Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 13: How To Use AI + Data To Understand Behavior
Episode Date: May 11, 2023How to use AI + Data to understand behavior: an Everyday AI conversation with Karrie Sullivan.Make sure to tune in for the latest AI news and trends. The Everyday AI show helps make your job easier, g...et your work done faster, and grow your career. Time Stamps:[00:01:00] Google's New Magic Eraser[00:02:06] Google Bard New Updates and Integrations[00:03:50] AI watermarking: necessary caution or potential danger?[00:05:15] AI-Generated Emails: The Future of Communication?[00:07:09] How Culminate Uses AI as an Assessment Tool[00:10:10] Transform Your Business Success Rate by 6x[00:12:25] AI Enables Quick Business Growth for Startups[00:15:10] Encouraging Collaboration and Innovation in the Workplace[00:16:48] Workplace Angst: Pandemic's Lasting Impact on EmployeesFor full show notes, head to YourEverydayAI.comSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info)
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This is the Everyday AI Show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips.
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Did Google just declare war on OpenAI?
Well, some of the things they announced yesterday, you might think so.
So my name is Jordan Wilson.
I'm the host of Everyday AI, the daily live stream podcast and newsletter, helping everyday
people like you and me keep up with what's going on in AI and how to actually use it.
very excited to have our guest today, Carrie Sullivan, the founder and CEO of Colminate Strategy
Group. Carrie, thank you for joining us. Thank you, Jordan. I'm happy to be here.
All right. So let's just get straight into it. Let's do a quick rundown. And normally we
bring you news from all over the AI world. Today, we're just focusing on Google. They had their
big I.O. event yesterday, which is their yearly event where they announce hardware and software
updates. We're just going to be talking about the AI
specific software updates. So one of the first things, it should be, I think, pretty cool to play with,
at least. It's something called Magic Eraser. So they announced this, some big updates to Magic Eraser
essentially allows you to, if you have a photo that's cut off, you know, if you're trying to get a
photo of your kid riding a bike and half the bike is cut off, you can essentially move it over and
it's going to use kind of technology called in painting to fill it all in. You know, you
You know, Carrie, what are your thoughts on this piece, Magic Eraser?
I love it.
It's a lot of fun.
And it sounds like it's going to be a lot easier than some of the other image generation and image fixing AI tools.
Because hopefully it's a little better quality, too, because you end up with weird hands and fingers and things like that when you start to extend photos.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
You always got to count the fingers, right?
So the next big update out of the Google I.O. Conference, BARD. So their kind of language model got a big update called Palm. We'll get into that in a later show. But I just want to run down just some of the new things coming to BARD. So BARD is essentially, if you haven't used it, it is the chat GPT for Google. So let's just run down. So it's going to be directly integrated into Google Docs and Google Sheets. Coding. It's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
going to natively support 20 different programming languages. You can export to what's called
Replit or Google's Collab. So you can take code and take it straight into a development kind of
playground. Their plugins, so announcing plugins, which I've been waiting, hey, O'Ne,
I've been paying for chat GPT premium for months, still don't have plugins. And Google is
removing the waitlist on BART. So essentially, hundreds of countries throughout the world are going to be
getting all these updates within a week or so. So many updates could do a whole show on this,
but Carrie, what's your quick take on all these different updates to Bard?
I love the idea that Google's starting to do some native integrations. I think it's a really smart way
for them to start to really think about what that operating model looks like for them going forward.
Because obviously, AI and Open AI and even Bard poses an exit.
existential threat to their core business, which is search.
So I'll be really, really interested to see how they actually start to shift that operating
model into something that's not quite search related specifically.
Yeah.
Yeah, hot topic for another day.
I've been saying this for a month.
Search.
Search as we know it is going to.
It's changed.
Yeah, it's going to be wild.
So something else that's going to change completely is images.
So, you know, in barred, you can work directly.
with Adobe Firefly, which is their kind of AI image generating, but they're going to start
watermarking AI content, at least for photos, we know for sure.
Carrie, how is that going to change at least public perception of art and AI art?
That's a great question.
And you and I were talking a little bit before the session, because I think it's a good thing
to start to do some watermarking.
we still have to proceed with caution because just like we saw with social media, there's
a whole lot that we don't know about AI and unintended consequences and how people might use it
to manipulate.
I was just reading a story from Matt Carmichael this morning from Ipsos.
And he talked about the majority of people at about 70%, 70% that are really worried that they're going
have miss they're going to see misinformation spread even faster online that they won't know
what's produced by humans versus AI. I think there probably needs to be some standards.
I don't know what those standards are. And I don't know how to how to check if people are
using AI to rip those watermarks out. You know, it's it's a tough one. Yeah. Yeah.
A lot of, a lot of tough things to navigate, but hopefully something that's easy is is this new.
help me write feature, which is essentially bringing chat like chat GPT, but bringing BARD into your
Gmail, you know, where it can automatically read the context of an email and you say,
help me write this and it helps. So it's almost, you know, reading your mind. But that's,
that's kind of where I wanted to get to carry with with culminate, because that's something,
you guys are kind of helping using some machine learning and AI to kind of do the same thing.
So tell me, tell me a little bit about, you know, what you all are doing at.
culminate strategy. Thanks. First off, I'm not entirely sure that I mean, you got to put a lot of
trust in a company before they start writing your emails for you. And you got to trust them with your IP.
So that's always, that's always a challenging thing. But that said, when it comes to emails,
if you've got an AI that will help you write email for people and do some of that day-to-day
communication, man, I'm all for it. I think it makes a ton of sense. Partially because
when we write emails, the language that kind of reveals who we are as individuals isn't
necessarily apparent. They're very task-based and very kind of task-focused, really. So you look
like a very results-driven person when you're writing an email for the most part. Other things,
though, are a little bit different. So we can use language from LinkedIn or resume or keynote
speech is and things like that, anything with neutral language, and we can read that language
using AI to do a very accurate, very detailed analysis of somebody's psychology, using trait
based psychology and language. Yeah. Can you say, and, you know, again, you know, I think for the
most part, a lot of, you know, everyday AI's listeners and watchers are people just, just learning
about the technology. So explain a little bit, kind of in everyday terms.
you know, how culminate is using technology to help its clients.
Thank you.
Yeah, totally.
One of the hardest things we have to do when we go through transformation and even growth, M&A,
private equity acquisitions, things like that, is change and culture.
The technology and org designer or things like that, even op models, that's pretty easy.
Getting the people to change is always hard.
That is something that will never, ever change.
And it's not because people don't necessarily want to change.
They just don't necessarily know how.
Because not everybody's wired that way.
So what we do is use AI like radar.
And we're looking for general thoughts and thought process across a population and a company
to help those leaders understand how easy or how difficult it
might be to either go in by department or different groups or things like that to find those
folks that are going to have a tougher time with change and figure out how to help them make
those changes a little easier.
Sure.
Have you seen any shifts?
So, you know, you've been doing this type of work for a long time.
Have you seen any shifts just in the in the types of companies that you're working with,
you know, maybe now a hunger to use more of this tech and to use more of this AI and to use more
of this machine learning to give them insights into their business? Or do you think there's still
some hesitation? Is there still some kind of convincing companies that, hey, this can help you grow?
It depends. And it depends on the leadership team. It depends on how they think and whether it's
something they want to use. But the reality is that HR departments have been using tools,
assessment tools like Hogan and Disk and Myers-Briggs and others for years and years and years.
So it's not different.
The only big difference is that we're not asking anybody to fill out a survey.
I'm not having to go and do a thousand interviews across an organization over months.
So we can take that time to market or time to change, as I like to call it, and cut it by months or years,
because we're able to grab big swaths of the organization faster, especially in big enterprise.
And literally, those kinds of processes would typically take months and years.
So we're taking the time out of it.
We're taking the pain out of it.
So that's not really a hard sell, if you will.
It's the hardest part is getting people's heads around how to do it a little differently.
That's really it.
Speaking of this time to change, what do you think has been the biggest, whether it's technology or, you know, a mind-
mindset shift, what's been one of the biggest things that's allowed that time to change for a company,
you know, to go through that digital transformation process? What's been one of the biggest
things recently that's allowed that time to change to be much faster or much quicker?
So one of the core principles that we use is it was actually a finding from McKenzie.
They discovered using a similar process with a lot of their Fortune 100 clients that, and you can
read about it in Beyond Performance 2.0. It's a really, really great source. And they found that
you can actually increase the success rate of your transformation by 6x if you focus on people,
behavior, and mindset. And they're right. They just don't necessarily know how right they are
because they're using a survey to gauge those things. And maybe, you know, just using,
the survey and paying attention to it makes it go faster. And they're saying by 6x. And it's
more successful. From an AI perspective, we can grab much bigger parts of an organization. We've
scanned millions and millions of profiles across the professional social media like a LinkedIn.
And that includes in total about 30,000 companies. So we can in aggregate tell you what the
culture of a company is in about an hour. That's it. I can tell you what they're talking about
around the water cooler in general in about an hour. Wow. That's amazing to think, right? Because
I think even before some of these AI and machine learning advancements, you know, before the
internet, that's something the time to change or even to figure out what's happening around
the water cooler might take months or years, right? Right. Absolutely. And it still gets watered
down because people just generally don't want to change.
That's true.
So looking at that big shift and now looking at, you know, how much faster machine learning
models are, how much more accessible AI is, you know, for small and medium-sized businesses
especially.
I think in the past maybe this was something that only enterprise companies might think of
or think to take advantage of.
So where do you see this going in the next couple of months, couple of years?
just with all these advancements that are coming.
So how can companies look at using some of this data and some of these insights that
you're talking about?
How is this going to actually change or improve or, I don't know, could it get worse over the
next couple of years?
Can data come too quickly?
What are your thoughts?
For some companies, it will come too quickly.
And that's the part that gets me a bit excited, Jordan.
I love the idea that a very big company's competition isn't just another big company anymore.
A big company's competition is a mid-market company or even a startup run by a single person in their basement with no employees because AI allows for that ability to scale.
And it allows you to scale quickly.
As long as you're automating the right things, you can scale quickly and let the huge.
humans focus on the really, really important things that drive your business. I will probably
never have a back office. I've automated finance and accounting. That's part of my business model.
I try to eat overhead for lunch. I don't want clients to have to pay for overhead. So I try to
cut it out of my business and make things go faster for them as much as I possibly can. So, you know,
I don't want to charge them for those hours or that, you know, that, you know, that,
that pretty big logo on a building. Instead, I want to be able to scale the business and scale for a
client as fast as they need us to. And that's really the trick. Can a company leverage tools like
AI to meet the market as fast as the market is changing its expectations of what they want from the
company? And I think the companies that will have a tendency to do what they've always done with
automation, and that's, you know, cut people, cut cost, cut, cut, cut, cut to make the bottom line
look better, they're going to lose. And it's the first time they're going to lose with that
strategy because they're not going to be able to keep up with market expectation. They're just not.
So one thing that you just mentioned there is scaling faster. And I think that there's very,
there's very few people at the organizational level that can actually do that. You know, I think a lot of
times that's that's kind of a top down but you know what would your advice um what would your advice
be carry for the everyday person maybe who is not the CEO or they're not the vice president at a
fortune 500 company but given your experience of both what you're doing at culminate and personally
what's for for the everyday person how can they use AI technology or machine learning if
if they're not very tech savvy like what's a couple practical things that people can just start
doing this week to improve their output or just improve their work life.
Love that question.
It's actually a question that I ask my team every week, partially because I want them to
know that I'm not going to replace them with AI.
And I want them to be able to share their ideas with each other as far as how they're
using different tools to either give them some time back and make their lives better or
make their service to a client better. So that's just one thing I do as a leader every single week.
What are you using? How are you using it? And what would you like to share with the team?
So that's that's one thing you can do even as a middle middle manager or an individual contributor.
Ask the people around you what they're doing and share those ideas. Get used to collaborating
and sharing those ideas with others because it spreads. You can get some time back and you can create a little bit more
balance in your day. And that's, that's probably from a big picture perspective, one of the things
that I'd encourage, and I know it's not exactly answering your question, so I'm sorry.
No, that's perfect. One of the things that we are seeing in the data is higher levels of angst.
There's a lot of people that aren't feeling good at work. Work has, the way that they see work,
that's kind of one of the things that the pandemic did for all of us.
Whenever you go through crisis, you see the world around you differently.
You solve problems differently.
Any kind of adversity is an opportunity to solve problems and bigger problems and more complex problems in slightly different ways.
If you think about it, we all collectively went through this adversity in the pandemic.
And it's changed us all in different ways, but probably in similar ways.
But work hasn't changed.
companies aren't keeping up with how employees want to work and how they see work and how they
value work. So when you see a lot of the return to the office, you know, hardline, hybrid, things like
that where managers kind of feel the need to control the people around them, that's a leader
problem. Return to work and virtual, you know, full virtual is a leader problem, not an employee
problem because it's not a productivity problem. Employees will find ways to be productive all day,
every day, especially if they can focus their time on the people they care about, the places
they care about, and the things in their lives that they care about outside of work. Yeah, wow. Such
great insights there, Carrie. All of a sudden, you know, I look up at the timer and everyday AI is
already coming to a closer today.
I have way too long for that one.
No, it's so, no, so good, though.
Such great insight.
So we're going to have more about what Carrie has been talking about in our newsletter.
So make sure you go to your everyday AI.com.
Sign up for that.
We're also giving away a year-long subscription to the premium version of ChatGPT.
Carrie, thank you again for joining us.
Thank you for having me.
I really appreciate it.
And this is fun.
All right.
So we hope thank you for listening, watching.
reading the newsletter and we hope to see you tomorrow and every day at everyday AI.
Thank you.
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