Innovation experts predict top tech trends for 2025
How will 2025 look for innovation and technology? We broke down predictions from the pros
Innovation in the tech space won’t slow down any time soon, based on 2025 predictions from futurist Amy Webb along with services and consulting firms Deloitte and McKinsey.
Instead, their forecasts reveal continued advances in artificial intelligence, the emergence of nuclear fusion and quantum computing and the advent of more sophisticated cybersecurity.
This article is particularly relevant for innovators and entrepreneurs within the Cincinnati Innovation District, known for fostering collaboration between startups, established firms and academic institutions. The University of Cincinnati’s 1819 Innovation Hub serves as a nexus for creativity and advancement, making insights from leading experts critical for those navigating the competitive landscape of technology.
Below, we’ll look at 2025 tech forecasts from key thought leaders searching for innovation patterns over the next 12 months.
Amy Webb: Futurist and CEO of Future Today Institute
As founder and CEO of the Future Today Institute, Amy Webb uses strategic foresight to advise leaders on developing long-term business resilience and success. She predicts that AI, advanced sensors and biotechnology will dramatically reshape the business landscape this year. Additionally, Webb sees 2025 as the time for nuclear fusion and quantum computing to move from pipe dreams into reality.
Today’s tech: AI, advanced sensors and biotech
2024 marked a watershed moment for AI, and Webb predicts continued growth in 2025. Expect companies to start viewing AI less as an emerging technology and more as a practical tool for improving operations, leading to “a new reality that will shape the future decisions of every leader.”
Advanced sensors and biotechnology are on Webb’s radar for 2025 as geopolitics and global trade move through an unstable period. Sensors may be used to improve supply chain tracking methods and autonomous vehicles, among other topics. Webb also makes a bold forecast about biotechnology, saying that recent advances achieve “speeds 10 times faster than before … getting us closer to lab-grown tissues and organs at scale.”
Tomorrow’s tech: Nuclear fusion and quantum computing
In Webb’s view, two other frontier technologies are nearing the horizon: nuclear fusion and quantum computing. The former is quickly reaching a point of viability for powering data centers and manufacturing facilities, potentially eliminating the need for fossil fuels. “The dream of near-limitless, zero-carbon energy fusion is within reach,” Webb says. “Thanks to recent breakthroughs, fusion machines are on the verge of producing more energy than they consume.”
Quantum computing may finally reach a point where humans can harness quantum mechanics’ potential to revolutionize various fields. Webb predicts widespread disruptions in industries ranging “from medicine to materials science to finance.”
Deloitte: Leading professional business services firm
As the world’s largest professional services firm by revenue, Deloitte offers businesses with tax, auditing and advising options. It forecasts a revolutionary year ahead for AI in the technology sector, with a strong focus on spatial computing and a renewed interest in computer hardware.
Today’s tech: AI everywhere
Discussions about AI have largely focused on large language models (LLMs) and small language models (SLMs), which use natural language processing to generate text. Neither is going away, but Deloitte predicts a greater focus instead on augmented reality and virtual reality (AR/VR) tech along with AI agents in 2025.
Multimodal machine learning interprets and processes various data input types — it simultaneously digests text, images and audio. Spatial computing uses multimodal AI models to merge the virtual and physical worlds effortlessly, leading to AR and VR tech. Companies such as Apple, Meta and 1819 partner Microsoft are developing spatial computing technologies via AR headsets and deep integration with the Android and Apple operating systems.
Beyond spatial computing, Deloitte forecasts the emergence of “AI agents that can execute discrete tasks.” Models could start completing complicated jobs such as booking flights based on personal preferences and providing useful customer service without requiring long-winded and specific prompts.
Tomorrow’s tech: A heady year for hardware
Deloitte predicts that transformative changes to “[computer] hardware will reclaim the spotlight” in 2025. The last decade led to steady advances for computer software such as operating systems, games and apps. While improvements keep progressing in these fields, Deloitte forecasts larger — and more powerful — changes to hardware components such as computer chips and hard drives.
As AI demands specialized computing resources, companies are turning to advanced chips to power AI workloads.
Tech Trends 2025 report Deloitte Insights
As with many 2025 tech predictions, the impetus for this change is the rise of sophisticated AI tech. “As AI demands specialized computing resources, companies are turning to advanced chips to power AI workloads,” Deloitte says. “In addition, personal computers embedded with AI chips are poised to supercharge knowledge workers” and transform the Internet of Things and robotics.
McKinsey: Top business consulting firm
Ranked as the world’s largest management consulting firm, McKinsey & Co. helps companies across the world improve business practices and stimulate stronger growth. One of McKinsey’s main forecasts for 2025: a reframing of what it means to be a data-driven organization.
Tomorrow’s tech: Data, AI and cybersecurity strategies
It’s essential for forward-thinking companies to become data-driven in 2025, in McKinsey’s view. One of the firm’s main predictions for the new year is that “nearly all employees naturally and regularly leverage data to support their work.”
Integrating AI into work structures is the main avenue McKinsey envisions companies using to become truly data-driven, especially by “automating basic day-to-day activities and regularly occurring decisions.” That should allow employees to instead focus on more pressing and complicated tasks such as stimulating innovation, collaboration and communication.
McKinsey also sees AI-enhanced data procedures as ushering in a new era of cybersecurity. “Automated, near-constant backup procedures [will] ensure data resiliency,” the company forecasts, and “AI tools [will] become available to more effectively manage data” that’s personally identifiable or proprietary to the business.
Be part of what’s next
As we look ahead to 2025, the insights shared by Amy Webb, Deloitte and McKinsey present invaluable guidance for innovators and entrepreneurs in the Cincinnati Innovation District. By embracing these emerging technologies and understanding their potential impacts, you can position your business at the forefront of innovation. Whether you're leveraging AI for efficiency, exploring possibilities with quantum computing or enhancing cybersecurity strategies, the trends highlighted in this article offer a clear road map for navigating the evolving landscape.
To stay engaged and be part of Cincinnati’s innovation wave, we encourage you to follow, join or visit the 1819 Innovation Hub this year. Participate in programs, connect with like-minded entrepreneurs and access valuable resources to help you thrive in this dynamic tech environment. Let’s drive the future of innovation together.
Featured image at top: Cincinnati skyline at night. Photo/Mariana Ianovska
Innovation Lives Here
The University of Cincinnati is leading public urban universities into a new era of innovation and impact. Our faculty, staff and students are saving lives, changing outcomes and bending the future in our city's direction. Next Lives Here.
Related Stories
UC’s Center for Entrepreneurship tailors big solutions for small businesses
November 21, 2023
At the epicenter of the UC Entrepreneurial Ecosystem hub is the Small Business Institute (SBI) program, nestled within UC’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business (LCoB). As a founding member of the SBI and the Small Business Institute Directors’ Association, UC helps bridge the gap between aspiring entrepreneurs and businesses eager to boost their success.
From lab to legacy inside UC’s 1819 Innovation Hub
December 12, 2023
In the vibrant corridors of the University of Cincinnati, pioneering research extends beyond the confines of laboratories — it launches revolutionary ideas poised to reshape the world. The key to safeguarding these innovations lies in the swift and savvy journey through the 1819 Innovation Hub’s technology transfer and patent licensing process, a vital approach for both faculty and the university.
Navigating IP strategies with UC’s 1819 Innovation Hub
March 28, 2024
While navigating the intricacies of pioneering research initiatives, faculty and student innovators can stay current on legal safeguards and protect invention commercialization through the University of Cincinnati’s tech transfer team in the 1819 Innovation Hub.