Strategies for Getting Your People and AI Working Together
OVERVIEW
From driverless cars,
trucks, and delivery drones, from kiosks to chatbots, the number of jobs being
displaced by AI, machine learning, and automation continues
to grow. Even industries such as banking and finance, law, medicine, training
and education, staffed by highly skilled professionals whose jobs had been
considered immune from automation, are being disrupted.
The harsh reality is: no
industry is safe, including yours.
The good news is that you can have the best of both worlds, in which people and
computers play to their strengths, and offset each other’s weaknesses. In this
webinar, you’ll take your first steps in identifying these strengths and
weaknesses, and formulate an initial strategy for implementing the workforce of
the future in your organization today.
This strategy will also
include how to make AI work for your business, setting up plans for workforce
training, along with a system of governance that will reduce risks associated
with increasing levels of automated knowledge work, especially decision-making.
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND
Leaders know they need to
get on board, but the speed and complexity of the technology and its
implications can be overwhelming. This includes fear of not knowing what’s
really going on “under the hood” of their AI systems, which seem to be taking
over increasing numbers of functions in their organizations.
As AI and machine
learning become more pervasive, so do the risks. Managers and execs alike know
they need the increased efficiency that automation brings, or else they find
themselves becoming increasingly less cost competitive. But there are also
serious concerns about risks.
- How can you be sure that the
computers are making the right decisions?
- Especially when outside conditions
suddenly change?
- What vulnerabilities does AI
create, including becoming increasingly dependent on technology, when
everything can change overnight?
- And what about the human side?
- What happens to the morale of your
workforce as some parts of it become replaced by automation?
- While it’s true that AI also
brings new job opportunities, those jobs tend to be highly specialized.
- Can you train members of your
current workforce to meet the new challenges?
- Even if you do seek outside help,
do you know what skill sets are needed in the artificial intelligence job
market?
- And even if you do, are you sure
you can find and afford the right talent?
AREAS COVERED
- AI and the job market – what you
can expect. What jobs will inevitably be taken over by AI and automation.
Understand the AI automation and the future of work.
- Rather than fighting the trend,
learn how to make AI work for your business and even drive the changes.
- Checking your bearings: Don’t get
caught up in the hype. Instead, know where you are in the “AI and Machine
Learning Hype Cycle” and plan accordingly.
- How to prepare your organization
for the coming disruption. Learn how to awaken the latent talents,
creativity, and other competitive advantages of your human workforce, and
how to overcome resistance and guide your workforce through the necessary
changes.
- Understand the importance of
organizational goals and learn how to perform a review of your
organization’s primary goals and work back, determining which steps are
best performed by humans, machines, or both. Know AI automation and the
future of work, and where humans have the advantage and where computers
have the advantage.
- Computers are good at crunching
overwhelming amounts of data. Learn how to get humans and machines working
together and how to effectively apply your human workforce in order to
make sense out of it all.
- Formulate a top-level strategy for
building and growing a combined human and automated workforce that will
bring both into alignment, boosting your productivity, innovation, and
overall organizational performance.
- Develop strategies for using human
foresight as a supplement to machine-based prediction (and vice-versa).
- Understand the “five V’s” of
knowledge and information (volume, velocity, variety, veracity, and value)
and how they drive the need for combined human and machine learning.
- How technology, especially social
media, greatly amplifies the consequences of even seemingly minor
decisions, and how your new, combined human and automated workforce can
reduce such risks.
- Catch a glimpse into ongoing
research initiatives having implications for how your organization,
whether public, private, or non-profit, will need to change
- Almost everyone is data-driven.
Stand out from the crowd by being problem/opportunity/solution-driven.
- No matter how intelligent
computers become, they still require “adult supervision.” Keep things from
getting out of control by putting together a system of governance for AI
and machine learning.
- Open source is good – but not
always. Learn what dangers may be lurking in open source AI/machine
learning software and how to avoid them.New skills for the post-AI
workforce: why you need to dust of some of those old “soft skills” that
might have fallen by the wayside.
- New skills for the post-AI
workforce: why you need to dust of some of those old “soft skills” that
might have fallen by the wayside.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Rather than viewing AI as
a threat, form strategies for getting your people and AI working together in
ways that take your organization far beyond what would have been possible using
either AI or human capital alone.
It doesn’t have to be a
“humans vs. machines” proposition. Overcome the fear of ever-increasing
“machine intelligence” and discover how forward-looking companies are finding
ways to harmoniously merge these two seemingly opposing forces, and use those
insights to craft your own unique strategy. You’ll be amazed at the results.
WHO WILL BENEFIT
- CXOs, especially CEOs and
executives focused on strategy
- CIOs, CTOs, and CKOs
- HR and employee development
Program Directors and Managers
- Program, Project, and Product
Managers
- Team Leaders and Supervisors
- Knowledge Workers
- Customers, Suppliers, and
Stakeholders
SPEAKER
Years of
Experience: 25+ years
Areas of Expertise: Transforming
traditional organizations into knowledge-sharing enterprises
For over thirty
years, Art Murray and his teams have helped organizations
around the worldtransform intoknowledge enterprises. A knowledge engineer
by trade, he has the unique ability to capture and grow deeply embedded
personal and institutional knowledge. His many clients include government
agencies, non-profit organizations, and companies of all sizes in the Americas,
Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. He has advised government leaders in
ministries of defense, law enforcement, higher education, public health, and
whole-of-government in making the transition to a knowledge-based
economy. One of the many projects he has led is the transformation of the
Pan American Region of the World Health Organization into a knowledge-sharing
enterprise, improving their ability to respond to health threats such as
pandemic influenza, HIV/AIDS, and malaria. The project was documented as
a chapter in the book, “Knowledge Management in Public Health Organizations,”
by J. Liebowitz, et al, eds., 2010.
More recently, he led a
strategic knowledge capture and transfer initiative for the U.S. energy sector,
and is currently technical director of a project to promote knowledge-sharing
among world trade centers and science parks across the globe.He is also
technical director on several projects to design and develop knowledge
discovery and sharing platforms for integrative medicine,food and agriculture
futures, and mathematics education.His decades-long research in this area has
been published inthe book: Deep Learning Manual: the knowledge explorer's guide
to self-discovery in education, work, and life(2016).
As the first Fellow at
the International Institute for Knowledge and Innovation, he is Director of the
Enterprise of the Future program and author of the book: Building the
Enterprise of the Future: Co-creating and delivering extraordinary value in an
eight-billion-mind world(2018).
He is a keynote speaker,
a member of the National Speakers Association and the Global Speakers
Federation, an editorial board member and reviewer for scientific journals and
trade publications, and has been featured in various publications and radio
programs. He writes the widely-read column “The Future of the Future”
which appears in KMWorld Magazine.
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