The hype bubble around AI makes many executives think that if they’re not already in the loop, they’re too far behind and missing out on the power of AI transformation. The reality, however, is that businesses should think of AI just like of another helpful tool, simply one of strategic investments.
Not every process should be automated via AI just because it’s the latest trendy thing to do. The approach of “if you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail” is generally a bad idea.
A big part of the effective use of artificial intelligence in business settings is being smart about where to start. Mass corporate adoption of intelligent technologies is still mostly in its infancy, with possibilities and pitfalls growing by the day; it can often seem hard to even begin to work out what to focus on.
So how to figure out where and how to best use AI for your company, right now?
Judging by presentations from this year's O’Reilly NY AI conference, this question rings even truer with today’s growth and democratization of AI and ML. The overall vibe and message to businesses can be summed up as:
It’s wrong to just say ‘We’re going to use AI for our business’. What needs to be said is ‘What is the problem, the goal, the data? How do we break it all down?’ Functionality and real problems should be decision drivers.
A good way to go about this is to look at the common starting points in recent use cases, the ‘whats and whys’ that successful AI adopters across the globe share. What possibilities and challenges do they take into account first? What are the prerequisites? What data and processes are good starting bets for AI integration? And all the while we should keep in mind whether the companies in question are large or medium-sized, from the same or adjacent industry, whether they operate in Europe, North America, and so on.