Innovation, New Ideas and How The World is Changing

Generative AI Is Good Enough To Be Useful. Should You Adopt Or Die?

If you look up the definition of the word laggard you get this: Laggards are the last persons or organizations to adopt new ideas, technologies, products, or specific innovations. Another way to describe laggards is by using the word traditionalists; the last to adopt an innovation. They are fixated on the past, on maintaining the status quo.

I believe most people, and organizations, are laggards by nature.

I first heard about ‘laggards’ from the technology adoption curve, which shows how various groups of people adopt technology:

Today, there are many technologies that make the news but none bigger than artificial intelligence. The topic of adoption is at the forefront of the conversation, specifically “Will it replace people.” The topic of AI replacing people is directly related to the topic of people and organizations adopting the technology.

As stated in a recent McKinsey report, the rise of generative AI technologies has been fast and furious, but mostly the adoption has come in very specific groups of people and organizations. Before last year’s launch of ChatGPT, the technology was mostly available to big corporations with big budgets and was mostly experimental.

What’s different today is the technology is now widely available to anyone with an internet connection, curiosity, and a bias for action. And because of this, we’re in the iPhone moment of this technology. The question of whether or not it will replace humans is the wrong one. The question is: What will this technology enable humans to do and how fast will it happen?

Artificial intelligence will not replace humans, a human using AI will. The same applies for organizations. Therefore, leaders need to embrace the technology, learn to harness its potential, and develop use cases for their businesses.

How?

Here are three steps you can follow to help you adopt generative artificial intelligence:

1. Understand Generative AI

2. Identify Opportunities

3. Start Small

With that said, here are some questions to help you identify workflows and processes for AI automation.

As always, there will be individuals and organizations that will be late to adopt. To be fair, being an innovator, and early adopter doesn’t mean you’ll win. But being last for sure won’t either. Remember, disrupt, or be outpaced by it.


Bottom line: Generative AI is good enough that it enables people to do useful stuff with it. Individuals and organizations shouldn’t just dip their toes in the technology, but embrace it as is. Adapt or die, or be outpaced by those who do. 

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