A new World Economic Forum (WEF) report has revealed that the next phase of global competitive advantage will no longer be driven by isolated technological breakthroughs, but by how effectively organisations and countries combine and scale multiple technologies across entire operating systems.
The report argues that as technologies such as artificial intelligence, robotics, advanced materials, spatial computing, and next-generation energy systems mature simultaneously, early adopters who successfully integrate them into unified systems are already gaining a decisive edge.
Titled “Technology Convergence: The New Logic for Competitive Advantage,” and developed in collaboration with Capgemini, the study examines how eight interconnected technology domains—artificial intelligence, omni computing, engineering biology, robotics, advanced materials, spatial intelligence, quantum technologies, and next-generation energy, are increasingly working together to create capabilities that no single innovation could deliver alone.
Rather than treating these technologies as separate tools, the report describes convergence as a coordinated operating model where value is unlocked through integration. It draws on cross-industry research and case studies from 12 sectors, including healthcare, manufacturing, energy, and life sciences, to show how organisations can move from experimental adoption to large-scale operational impact.
According to the findings, successful organisations are not necessarily those with the most advanced technologies, but those best able to integrate them into existing systems and workflows. One example highlighted is the increased adoption of surgical robots, which gained traction when designed to fit seamlessly into existing hospital operating environments.
The report also notes a shift in competitive strategy from ownership of technology to coordination of capabilities across ecosystems. Increasingly, organisations rely on partnerships to accelerate innovation, often adopting service-based models that reduce capital burden while allowing them to focus on core strengths.
Another key insight is that convergence is reshaping entire value chains rather than just improving individual products. While it helps ease long-standing constraints, such as limited surgical capacity or manufacturing bottlenecks, it also introduces new challenges, particularly at the interface between physical systems and digital technologies.
Cathy Li, head of the Centre for AI Excellence at the World Economic Forum, emphasised that value creation now depends on integration rather than possession of tools. “The real differentiator is not who owns the most advanced tools, but who can combine them across systems and applications at scale,” she said.
Similarly, Aiman Ezzat, chief executive officer of Capgemini Group, described technology convergence as a leadership challenge rather than purely a technical one. According to him, organisations that succeed are those capable of orchestrating technologies, teams, and partners into cohesive systems that deliver measurable value at scale.
The report further highlights that leadership capability, rather than technological access, is becoming the key determinant of success. Organisations that can align people, processes, and partnerships are better positioned to turn convergence into sustained performance gains.
Beyond corporate strategy, the study warns that technology convergence has broader implications for national competitiveness. Countries that effectively align talent, infrastructure, data systems, and policy frameworks are more likely to benefit from the accelerating shift.
Jeremy Jurgens, managing director of the World Economic Forum, noted that the transformation is already visible across industries and regions. From hospitals deploying robotic systems to factories integrating AI-driven automation, and even research labs using intelligent platforms to accelerate discovery, converging technologies are reshaping how systems operate globally.
In the United Kingdom, for instance, advanced surgical robots are helping extend clinicians’ capacity while maintaining workflow efficiency. In China, automated laboratories are combining robotics, AI, and data platforms to speed up scientific research and improve coordination across networks.
The report concludes that convergence is no longer a future trend but an active shift already redefining global industry structures. As digital and physical systems become more deeply connected, competitive advantage will increasingly depend on how well organisations can integrate technologies rather than simply adopt them.






