Your judgment is the one input AI can't supply. Why I am looking forward to the beautiful AI backlash in marketing. Plus: The one habit that protects your edge, now.
"Your actual job is judgment" — this is the thing that keeps getting lost in the efficiency conversation. AI gets better at execution. It doesn't get better at knowing which problem to solve, or when the numbers are technically right but the direction is wrong. The managers I've watched struggle most with AI aren't the ones who don't know how to use it. They're the ones who forgot that using it well still requires having something to say. Sharp piece.
Exactly. And if managers loose this ability to think critically with their taste (which is also something deeply human) well... then companies will be fucked in a couple of years.
"Your actual job is judgment" — this is the thing that keeps getting lost in the efficiency conversation. AI gets better at execution. It doesn't get better at knowing which problem to solve, or when the numbers are technically right but the direction is wrong. The managers I've watched struggle most with AI aren't the ones who don't know how to use it. They're the ones who forgot that using it well still requires having something to say. Sharp piece.
Exactly. And if managers loose this ability to think critically with their taste (which is also something deeply human) well... then companies will be fucked in a couple of years.
I really enjoyed that, in the sea of all pro-AI hype right now.
PS: on linkedin someone commented that AI is to CEOs what NFTs were to the bro culture and it made me laugh :D
so glad to hear that Cordula :)