Chief Change Officer - Jason Bloomfield: Leading the Transformation of 19th-Century Giants into 21st-Century Icons
Episode Date: January 8, 2025Get ready for a conversation that goes beyond boardrooms! Jason Bloomfield, Global Head of Change and Experience Design at Ericsson, brings over 20 years of experience from roles at M&G PLC, Prudentia...l Financial, and MetLife. From navigating M&A integrations to reshaping direct-to-consumer strategies, he’s seen it all in organizational transformation. In this episode, Jason shares deeply personal moments—like how his parents’ separation shaped his resilience—and how he transforms challenges into opportunities. Whether you’re facing change at work or in life, Jason’s insights will resonate and inspire. Key Highlights of Our Interview: 0:36—It's All About Giving Back 4:02—From Upper Middle Class to Crash Course in Adulting: Why Unwanted Life Experiences Can Be Your Best Teachers “I was in the middle of high school, where focus on study really needs to ramp up. Instead, I was learning home economics by necessity and dealing with my parents’ rapidly deteriorating relationship.” 14:04—Building Resilient Relationships: Navigating Anxiety and Fear During Mergers & Acquisitions 17:26—Being human: How is it possible to scale empathy to 100,000 people across 180 countries? 24:44—Navigating Company Pride: When Heritage Turns into Hurdles “It’s quite a thing to come into a company that has 140, 150 years behind it. Pride can at times obscure a line of sight on the way forward.” 31:11—Asking the Right Questions: The Surprising Reasons Retirees Didn’t Want to Go Paperless “We thought retirees were less digitally comfortable, but it turns out it was a trust issue—without something physical, they feared companies might alter their records behind the scenes. Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Jason Bloomfield ______________________ Chief Change Officer: Make Change Ambitiously. Experiential Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives Global Top 2.5% Podcast on Listen Notes World's #1 Career Podcast on Apple Top 1: US, CA, MX, IE, HU, AT, CH, FI 3.5 Million+ Downloads 80+ Countries
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Hi everyone, welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. I'll show it is a modernist community for change progressives in organizational and
human transformation from around the world.
I got approached by book authors, leadership coaches, business consultants, and venture
founders quite often.
They come with business purposes and goals,
eager to share their ideas on books, practices,
and venture ideas.
I talk to each and every one of them,
taking it as an opportunity to make a new friend,
get educated, and be inspired.
But in this episode, the guest, Jason Bloomfield, came to me out of the blue one day.
He isn't a book author, leadership coach, business consultant, or venture founder.
He is a change maker in organizational transformation. When I asked Jason why he wanted to be on my show, his response was,
It's about giving back.
Vince, you're also giving back by setting up and running the show.
I'm just joining you in the effort.
Take this episode as a love letter from Jason to you on how to navigate personal and organizational
change from the disruption in his life caused by his parents' separation in the U.S.
to his multiple roles across different long-standing organizations,
resolving conflicts, bridging gaps, and aligning interests through M&A integration, tech disruption, and cultural
alignment.
You'll hear stories and examples, strict from Jason's first-hand experiences. Get ready to hear how Jason has navigated change and made it work.
Good morning, Jason. Welcome to our show.
Thank you, Vince. It's great to be here with you and your listeners.
You can tell by the accent, I'm not born and raised in the UK.
Actually born and raised in the suburbs of New York,
Long Island in fact.
And about seven years ago now, my wife and family and I, we moved to the UK, specifically
in England.
And what we're finding here is it's very helpful to have a common language, asterisk.
Things are spelled differently.
Some words are used in different ways.
Football, for example, meaning a very different thing in America
than what it does mean here today in the UK.
Yes, football versus soccer.
Yes, indeed.
While you are now based in the UK,
tell us a bit about your experience growing up in New York.
What was it like for you as a kid and what kind of things were you into back then?
Certainly, so growing up in the suburbs of New York out in Long Island, I really enjoyed
the neighborhood we were in and the friends that we made.
And we were, I'd say upper middle class, if you will,
and things were going along quite nicely until,
and rather inconveniently, my teenage years,
where focus on study really needs to ramp up.
And instead, what was happening was that a relationship
between my
parents had really violently and rapidly deteriorated to the point where they
were looking to try to have my sibling and I take a side and really they were
so unable to actually care for themselves much less my sibling and I. And so in a very rapid fashion, my entire lifestyle changed where I then had to
find a place for myself and my sibling, have my sibling live with me.
And I was the one with an active income.
It was a crash course for sure in life and home economics.
Really necessity is the mother of invention
and those dire challenging circumstances,
socially, economically really created resilience
and has enabled me to then take on
some of other life's challenges in the years since in a way
where I feel like had I not had that previous experience, not that I recommend
or suggest it to others by the way, but had I not had that experience I think it
would have been more difficult to get through. And I think one thing for sure
if anyone listening is going through a similar situation where you're having a high level of
conflict and distraction amongst others, do know that it will take time, but at the end,
you will find things to smile about again.
So in your early years, you experienced what I call a major disruption beyond your control.
While you mentioned that, in hindsight, you can appreciate how it helped you become more
resilient to change and gave you a deeper appreciation for life.
I'm curious, how did you manage to help yourself
and your siblings settle down and rebuild everything
from the ground up?
It was a very non-linear journey is the simplest way
to describe it.
But really, my first work experience was a
paid internship through school. It was what's a regional family-owned business.
It brought together two passions of mine which was business and the other is being
technology and it really helped to awaken those two passions.
And having done some really great work
that I'm proud of, building out offices,
the first acquisition I ever did was actually
with this family regional business,
helping them take on another business.
But quickly what I wanted to then do was to get
some more broadened horizons, some differentiated
experiences.
And so there was a multinational company that was advertising an open role and I thought,
you know what, I want to make that move.
I want to try to get a nationally recognized, turns out years later, globally recognized
brand on the resume or the CV as we call it here,
and that leap, and I started as an hourly wage person
connecting in cables from the person's laptop to the wall
and setting up their voicemail on their phones
and loading software by floppy disks, I'm aging myself now,
to then getting the attention in a positive way of the corporate
options that was based in New York.
And so then they asked what I welcome joining the homoethis.
And it was at 1 Madison Avenue.
It doesn't get any more New York than that.
And from there, hard work translated into additional roles and responsibilities.
And so after a few years, this kid from the suburbs who never left the U.S. at all, actually
found myself being nominated to work on a global acquisition and an integration of a
multi-billion dollar business located in 13 different countries and I was
in country, on the ground, working across 17 different work streams and so all of a
sudden I'm learning things that I'd never imagined I'd learn.
Tax, product, marketing, email, and when you have a street date, a date where the transaction needs to close
and everything needs to be ready,
that's an immovable object.
And that's where you discover the power of constraint.
It's a counterintuitive phrase,
but really when you've got constraints,
it forces things to happen and move.
And thinking back on that experience,
by far and away away and to this very
day the hardest work, the most stressful and yet the most gratifying experience.
We did things like a reverse acquisition, which is a phrase I'd never even heard of
until that point in time.
And to this day, one of the big lessons from that, which carries forward to change and
change management, is really building resilient relationships.
Even though you can imagine if you're being acquired, you're going to have some natural
fears and anxieties.
Is my job safe?
What's going to be happening to my position in the company?
Et cetera.
And so it's easy to be at worm's length and to be distrustful,
but through transparency and finding common ground
and emphasizing the common ground,
talking more about what's in common than what's different,
we built resilient relationships.
And we had some very opposed views on things like branding,
for example, the local businesses were very proud of what they built, especially in places like Poland.
And yet, exchanging candid ideas, actually to this day, I'm still in connection with
many of the people who we worked with on the side of the company being acquired, and I
was the acquirer.
We still have a contact today, and I think that just speaks volumes
to the power of relationships.
But thinking about the school and the like,
for me, I was the first in our family to go to college,
and it was not because, actually,
that's what my parents were nudging.
They were actually nudging quite the opposite.
They were really suggesting a quick-sassed locational track, which has some merits to be sure,
has some pros. It didn't align though with my passions around both business and
technology. So I wanted to go to college and I remember growing up listening to
my parents or uncles and aunts when they would come over, everyone hating
their job, just hating their job, talking about night shifts and not liking their manager.
There needs to be a different way. So either the definition of insanity, do the same thing
but somehow expecting a different outcome. I was not going to do the same thing as them
and expect a different outcome. I was going going to do the same thing as them and expect a different outcome.
I was going to try something different and what that outcome might be, who knew?
But I definitely wanted to give it a go. And so after that I did have to pause
college studies though for some time so that I could care for the family and then once they got to a point of
self-sufficiency, I was able to resume.
And it was really difficult balancing the needs of the family with what at the time
was I was very, I would say, work-obsessed.
And either because it was just a level of achievement that I was inspired to reach for,
or maybe it was an escape from the
personal circumstances and challenges that were going on, which of the two,
maybe both, maybe neither, I really can't say, but I can say this, that it really
forced me to rethink about things where there were times I would happily be
working until 2 a.m.
Not because anyone asked me to, just I was consumed and passionate and driven to get
things done, to move at pace.
But I've since had to learn through a number of changes over life to recalibrate that in
a much healthier way and recognizing that's not a luxury, that's a necessity.
After investing yourself, think of the analogy around when you travel on an airplane
during the flight safety briefing. What do they say about cabin pressure and putting the mask on?
Put it on yourself first before helping others. And that concept is really important because if
you're not there, if you burn yourself out, if you're not living
and acting in a sustainable way, the people who count on you and the people who you care
about, they won't be able to be helped by you.
You need to put your mask on first.
There are times where you do need to be, I'll use the word selfish.
You need to focus on yourself so that you can be able to support and care for those who depend on you and for those who you love.
You've mentioned the word resilience quite a bit.
First, in relation to your personal life and your parents' divorce.
And second, regarding the M&A integration you were involved in.
Now with corporate restructuring, M&As, and cost-cutting all around us, I'm curious,
looking back at your early days, where you were driving M&As, integration, and navigating conflicts.
How has those early challenges helped you become more successful,
or perhaps, as you put it, more resilient in guiding your team,
your organization through its own transformation?
The big thing with's with transformation,
I would say it's part instinctive
and also through learning,
it's something I've come to understand
is a really powerful instrument and that's empathy.
And empathy comes from a number of ways,
but particularly one mechanism that I employ is active listening.
Not listening, active listening.
What it does is it helps you feel the shoes of the person or people across the desk, across
the counter, across a video call, to understand what he or she is thinking, to understand
what he or she is feeling.
What are their hopes? What are their aspirations? What are their hopes? What are their aspirations?
What are their fears? What are their concerns? What are their anxieties and
When you build that empathy what you're able to then do is to build a resilient relationship
and it starts because
Active listening not only allows you to hear and understand the other person, it sends a signal.
It sends a signal to the other person or people just by listening that you care.
Because in today's world, it's just so easy to click and call, for example, or if we were faced to go,
oh, look at the time, I've got another meeting I need to go. To just end that conversation and walk away, to disengage.
Simply by actively listening, there's a signal there to the other person on the side of the
conversation that you do care, that you're interested, that what they say matters.
And amplifying that to a global community where there's a feedback loop is how we're powering change
now.
And thinking about making sure that feedback loop is not just focused on those who are
the most local, but it needs to be inclusive.
We're a global company.
We're in 180 countries.
And that is fantastic, because what it does is it provides you with that diversity of
thought.
Now, the challenge then is, how can you be empathetic across 100,000 people in 180 countries?
The answer is still the same.
It doesn't matter if you're in one country and 18 people or 100 countries and 100,000 employees, it's
still the same thing.
It's humanity, ultimately.
By hearing a person out, you can find that common ground and you can then action it.
And one of the things that we've been working really hard on is pivoting ways of working from a focus on functionality
over to usability.
These are 180 degree opposites.
From leading with a solution,
where a technology company, some, not all,
but some people believe you can just grow a bunch of kit,
hardware, software at something and that'll
solve the day. Rather than leading with the problem, this approach around combining empathy,
divergent thinking, and loving a problem as opposed to leading with the solution,
these are some of the ethos or guiding principles of design thinking.
Design thinking is a concept that I first got exposed to
in 2018.
I took a mini MBA through Google in London.
All light bulbs just clicked.
I've since become a huge advocate,
an evangelist you might say,
around applying design thinking to everything.
And what's beautiful is it's industry agnostic, it's geography agnostic, it is plug and play.
It works in every single context or none, even in a not-for-profit space.
In fact, some of the not-for-profits that I've supported being on their board, I would take them through a design sprint,
which is a type of structured activity
that design thinking has to help them unpack a problem.
And for them, it was cultural change.
And after a day and a half, we did a compressed exercise.
We had actionable ideas that they've since adopted,
improving cultural appreciation and satisfaction across all measures. And diversity events is something I believe
you already know is really a superpower. And I don't want to use a praise
lightly, I'll give you some facts, right? Because some of us are left-brained,
right-brained. So McKinsey did a very famous study out in 2015.
It was called Why Diversity Matters.
And what it did was it compared most diverse companies
with least diverse companies and explained what they found
when they compared business performance.
And let me give you some quick bits of information there.
So what they found was the most diverse companies tend to outperform their peers by 15%.
They are 15% more likely to outperform their less diverse peers.
But that gap becomes quite stark when you compare top quartile companies in terms of
diversity with bottom core tile companies.
The gap then widens to 45%.
Four or five.
Now talk with any business leader, technology leader, operational leader.
Would you happily love a 45% increase in your likelihood of being successful and being performant and outperforming your peers in the marketplace? Absolutely. And what's so
great about that study and the follow-on studies since in 2018 and again I
believe in 2021 is that it was found this was not a one-time slash in the pan.
This wasn't a fluke. This was actually fact and it helped to settle the debate.
And so when we think about this global community of feedback loops that we have,
we built diversity by design.
What that means is we looked across functions.
We looked across regions and geographies.
We looked across seniority levels.
We looked across tenure and we built by design a very diverse, representative,
unbiased community. And that is what's been shaping the things that we work on. So now
the voice of the community is what's informing the technology priorities. And so there's
still more work to be done.
I don't want to sound as though we're at the finish line,
but we have made substantial strides in now doing things
that people recognize and care about
and rewarding that with increased satisfaction scores.
One quick example, there's a tool,
I won't mention the name for obvious reasons.
When I first joined, it was far and away the single greatest concern
and complaint among employees.
I said, okay, great.
If we can't measure something, we can't manage it.
So let's start measuring so we can manage. And that meant creating a global survey and some
other things and what we found was I wanted to use something that's globally
recognized and not proprietary so we went with net promoter score NPS and it
basically says how satisfied are you with a gooding product to the extent
that you would have would not recommend it to friend or family. The range for
anyone unfamiliar with NPS scores can go from a
minus 100 being the worst to a positive 100 being the best. I had never seen ever NPS scores
this eye-wateringly negative. The first was a minus 83 and we are almost a year and a half, two years on
from that point, we are now at a minus four.
We're still minus, but that is a significant gain.
And before we, and one of the things that we do
is we transparently and candidly communicate
all information, all results back out to employees,
whether it's good or bad, no spin, we just are direct and candid and transparent.
They've started to appreciate that.
But what I do is before we publish those numbers, I'll get some of the other tool owners because
we do it across tools now.
I'll preview for them, hey, here are the latest results.
And one thing that really sticks with me, one of my colleagues said something really generous and said, you know what, these numbers are living in such magnitude, we haven't really
done big changes in the systems.
You know what I think this is?
I think this is people feeling and knowing that they are heard.
And I thought, wow, that's really powerful.
And it would have been more, it would have been powerful
if it was said to me one-on-one in a private conversation,
but this person said this in front of their peers,
and then their peers chimed in as well.
And so I don't have a quantitative, crunchy business case
for the power of change, but I can share with you this,
that their belief certainly is
having people feel and trust that they're being heard in of itself can help to elevate perception.
And we see that now tangibly with scores continuing to increase.
In your experience working in large organizations with such a long history and deep-rooted traditions.
How do you introduce modern concepts and actions and get buy-in?
How do you turn things around in an environment where values, policies, and even mindsets
so entrenched.
How do you successfully blend modernism
into that kind of setting?
It is quite a thing to come into a company that
has 140, 150 years behind it.
To your point, they've got ingrained norms,
they've got ingrained ways of working.
And then in a company that's large,
you'll find subcultures.
You couldn't paint with one paintbrush and say,
ah, company X has this mindset or mentality
and company Y has this mindset or mentality and company Y has this mindset or mentality.
Actually, what you'll find is within different businesses
or different functional areas, entirely different cultures.
But the consistent thing that I have found
with companies that have a great heritage to them
is that pride can at times obscure a line of sight on the way forward.
And some examples, when we think about one of the big plays has been going from paper to paperless.
And there's an economic element to that for a company. If you think financial services and if you have
any investments, when you first become a client you get a huge stack of paper.
When you do a transaction you get some additional paper. At the end of the year
you get another huge stack of paper. Now as a business you've got some economic
incentive with rising cost of posts,
rising cost of material to digitize that. But what's the value proposition? What's the value
exchange for the client, for the human on the other side of this handshake? And interestingly
enough, at one company I was with, the most recent one in fact, we were really
struggling with adoption of this not going above a certain percent. So I suggested to do something
different. How about we ask? And it sounds, you know, almost too simple to be true, but this simple act of asking unlocked insights that surprised everyone.
So the thinking going in was, these are retirees and therefore they're less digitally comfortable
navigating the technology, and that's the reason. And so we just need to increase training and the call center talking
about it. That wasn't it at all. And what we discovered was actually, well, people in retirement
age are much more digitally comfortable than by perception you might think that they are.
you might think that they are. Their challenge was distrust of institutions.
They had this distrust that unless they had something
physical and tangible that they can put in a filing cabin
and always refer back to and see the value,
they thought the company might just update the values
behind the scenes and not then authentically represent what happened.
So there was a trust issue.
And so the way to overcome that would be what if you can simply save your digital statement
just like you would, except now you don't have a bulky file cabinet.
Instead, you could just save it on your laptop.
Ah, light bulb goes off.
Second light bulb goes off. Second light bulb goes off.
The incentive for them,
one thing that they had concern with paper
were people rummaging through their mail.
So if people are watching the mail,
they might say, let me try to grab an envelope
and that's my gateway to identity test.
So what they found appealing was that no one could rummage through their mail,
take paper, and turn that into an identity theft risk.
And so that was another value proposition for them.
Let me give another example.
We were looking into more environmentally and social governance or ESG, more sustainable
investment products and making those available.
And we thought for sure the compelling value proposition was that you can now vote with
your wallet.
You can invest ethically if you're against munitions companies, if you're against tobacco,
if you're against companies or indeed markets,
which don't have values aligned with your own,
now you've got alternatives.
And we thought that was a strong case.
I asked, can we please test this?
So we did a focus group.
We were dead wrong.
The investors, the poor randomly sample, came in
and we asked for their thoughts and opinions.
What they wanted were returns.
Returns. Good old-fashioned economic incentive returns.
It was really disappointing, I have to say, to hear people say they didn't really care about
the environment. It was not their priority. Instead, their priority was getting returns. And so
ultimately we had to just reposition this to say, you can invest in the economy that
was or you can invest in the economy that will be. And that was the incentive to help
move things along. So in this culture where people feel like they know everything, the most powerful thing you can do
is to challenge that not in a confrontational way, but more like a what-is. And you get them to
listen. And those insights, I'm going to say eight out of ten times, will surprise you and unlock and
unblock outcomes that otherwise simply are impossible.
Among all these organizations you've been with so far,
in financial services, in telecom,
your current role is with Ericsson in the UK.
Tell us about your current mandate.
I joined Ericsson two years ago
as the head of people change and experience design.
In the company, we call the HR function people.
And so in most other companies, you'll hear it's simply called HR.
But really what that focuses across, we have digital tools which facilitate HR, people, transactions.
And the thing that created my role, gave rise to my role to begin with, was a very disastrous
rollout of a tool, again, I won't mention the name, that took place a year before I
joined. The company became self-aware as to how poor the
tool was received and was performing and said, okay, we need to bring in some change management
to help here. When I joined, to my manager's credit, when we were interviewing, they were very upfront.
This is not going to be a walk in the park.
This is not going to be easy.
You are stepping into a minefield.
Are you OK with that?
So I have to give immense credit to my manager
and the transparency and authenticity
through the interview process.
But since then, the ask was, how do we make things better?
And I'll zoom all the way out, Vince.
To first understand how things might get better,
we need to understand why they are the way that they are.
And so tying back to active listening,
I reached out to a number of stakeholders
across a number of different areas
and said, how did we get here?
And that long pause was exactly the invitation to the other side to share what they were
thinking, what they were feeling.
And from that, I took away five key lessons from a retrospective putting together these
key views.
And I've been actioning those ever since.
One of those key lessons has been that really the tool was
designed by and for the subject matter experts.
It was not designed for or with, co-created
with the actual human, the person between the chair
and the laptop, who day in and day out would be having to work with the tool. And so that's
as an example. Now we have a definition of usability. It's no longer some nebulous,
subjective thing. We have built a definition of usability
and it is now threaded into a design process.
And so that challenges everything from day one.
And now I talked about the community that we have,
we're co-creating with them,
rather than just turning up with a finished product
and going, this is going live on date X.
There you go. Rather than doing that,
and immediately you get an us-them type of dynamic,
we are co-creating with them.
So we're commenting them with,
I'll call it in pencil sketches so to speak,
some ideas. What do you think about this?
Tell us, what do you like? What do you hate? And then we'll come back.
We'll close the loop. We'll come back and we'll go, you know what, great idea, but just not possible
or great idea. We're going to do it or something in between. Maybe it comes later because it's just
not feasible in the moment. But that co-creation process is something that really taps into the diversity of thought,
taps into empathy, taps into design thinking, and that co-creation process helps.
The other thing though was having to back to trust.
When you've got a tool that's hated and has a minus 83 score and PS scoreare and your humans who are using it feel distrustful and resentful
of anyone having anything to do with it. What you need to do is you also need to
be really careful about how you position things. So when we started the global
feedback community, I really wanted to be intentional around how we framed it. No,
we don't have the answers. We wanted to make it about you, the person
who we're going to be asking for feedback. And so positioned it as an experiment on how
we can make things better. What's important there is it does let people know and understand
these people don't think they have all the answers. They are actively listening.
And with experiments, sometimes you get things right, sometimes you get things wrong, and
it is always iterative.
There is no such thing as a single time experiment, right?
It's an iterative process.
And simply by couching and positioning things in that way, it's more of a shared
journey, a journey together. And the brand that I've given this process, I say it's
Your Voice, Our Action. And that is the red thread between everything. So every single
new thing we're doing in a system, I thread it back directly to, you said that
you wanted this, or you said this needs to be better. Therefore, here is the improvement
or here is the new capability. And that's the journey that we're on right now.
You are in the transformation function. It seems obvious that AI is one of the biggest forces driving change in human organizations today.
What is your take on the strategy and approach leaders, people, workers should be adopting when it comes to AI?
I'll share a little bit of my personal perspective
and then give some examples around how I'm applying
generative AI today in a space
that's really about hearts and minds.
So when I think back, does anyone remember the metaverse?
Do you remember Vince hearing nonstop all day day long every day that the metaverse is going
to change the planet?
When was the last time you heard any mention of that?
And for me, it never clicked because I always ask myself, why would I want to use, in essence,
a video game with really poor graphics?
It didn't click.
In contrast, with generative AI, I was helping someone update their resume, and I heard about
ChatGPP, and I go, okay, let's give this a go.
And updating resumes is excruciating.
But I said, let me help this person.
I used ChatGPP, and it was like magic.
And it was useful, purposeful magic. What otherwise took hours, now took a few seconds, and produced a very high-quality product.
Now, when we think more broadly, what does it allow a hearts and mind function to do that couldn't do before?
It's about scale and pace. So as an example, one of the things that we launched
was a global survey where we asked for feedback
on our global digital tools and ways to improve it.
High quality problem is we get thousands of herbatums,
qualitative feedback.
That took me a week to go through painstakingly and cluster them
or bundle them according to theme. I am now able to do that same activity in a week that
used to take a week. I'm able to do that in a few hours. Now, my personal journey is the one that I would suggest and recommend for others is to
experiment and find a purposeful value or user case for yourself to experiment with it.
There's risk and reward. There's something called hallucinations, which in simple speak means AI
gets it wrong. I'll give an example. I used a number of tools. I asked it the same question,
gave each tool the same data set.
Three of the four got it right.
One got it wrong.
Had I just used that one and not checked the outcome,
we would be looking pretty silly
because actually the one that got it wrong said,
scores were going down when in fact scores were going up.
Now the other thing that it lets it do is you can with prompting and this will become
I think for those who might be old enough to remember DOS you had to type commands in
order to get the computer to do what you want and then we move to Windows and you can simply
move your mouse and click.
But prompting is in essence, think of it as whether you want to call it HTML, whether you
want to call it command language, whatever you want to call it. But the good news is there's no
jargon associated with it. So you use natural language. The easiest way I would suggest a
person experiments with generative AI and interfaces with it.
Hype as though you're in a chat message with a colleague or a chat message with a friend,
and you can do things like help create a survey, provide for me the top five insights from this
data, help me carry out a change plan or devise a plan
to roll out a new system.
And you can use various prompts so that you can say,
do this in a humorous way.
Interrogate this outcome from a skeptic's point of view.
As a data analyst, do this.
As a strategist, do this.
As a change manager, do this. As a strategist, do this. As a change manager, do this.
And each of those different ways of conversing with the technology helps to produce an output.
I'd suggest people think of this as a first draft.
One of the most daunting things to do is to try writing and you're staring at a blank
page or if you're in a meeting and you've got a giant blank whiteboard, getting that first thing on can sometimes be a little difficult.
Take that difficulty away.
Allow generative AI to give you that first draft and then you humanize it.
I don't believe now in this day and age, in our conversation,
as it's happening, Vince, I don't think AI is going to replace humans.
There is that very common phrase, which I think is really important.
It's not going to replace humans.
It will replace humans who do not use generative AI.
What the future holds, I will not pretend to know.
I could not have foreseen how rapidly and how powerful
genera- AI has come to be.
I could not have foreseen that despite my love of technology
and business and following things closely.
It was a pleasant surprise.
Though I dare not predict or forecast where it will be
three or five years from now,
but I do know this, that it is helping people now
in a hearts and mind space, such as change management, to do more
and to do it in less time
because it's an extra pair of hands.
It's an assistant.
It's a great way to provide a first draft.
And you can use it to anticipate objectives,
and that can help you prepare
and refine your value proposition, the why.
Not the what, not the how, but the why for doing something so that it
lands well with the community.
Thank you so much for your time, Jason.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard, don't forget, subscribe to our show,
leave us top-rated reviews, check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.