商务及零售中小企业提升 AI 素养、加速 AI 应用,从而提高生产力并发掘业务增长机遇。
这一目标通过多项举措实现,其中之一是与 SUTD 联合为中小企业商户合作伙伴开发为期两天的 AI 课程。
课程将带领学员从理解 AI 的商业价值,到识别应用场景,再到为自身企业制定切实可行的路线图。通过实践课程,学员将使用 IMDA 精选的预先批准 AI 解决方案,并将 AI 应用于自身业务需求。
其次,Grab 还将与 IMDA 共同策划大师课和网络研讨会,专门针对新加坡中小企业在 AI 能力方面所存在的差距进行设计。
第二家新加入的 DEB 合作伙伴是 RSM Stone Forest IT。作为 CSA 指定的「首席信息安全官即服务」(CISO-as-a-Service)网络安全顾问,他们与中小企业合作,协助提升网络防御能力。
通过与 IMDA 合作推出的全新 RSM Cyber2SME 计划,他们正针对我此前提及的一项最顽固、也最被忽视的漏洞展开应对:网络钓鱼。
要防御网络钓鱼,必须强化防线中的人为因素——对人员进行测试与培训,培养降低风险的良好习惯。这正是该计划的核心目标。
多达 2,000 家中小企业将获赠一次根据不同员工岗位职能定制的网络钓鱼模拟演练。在长达一个月的时间里,员工将收到逼真的模拟钓鱼邮件。
企业主将获得绩效报告,并与 RSM 网络安全从业人员进行一对一咨询,以审查演练结果并获取切实可行的网络风险管理建议。
我鼓励所有中小企业即日在 IMDA 的 SMEs Go Digital 平台上注册,作为强化公司网络安全韧性的重要一步。
对于在数字化转型之路上走得更远的企业——我们的数字领军企业(Digital Leaders),我们也备有一系列资源,以推动企业在 AI 时代实现有深度的变革。
去年,我宣布将把生成式 AI(GenAI)支持规模扩大至 1,000 家数字领军企业及 500 个项目。
截至目前,已有逾1,200家企业受益,截至2026年4月,已承诺推进的AI项目接近300个,更多企业正在与IMDA洽谈中。
今年3月,我们推出了数字领袖加速训练营(Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp)。该计划为企业提供能力建设、实用工具与方法论,帮助其在团队、流程和运营各层面落地AI应用。
然而,我们从企业处听到,现有支持资源的全貌往往难以厘清。知道AI能做什么是一项挑战,知道从哪里起步、应寻求哪些支持则是另一项挑战。这一差距是有代价的——体现在时间的消耗、机遇的错失,以及在规模化之前便已停滞的转型努力上。
今天,我很高兴宣布推出《企业AI影响力手册》(AI for Enterprise Impact Playbook),该手册由IMDA与新加坡技能创前程(SkillsFuture Singapore,SSG)及劳动力新加坡(Workforce Singapore,WSG)联合编制。其独特之处在于出发点:它以企业为起点,而非以计划项目为起点。
该手册基于真实转型历程中的洞察,帮助企业评估自身在五个维度上的现状——战略与领导力、人才与文化、数据与治理、技术部署与整合,以及价值创造——并将其直接匹配至最相关、最可落地的支持资源。各政府机构的计划与资源被整合为一条清晰易循的前进路径。
这份自助资源现已在IMDA网站上线。我强烈建议在场的每一家企业——无论您的AI之旅走到哪个阶段——都去使用它。该手册帮助您找到切入点,从茫然地摸索起点,迈向一套可行的行动计划和可调用的支持资源。
我们希望这场AI转型的红利能够广泛共享,而不仅仅惠及那些原本资源充裕的企业。这意味着帮助企业提升生产力、增强韧性、提高竞争力,也意味着帮助企业为员工提升技能,让他们在AI赋能的经济中拥有良好的就业前景。
为表彰那些已率先行动、采纳AI并取得积极成效的企业,IMDA与新加坡工商联合总会(SBF)将举办首届SME AI Impact Awards 2026,作为全国AI影响力计划(National AI Impact Programme)的组成部分,以支持新加坡的国家AI战略。
该奖项表彰那些取得可量化成效的中小企业:无论是自主研发的专有AI解决方案,还是成功部署现成AI工具并实现真实商业成果的企业。获奖者将获颁SME AI Impact Awards信任标志(Trustmark)。如果您已做出成绩,请勇于站出来,向那些仍在观望犹豫的企业展示——这是可以做到的。
提名申请将于6月1日在IMDA的SMEs Go Digital平台正式开放。
对在场的每一家企业——无论您是刚刚起步,还是已在大规模部署AI——您无需独自前行。
新加坡的企业能够完成这一转型,让这段旅程对所有人尽可能顺畅,是我们共同的责任与承诺。
请取阅《企业AI影响力手册》,从评估环节入手,了解自身所处阶段,并与我们的合作伙伴携手推进。
感谢我们所有的DEB合作伙伴,今天的成果同属于你们。
感谢ATxSG的组织团队——感谢你们带来又一届持续成长的盛会。ATxSG的第六年,不是对过往的庆典,而是对我们共同前进方向的承诺。
我们正携手超越流行词汇、泡沫炒作与口号,让AI的影响对新加坡的企业和劳动者而言真实可感、切实可触。
谢谢。
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21
Good morning. Welcome to ATxEnterprise 2026. It is good to be back and to see so many of you here.
Today, I would like to speak on how we are working with partners to go beyond buzzwords and make AI real for enterprises, particularly our SMEs.
Two years ago, we launched the Digital Enterprise Blueprint which was jointly developed with the industry.
The Digital Enterprise Blueprint, or DEB, identified four areas for our enterprises in the AI era.
First, to Be Smarter by using AI. As more digital tools become AI-enabled and more accessible, enterprises can leverage AI to raise productivity and create new value.
Second, to Scale Faster through integrated digital solutions. Moving from siloed point solutions to integrated systems and data, businesses can improve operations and adapt more quickly to market needs.
Third, to Be Safer through cyber resilience. As SMEs become more digitalised, they will need to raise their cybersecurity posture to deal with cyber risk.
And most importantly, enterprises must Upskill Workers to fully realise the potential of digital transformation.
I am very heartened that since the DEB launched in May 2024, more than 26,000 SMEs have benefitted from the programme. Within two years, we have crossed the mid-point of our five-year target of 50,000 SMEs. These figures represent businesses that took concrete steps forward. This is encouraging progress.
Based on our latest statistics, enterprises’ digital adoption in Singapore is now near universal.
96.4% of enterprises adopted at least one digital solution in 2025, up from 84.6% in 2019.
The average number of digital technologies adopted per enterprise also increased from 1.7 in 2019 to 2.5 in 2025.
In addition, 97% of SMEs adopted at least one sector-specific digital solution under IMDA’s Industry Digital Plans in 2024, up from 85% in 2023. Not only are more enterprises adopting digital solutions at scale across different industry sectors, but they are also adopting more sophisticated, advanced solutions for their sectors.
These trends show that enterprises are not only going digital but increasingly adopting more sophisticated and industry-tailored solutions. AI adoption among enterprises has accelerated rapidly, rising more than fivefold from 4.3% in 2023 to 23.5% in 2025.
Firms are also investing for the long term:
68% of AI-using firms plan to train and upskill workers in AI capabilities.
63% plan to redesign jobs and workflows around AI.
Encouragingly, AI usage among workers is also healthy. In 2025, 73.8% of surveyed workers used AI tools at work, with most using them several times a week or daily.
Let me highlight a couple of examples:
Castlery, a homegrown furniture brand with customers also in the US, Australia, UK and Canada, built a GenAI-powered Personal Shopping Assistant through tech discovery with AWS and partner Axrail. Customer response time reduced by 34%, and the customer experience team saw 13%-time savings.
Another example is UEI Logistics, which took steps to improve their cyber resilience after ST Engineering's complimentary Cyber Threat Scanning revealed vulnerabilities. They saw that taking a proactive approach early would be far less costly than reacting after an incident. UEI Logistics moved to implement continuous monitoring and a pre-approved endpoint detection solution – a significant step up from standard antivirus, which can only catch known threats.
I share these couple of examples to highlight what meaningful transformation can look like. These are not frontier technology companies. They are enterprises dealing with the same constraints and opportunities that many other companies face.
What matters is building momentum – taking practical steps to strengthen capabilities and create value over time. If they could make this work, so can all of you.
SMEs in Singapore are not undertaking their digitalisation and AI journey alone. As part of the DEB, we have worked with industry partners across the ecosystem to work with SMEs to make AI real for them.
Close to 6,000 SMEs have benefitted from AI programmes through partners like Salesforce, DBS, the Singapore Business Federation (SBF) and Prudential.
Over 2,400 have benefitted from cloud programmes by Alibaba Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft.
And close to 2,800 have taken steps to strengthen their cyber defences through Singtel and ST Engineering.
Today, we have 13 DEB partners contributing across all four pillars. Let me give you a sense of what partner contributions have looked like in practice.
SCCCI, in partnership with IMDA, launched the AI Experience for SME Programme - giving business owners hands-on exposure to pre-approved AI solutions and expert guidance on applying them to their specific context.
Singtel, working with Enterprise Singapore and IMDA, has been helping SMEs strengthen their cyber defences through the Singtel Cyber Protect Programme, where enterprises can access complimentary enterprise-grade mobile and broadband security protection for twelve months – a first for many SMEs.
These are practical, targeted contributions that make the DEB more than just a framework on paper. Partner organisations that SMEs can approach, depending on business needs, and where they are in their journey. In short, we are making good progress on many fronts since the launch of the DEB two years ago.
However, the world is not standing still. We cannot afford to stand still. I would like to touch on three trends that are important to enterprises in the coming years.
First, global tensions are reshaping supply chains, trade relationships. The uncertainty is making it harder for enterprises to plan with confidence and invest for the long term.
For SMEs, the exposure is immediate. If a key supplier is disrupted, or a key customer pulls back, you feel it across your entire business. There is no buffer of scale to absorb the impact.
This is where digital capability matters. Enterprises with digital systems are more adaptable and resilient. They can find new suppliers faster, pivot their customer approach more quickly, and stay competitive and relevant.
Second, AI is also transforming industries. This is not just about getting a technology upgrade. It is about what your business can do that it could not before – handling customer enquiries, generating quotes, processing orders at greater speed, even with manpower constraints.
AI itself is evolving rapidly. We now speak of agentic AI -- systems that do not just assist, but act. That carry out multi-step tasks autonomously and operate continuously. For enterprises that get this right, the productivity gains are significant. For those that do not engage and use it sensibly, the gap compounds.
These developments set the context for our raised ambitions for AI.
Third is cybersecurity. Many of us have ramped up on using digital and AI tools, but the more you digitalise, the more your cyber posture matters. They are not separate conversations – to use digital tools and to be cyber secure.
The data on SME cyber incidents is stark. According to CSA's Singapore Cyber Landscape report, around 6,100 phishing attempts were reported in 2024 – a 49% increase from the year before.
Business Email Compromise scams, where attackers impersonate suppliers, vendors, or senior executives to trick employees into making fraudulent payments, resulted in $35.3 million in losses across 377 cases in 2025 alone.
These attacks succeed not because businesses lack technology, but because they exploit human behaviour. The most common entry point is a phishing email that looks legitimate, appearing to come from your bank, your supplier, or even from you. Now AI-enhanced, these emails are more personalised, better timed and harder to spot. One wrong click, and the organisation may be compromised.
When that happens, the consequences are not just financial. Almost all of those who were impacted suffered business loss, reputational damage, or operational disruption.
And your company may not even be the intended target. A ransomware attack propagates through supply chains and shared systems. If you are a supplier to a company that gets hit, you could find your own operations paralysed – even though you had not been the direct target.
This is why “Be Safer” is a core pillar of the DEB – not an add-on. And it is why the cybersecurity work we are doing with our DEB partners needs to keep growing.
One measure of how this is landing: over 14,000 SMEs have adopted pre-approved solutions across AI, cloud, integrated digital solutions, and cybersecurity. We are continuously raising the quality of what is on offer – working with professional bodies like SGTech and the Singapore Computer Society to grow capabilities in our tech workforce and companies, to scale AI solutions and impact for our broad base of SMEs. This is how we are working with industry to scale AI impact across the economy.
To support our SMEs to harness the benefits of AI and strengthen cyber resilience, I am pleased to welcome two new DEB partners.
First is Grab. Many of you will be familiar with its network of merchants.
Grab together with IMDA is helping 10,000 F&B, e-commerce and retail SMEs strengthen AI literacy and accelerate AI adoption to enhance productivity and unlock business growth opportunities.
This is done through several initiatives, of which one is co-developing a two-day AI programme together with SUTD, for SME merchant partners.
It takes participants from understanding AI's business value, to identifying use cases, to building a practical roadmap for their own business. Through the hands-on programme, participants will use pre-approved AI solutions curated by IMDA and apply AI to their own business needs.
Secondly, Grab will also run masterclasses and webinars co-curated with IMDA, designed around the AI capability gaps observed among Singapore's SMEs.
The second new DEB partner, RSM Stone Forest IT. As a CSA-appointed CISO-as-a-Service cybersecurity consultant, they work with SMEs to enhance their cyber defense.
Through the new RSM Cyber2SME Programme in partnership with IMDA, they are tackling, what I shared earlier, one of the most persistent and under-addressed vulnerabilities: phishing.
To defend against phishing, you need to strengthen the human aspect of your defense. To test and train people and build habits that reduce risk. That is exactly what this programme aims to do.
Up to 2,000 SMEs will receive a complimentary Phishing Simulation Exercise that is customised to different employees' job functions. Employees will receive a realistic simulated phishing email across 1 month.
Business owners will receive performance report and a one-to-one advisory session with RSM cybersecurity practitioners to review results and provide actionable recommendations for managing cyber risks.
I encourage all SMEs to sign up on IMDA’s SMEs Go Digital platform today, as part of strengthening your company’s cyber resilience.
For enterprises that are further along on their digitalisation journey, our Digital Leaders, we also have a range of resources to enable meaningful transformation in an age of AI.
Last year, I announced that we would scale GenAI support to 1000 Digital Leaders and 500 projects.
Today, more than 1,200 enterprises have benefitted, with close to 300 AI projects committed as of April 2026, and more are in discussion with IMDA.
In March, we launched the Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp. This programme equips enterprises with the capabilities, practical tools and methodologies to implement AI across teams, processes and operations.
But we heard from enterprises that the landscape of available support can be hard to navigate. Knowing what to do with AI is one challenge. Knowing where to start and which support to tap is another. That gap has costs — in time, in missed opportunity, and in transformation efforts that stall before they scale.
Today, I am pleased to launch the AI for Enterprise Impact Playbook – jointly developed by IMDA and SkillsFuture Singapore (SSG) and Workforce Singapore (WSG). What makes this different is its starting point: it begins with the enterprise, not the programme.
Built on insights from real transformation journeys, it helps enterprises assess where they stand across five dimensions — Strategy & Leadership, Talent & Culture, Data & Governance, Tech Deployment & Integration, and Value Creation — then maps them directly to the most relevant, actionable support. Programmes and resources across the government agencies are consolidated into a single, easy-to-navigate path forward.
This self-help resource is now available on IMDA’s website. I strongly urge every enterprise here – wherever you are on your AI journey – to use it. The playbook helps you find your entry point and move beyond trying to understand where to start, to a set of actionable plans and support you can tap on.
We want the benefits of this AI transition to be broadly shared, not just among those who were already well-resourced. This means helping businesses become more productive, resilient, and competitive. Businesses that upskill their workers to thrive in good jobs, in an AI-enabled economy.
To recognise the enterprises that have already moved, adopted AI and seen positive impact, IMDA and SBF are organising the inaugural SME AI Impact Awards 2026, as part of the National AI Impact Programme, in support of Singapore’s National AI strategy.
The Awards recognise SMEs that have made a measurable impact: whether through proprietary AI solutions they have built themselves, or by successfully implementing off-the-shelf AI tools, and achieving real business outcomes. Winners will receive the SME AI Impact Awards Trustmark. If you have done the work, step forward. Show other companies who are hesitating to start, what can be done.
Nominations open on 1 June on the IMDA’s SMEs Go Digital platform.
To every enterprise here – whether you are just beginning or already deploying AI at scale – you do not have to do this alone.
Singapore's enterprises can make this transition, and it is our shared responsibility and our commitment to make this journey as seamless as possible for all.
Pick up the AI for Enterprise Impact Playbook. Start with the Assessment. Find out where you are. Work with one of our partners.
To all our DEB partners, thank you. Today’s progress is yours as much as ours.
To the ATxSG organising teams – thank you for another edition that continues to grow. ATxSG's sixth year is not a celebration of where we have been. It is a commitment to where we are going, together.
And together, we are moving beyond buzzwords, hype and slogans. We are making AI impact real and tangible for our enterprises and workforce here in Singapore.
Thank you.