Much of the debate over artificial intelligence (AI) in the enterprise, especially the generative type of AI (Gen AI), is focused on statistics, such as the number of projects in development or the projected cost savings of automation, and the benefits are still very much hypothetical.
To cut through some of the stats, and the theory, it can be useful to listen to Gen AI users, as I did during a dinner hosted in New York last week by data warehouse vendor Snowflake.
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The company invited prominent customers to speak about their experiences putting AI applications into production.
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The overall impression was that there are meaningful use cases for AI, including document search, which can start delivering benefits within six months or less of implementation.
The conversations were anecdotal, and Snowflake is interested in promoting best-case scenarios from its customers to promote its cloud data warehouse services.
Nonetheless, with that caveat in mind, the thoughtful comments by both customers suggest that companies create value by taking the plunge into AI with even very simple use cases, after only days, weeks, or months in production.
Thomas Bodenski, chief operating officer and head of analytics for TS Imagine, which sells a cloud-based securities trading platform, described how it would traditionally take 4,000 “man hours” of labor at his company to have people read through emails for crucial, actionable events.
“I get mail, every year, 100,000 times, somebody that we buy data from, telling me that in three months, we’re making a change,” explained Bodenski. “If I’m not ready for this, there’s 500 clients that will be down,” meaning they will be unable to trade, he said. “So, it’s very critical that you read every single email that comes in.”
Bodenski continued: “That email comes in, I have to classify it, I have to understand it, I have to delegate it to the right people, across different departments, to action it on it – that task costs me 4,000 hours a year.”