Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 356: Why Having an AI Strategy Might Be a Strategic Mistake

Episode Date: September 12, 2024

Win a free year of ChatGPT or other prizes! Find out how.Think your AI strategy is future-proof? You might be setting your company back. What if having an AI strategy is the exact thing holding your b...usiness back from true innovation and competitive advantage? We dive into the real role of AI in business with Dr. Hanan Alhaddi, a strategist and academic practitioner who challenges conventional wisdom.Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan and Hanan questions on AIUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:1. AI Washing2. Operational Efficiency and AI3. Three Main AI Pillars4. Responsible AI ImplementationTimestamps:01:40 Daily AI News05:15 About Hanan and her role at Oxford07:04 Companies often mistakenly isolate AI in strategies.10:02 AI's promise, impact, and hype across industries.14:19 Use AI strategically to enhance competitive advantages.18:57 Focus on strategic, slow AI adoption and education.21:15 Superficial AI strategy for appearances, not substance.25:22 Transition from shareholder to stakeholder view for businesses.28:48 Utilize AI efficiency responsibly, educate and upskill workforce.30:35 Focus beyond efficiency; avoid long-term AI pitfalls.Keywords:AI Washing, Operational Efficiency, Understanding AI, Strategic Planning, Data-Driven Decisions, Differentiating Customer Experiences, Optimizing Organizational Efficiency, Efficiency and Employment, Responsible Implementation, AI Promise, New Products, Technology Developers, Technology Consumers, AI Plugin, AI Holistic Approach, AI Benefits Education, Adobe Firefly Video Model, Sam Altman, AI Energy Demands, Oprah Winfrey's AI Special, Hanan Alhaddi, AI Strategy Mistake, Standalone AI Strategy, Corporate Strategy, Business Strategy, Functional AI, Audience Interaction, Daily AI Newsletter, Everyday AI Show, AI Strategy Integration.Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Everyday AI Show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips. Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life. Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live and Adobe Firefly, the All In One Creative AI Studio. Just describe what you want to create and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step workflows across Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface. You direct the outcome. The assistant accelerates execution. How many hours has your company spent coming up with an AI strategy?
Starting point is 00:00:51 It's what all of the C-suite executives are talking about board members. Everyone toiling, spending hours upon hours reading research papers, trying to copy their competitors, all for that perfect AI strategy. Well, what if having an AI strategy is, actually a strategic mistake. We're going to be talking about that today and more on Everyday AI. What's going on, y'all? My name's Jordan Wilson, and I'm the host of Everyday AI, and this thing is for you.
Starting point is 00:01:25 It is your daily live stream podcast and free daily news that are helping us all learn and leverage generative AI to grow our companies and our careers. If that sounds like you, I hope it is. If you're listening on the podcast, make sure to subscribe, but also check out your show notes for more, including a link to our website at your everyday AI.com because every single day we keep you up with not just the AI news, but we also recap our conversation for each day. So make sure if you haven't already, go do that. And while you're there on our website, we extended this a little bit. We're going to be wrapping up our thanks a million giveaway to celebrate a million downloads at Everyday AI. So make sure you go sign up for that. All right, before we get into today's topic on
Starting point is 00:02:08 why having an AI strategy might actually be a strategic mistake. Let's go over what's happening in the world of AI news. So Adobe is set to launch a generative AI powered video creation tool later this year. Yeah, this is late breaking news, not even an hour old. So Adobe is set to introduce a new generative AI powered video creation and editing tool, marking a significant step in the company's expansion into AI-based video generation. This development is noeworthy as it positions Adobe to compete in a rapidly growing market already occupied by notable players like OpenAI, Stability AI, Runway, and others. So the tool will be named Adobe Firefly video model, and it will be released in beta later this spring, according to reports, joining Adobe's existing Firefly suite of image-generating applications.
Starting point is 00:03:00 It can create five second video clips from a single prompt interpreting both text and image. image inputs, which could enhance the creative process for users. All right. Next piece of AI news, Sam Altman is set to meet with White House officials tomorrow to discuss AI's energy demands. So the CEO of OpenAI is set to meet with top U.S. officials at the White House to address the significant energy challenges posed by the rapid development of artificial intelligence. So Altman will be joined by other prominent tech.
Starting point is 00:03:36 leaders from Google, Anthropics, CEO, etc., meeting with White House senior officials. So the International Energy Agency reports that a single request on JetGPT, as an example, can consume about 10 times more electricity than a regular Google search with projections indicating that AI energy usage could surge 10fold by 2026. So this meeting among top tech CEOs and brass might follow earlier initiatives by the Biden administration, encouraging AI companies to have new systems tested externally and to clearly label AI generated content. Speaking of Sam Altman, he'll be one of the people joining Oprah Winfrey tonight as Oprah hosts a special on AI's impact on daily life. Oprah Winfrey is set to host a prime time special that will dive into the significant effects of artificial intelligence on everyday life, airing tonight on ABC. So the special is title AI in the Future of Us in Oprah Winfrey special, and it will feature a panel of AI experts discussing various aspects of artificial intelligence, including its influence on the job market and the potential risks associated with its rapid development.
Starting point is 00:04:56 So notable interviewees include Sam. Maltman, the CEO of OpenA.I., Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, and Christopher Ray, the FBI director, who will share insights on AI's capabilities and the need for accountability among tech executives. All right, so that one should be an interesting one. And you know what? They'll probably be talking about AI strategy, which is what we are going to be talking about today.
Starting point is 00:05:22 I'm very excited for today's conversation. If you're joining live, you can see my smile. I'm a little giddy because I love this topic. I love talking about strategy. And when it comes to AI, I think so many companies are spending countless hours trying to build an AI strategy, but that might not be the right course of action to take. All right. So it's not just me blabbing on today.
Starting point is 00:05:46 I've got a great guest. So please help me welcome to the show. Let's see. There we go. There we got her. So we have Hanan Al-Hadi, who is a guest lecturer and AI strategist at Oxford University. Hanan, thank you so much for joining the Everyday AI show. Yeah, thank you for having me, Durdon.
Starting point is 00:06:02 All right. I'm excited for this one. Could you give everyone a little bit of your background? So what do you do as a guest lecturer at Oxford? Yeah. So what we do is we try to educate students in the Executive Education Program on strategy and AI. And the idea is to, you know, as part of these lectures and creating these case studies, the idea is to give the CEOs and the C-suite executives a very well-rounded, holistic understanding of AI
Starting point is 00:06:35 so that when they go back to their downs, they actually know how to make decisions around AI. So that's kind of part of the lecturing that I do. And then obviously, as an academic practitioner, I lead projects that are AI powered. So I try to bridge the gap between theory and practice. and being a practice, academic is really the best position to have. So, Hanan, you really have a front row seat in terms of how businesses are trying to drive their company forward using AI, right? So you're lecturing and teaching CEOs on this exact topic.
Starting point is 00:07:15 So, you know, I'm curious from your viewpoint, maybe what AI moves are companies getting correct from your viewpoint? And maybe what are some of those common mistakes or pitfalls that you're seeing C-Suite executives fall into? Yeah. So one of the things that we're seeing that companies across all industries doing correctly is identifying, first of all, they are acknowledging that AI has, it comes with its own power. And the potential to realize benefits and value from AI is literally on CAT. So that's great that they acknowledge this. Another thing that they do correctly is they try to identify opportunities and use cases
Starting point is 00:08:00 to leverage AI, which is great. So there is that energy in these companies. And we're focusing on mature organizations. Those are the organizations with the deep pockets with the largest workforces. Where we see that they are actually falling behind or actually making slight mistakes is how they approach AI. And we'll pick on the automotive industry, for example, one of the pitfalls, one of the mistakes,
Starting point is 00:08:31 is that they perceive AI as its own standalone strategy. And so commonly, very recently, you're seeing AI strategy. I'm developing an AI strategy, and this is what my AI strategy is going to enable me to do. And we argue that this is the wrong way to approach, AI. AI in of itself is a tool, just like any other tool, whether you leverage it to automate manual processes and get operational efficiencies. At the end of the day, it's a tool and its function is really to enable your strategic plans. It's supposed to enable your enterprise strategy,
Starting point is 00:09:12 not be perceived as a strategy in of itself. And there's a whole lot of education that we give around what strategy is at a corporate level, at a business level, at a functional level. And when you think of AI, whether you're talking about traditional ML or generative AI, it really fits as one of the building blocks for the enabling a functional level strategy. So those are some of the things that we're seeing across all industries. I love it. We're already getting into the crux of it. I love starting at the end and giving the answers right away and unpacking it. So and hey, as a reminder to our live stream audience, thank you for joining us.
Starting point is 00:09:56 Great guests for today. So Denny and Gene and Cecilia, Fred, Michael, everyone else. Get your questions in if you have them, right? Because we are literally getting an education from one of the top people out there doing it. So Hanan, I'm guessing, right, if this can be a strategic mistake, if creating an AI strategy can actually be a bad thing, Why are so many of these C-suite, you know, in big companies, Fortune 500 companies? Why are they spending so much time, energy, resources, and money into their long-term AI strategy? Probably a couple of reasons.
Starting point is 00:10:34 Number one, the promise of what AI can deliver is actually fairly communicated across all industries. So it's technically you have to be living under a rock not to really. realize that AI has its own power. So there's that energy, there's that momentum. The other reason is the fact that AI does actually have proven to deliver a lot of value to generate new products to enhance features. And for most of the industries, that's really what they're in for. It's to really develop a product, deliver it in the best way possible to differentiate the customer experience. So when you see the AI, AI powered solutions or products can help you enable all of these things.
Starting point is 00:11:24 It becomes a hype. It almost becomes the flavor of the month for a lot of the companies. And a lot of my speaking engagements, I like to draw a distinction between technology developing companies and technology consuming companies. When you talk about Navidia, Google, these are the technology developing companies. And for those companies, you can actually have your
Starting point is 00:11:48 own AI strategy because that's really your bread and butter. For the vast majority of companies, you really are a technology consumer. You're supposed to take the technologies that exist, customize them, but the idea is to leverage these technologies to enable what's in your portfolio of products and services. And so between having a lot of hype around AI and the fact that AI does actually deliver a lot of value, some of the CEOs, some of the senior executives can confuse this with I can actually do an AI plugin and it will produce what I want. And that's and that's really, that's really not how you're supposed to approach it. So how should companies be approaching it then, right?
Starting point is 00:12:35 Because I'd say the writing on the wall and I say this, you know, all the time. The future of work is generative, right? We're seeing generative AI in large language models come to where we work, right? We don't really have an option. Right. If you're using Microsoft now, you have co-pilot. Right. If you're using Apple or Mac products, you're going to be seeing Apple intelligence now following you around everywhere.
Starting point is 00:12:58 So how can companies do the right thing of using all of this kind of new technology and tools they have available to them? But it seems like when companies are using the latest technology, they always want to have a plan. They always want to have a strategic vision. So how do you kind of balance the two and not fall? into that trap that we're kind of talking about? So a couple of things. One, approach it holistically and then also approach it strategically. So when you think of AI and all of the benefits and the value that AI powered solutions
Starting point is 00:13:33 promise, they, for the most part, they revolve around three things. Number one is enabling data-driven decisions because of the amount of data analysis and that you can actually, and the insights that you can get from good data analysis. So, enabling data-driven decisions, differentiating customer experiences, and also optimizing your operational efficiency. Between these three pillars, this is really what AI-powered solutions for right now.
Starting point is 00:14:04 We're in 2024. Those are the three pillars in which AI is really promising a lot of value. So when companies understand these three pillars, then we have the second thing, which is approach it strategically. The idea is if you put park AI for a second, park it aside for a second, you need to go back to the North Star for your organization. What's the strategy? What is it that you're actually hoping to be for your customers in the short, mid, and long term?
Starting point is 00:14:39 So you should have your corporate level strategy when you really are focused at that level, on growth and business model that's going to enable that growth. And then the idea is when you use the strategy cascade, you go down to a business level strategy, you decide on how you want to differentiate or be a cost leader, and then you come to the functional level strategy, and that's when you actually say, okay, in order for me to enable the growth,
Starting point is 00:15:06 in order for me to be the next Rolex or the next Walmart, what are the building blocks for these competitive advantages? And technically you have one of four, efficiency, innovation, customer responsiveness, and quality. So what CEOs and VPs need to understand is where AI fits. AI can enable one of these building blocks. And so to approach AI strategically, the idea is to understand exactly what you need to get out of this technology as a company, regardless to the technology, what is it that you want to deliver? That's number one.
Starting point is 00:15:46 And the number two, understand where AI can help you. And then three, integrate AI into the strategic plan. And in that, that's when you actually have a, should have a specific objective for AI. And then you would actually manage it, just like you manage any other project. If you say, I will develop an AI strategy. and I will identify use cases to leverage AI, you're really approaching it from the opposite end. And what's going to happen is if we pick on the automotive industry,
Starting point is 00:16:22 they end up falling in the same trap they fell into when mobility, for instance, was the thing to go after five or seven years ago. Adobe just introduced an entirely new way to create, bringing the power and precision of its creative suite into one conversational experience. Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in the Adobe Firefly app, the all-in-one creative AI studio. Powered by Adobe's Creative Agent, Firefly AI Assistant lets you start with your vision, just
Starting point is 00:16:59 describe what you want, and shape the outcome as it takes form with the Assistant. The Assistant orchestrates multi-step workflows, drawing on 60-plus pro-grade tools across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Illustrator, Premier, Lightroom Express, and Lercing and more to help bring your ideas to life. You can also get started with creative skills, a growing library of pre-built workflows for common creative tasks, like batch editing photos, creating mood boards, portrait retouching, and creating social variations.
Starting point is 00:17:31 Every step the assistant takes is visible, so you can refine, redirect, or take over at any time. You stay in the driver's seat as the creative director. Adobe Firefly AI assistant now in public beta. See it today at FireWRefi. fly.adobie.com. You know, a lot of good takeaways there. This is one of those, y'all, like, you have to go read today's newsletter because Hanan's
Starting point is 00:17:58 is dropping, like, books of knowledge on top of our heads. So we're going to be distilling it all. Don't worry. My notes are going crazy over here. So one thing, though, I'm curious about is I think companies, especially when we talk about, you know, C-suite, decision makers, they've been rewarded over the past couple of decades for taking a very methodical approach to technology, right? Companies first had an Internet strategy, right?
Starting point is 00:18:26 And then they, you know, probably had a mobile strategy, a cloud strategy. And they had time, right? They had sometimes many years or a decade or more, right, to fully develop and implement a strategy. So is maybe the danger or the pitfall, you know, I know we talked about, hey, AI, you know, you can't think of it as just a tool, but how? much of it is also the pace or the speed of development that could make, you know, taking a slower approach actually maybe a disastrous strategy. So, and so I'll share with you my viewpoint that really don't represent any entity.
Starting point is 00:19:09 These are just my viewpoints as an academic practitioner. the pace at which AI space is evolving is at an exponential level. If any company think that it would actually keep up, probably they will not be able to keep up. So the idea is really to be focused and targeted at exactly what is it that you need to get out of AI. So we also a lot of times teach the signals that companies actually actually. receive from their macro environment.
Starting point is 00:19:46 Right now, relative to the AI space, there are a lot of signals. If any company actually chases all of the signals, it will really land on nothing. The idea is to be really focused. Focus on the specific AI-related signals that you think will help you enable your vision as a company. And therefore, taking a slower approach,
Starting point is 00:20:11 more focused approach, more calculated approach towards AI, would actually serve a lot of the companies in the long run, as opposed to chasing the next shiny thing. There's also, and it probably might sound a little bit too bold for most, when you think of the composition of most boards, especially for mature organizations, very respectfully, you are talking about people in their mid-50s, if not 60s, naturally by default, this isn't really the crowd that you would associate to be super up to speed
Starting point is 00:20:49 with the latest technologies out there or what we can get from them. So we're not really calling for dismantling our board compositions, but what we're saying is there is a legitimate need for education, right? So you need to educate, you need to coach, especially those people in senior executives, executive positions on the benefits of really approaching AI strategically, taking a slower pace at AI as opposed to chasing every single Chinese signal around AI, because that's really going to leave them with with nothing likely. Yeah, that's a great point that you bring up there that a lot of times, you know,
Starting point is 00:21:36 whoever may be steering the ship might not really care. They might be on their way out or they might be. just have an old archaic way of thinking, which I think is an important call out to make. One thing that I always see, right, we do a lot of consulting for a small, medium, large enterprises. And a lot of times, decision makers will just kind of want to sprinkle some, some AI on something, right? They see a huge problem within their organization, customer experience, sales, marketing, whatever, and they just kind of want to sprinkle some magic AI dust on this. Is that something that you see? Our companies,
Starting point is 00:22:11 just looking at AI as just this magical solution for everything? Oh, yeah. So it's what I call AI washing. Very similar to what we call. And unfortunately so, what companies still go through when it comes to like greenwashing. AI washing is when you send your paper to the board and it actually has an AI strategy or an AI, you know, projects or deliverables and whatnot. truthfully though, there isn't really a lot of substance.
Starting point is 00:22:47 So that's really what AI washing is, is when you apply the term AI onto projects, onto deliverables so that you say, yes, I'm using AI. Yes, AI is going to help me achieve aviancy. One thing that companies are actually doing correctly with AI is really around the operational efficiency, right? So, yes, they are leveraging in isolated pockets. They are leveraging AI to automate some manual processes, and therefore they are gaining some value from, from optimizing some labor hours, but these are still in isolated pockets, and they're not really strategically well-threaded with the rest of the organization. So that's kind of the AI washing that we're seeing
Starting point is 00:23:37 very similar to a lot of washing that the companies have done, whether it's the greenwashing or the mobility washing. It's what you call like this, you know, adding AI sprinkles to the, to the business plan, essentially. You know, one other aspect I see a lot. And, you know, I'm curious if you see this as well is, you know, big organizations, right? Like I've worked with and talked with outside of this show, you know, some of the largest companies in the world. And sometimes I'm shocked because they'll be devoting a lot of resources to, you know, maybe fine-tuning their own large language model, you know, rag, bringing in their, you know, all of their data in-house, all of these great things. But then they also don't even understand maybe how a large
Starting point is 00:24:25 language model works. And they don't even necessarily try to understand or investigate, really, the science behind these kind of magical models, right? Is maybe part of this not understanding what's going on under the hood that can actually be a trap or a strategic disadvantage? Absolutely. And rightfully so, AI is a fairly complex field. If you try to even explain how deep learning works and if you try to use an analysis, of how neural networks work and how that thought process kind of that's really the cornerstone
Starting point is 00:25:07 of deep learning. That concept in of itself is not very, it's not an easily digestible concept. And so AI as a field, as a science field, is a complex field. So when you add the complexity of it, the pace at which it's evolving, all of these things make it a, not very easily digestible, not very easily understood, and therefore, it does require a lot of effort, a lot of serious effort to actually understand what it is and what is it about AI that can actually help your organization achieve. It's not a straightforward science, and therefore, yes, it makes it a lot easier for companies to actually make the common mistakes that we see them make. A great, a great question here from our audience. Cecilia asking, so as,
Starting point is 00:26:08 as you teach CEOs, you teach create their strategies, do you have them focus on mission first and include stakeholder management of all the types of stakeholders internal and external and then how? Oh yeah, of course. So you start with your vision many, many years ago. We taught the the shareholder view of the enterprise. We walked away from this. And now it's the stakeholder view of the enterprise, which is a holistic understanding of what all of your various stakeholders look and care about when it comes to your organization. So that's a that's a no regret move. To start with your vision and mission, that's also on no regret move, independent of the technology. So the idea is you need to understand what your company is wanting to achieve, and then two, what something like
Starting point is 00:27:05 AI as a field can help you achieve, and then plug it exactly where it needs to be plugged in in your organization. And that's one thing that we try to educate the CEOs and the VP, you know, the people in that C-suite. The other things that we try to educate them on is really a good understanding of the real value, tangible and intangible value of AI. But your, you're spawn on. You start with your vision and mission, a stakeholder view of your enterprise, and then understand how something like AI can actually help you even get further. You should always strive to achieve your North Star. Your North Star should not change because of AI. You need AI to help you to get to a North Star faster, maybe,
Starting point is 00:27:59 but it shouldn't be the other way around. Hanan, earlier in the conversation, you kind of talked about this, approaching it holistically and strategically, and then you kind of broke it down into these three main pillars, right? Data-driven decisions, differentiating customer experiences, and optimizing organizational efficiency.
Starting point is 00:28:19 So on that third piece, that seems what so much of AI, quote unquote, strategy focuses around, right? Like how can we maybe do more with less? It seems like that ultimately goes to the conversation of AI in jobs, right? Like it's just a natural kind of cause, cause effect. Is that a problem? Are maybe decision makers spending too much time focusing on efficiency or about, oh, maybe we don't have to, you know, hire as many people now? Is that maybe a problem? And is it creating maybe too much fear around AI implementation or strategy? It is. It is. Absolutely. First of all, it's a low-hanging fruit. It's the easiest use case to leverage AI. It's not a bad use case. But when all of the
Starting point is 00:29:12 research is essentially telling us right now, when you think of the automation and the value that you get from automating manual processes, it's about 30%. 30% is not high enough to actually replace workforce, knowing that no one employee does just a single task. So it's a longing and fruit. It's a good use case. And it's probably the most common use cases that we see large organizations go after when they talk about AI or any AI powered solution. The idea, though, is to when you approach it holistically. And you say, okay, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've just enabled my team to leverage this AI powered solution and they've saved 30, 25, 30% of their time. To be a responsible C-suite, the idea is what can you do with the employment efficiency that you just gained with transparency
Starting point is 00:30:14 and clear communication for your workforce, educating them and that the fact that AI is not there to replace their job because you really don't want to create that reluctance and see for your workforce to actually leverage it. You want to, you want them to perceive AI as a thought partner as really a partner for future development. And so great, they've automated their manual processes. They've actually gained few hours from their day. To approach this responsibly, the idea is to understand how can you now utilize this gain in the efficient. What can you do with the employment efficiency that you just gained? Are you going to upskill them? Are you going to allocate, carve out some time to actually have them go for even more advanced features? But to actually stop at AI is going to save 30% of your time. That's just half of the story. But like you said, it's a low-hanging fruit. It's a very common use case. but C-suite professionals and executive seniors and leadership positions,
Starting point is 00:31:28 they really need to think beyond the 30% gain in operational efficiency. About more than efficiency, right? That's what we always focus on. So, Hanan, we've covered so much in today's episode. This should be required listening for everyone, I believe. But as we wrap up, what is maybe the one important takeaway? or maybe one next step, you know, for decision makers out there who have maybe been spending so much time and potentially wasting time thinking of a long-term AI strategy.
Starting point is 00:32:02 What is your one piece of advice for them to still leverage AI without falling into those big mistakes and traps that we talked about earlier? Yeah, a couple of things. Number one, reconsider your lens through this AI strategy. It's not the right ones. And the number two, when you do this, try to integrate it into the strategic planning process for your organization so that you understand exactly where it fits as opposed to chasing it as a standalone strategy. Love to hear it. That is great advice from someone that is already teaching the business leaders of today, how to prepare for tomorrow.
Starting point is 00:32:45 So Hanan, thank you so much for joining the Everyday AI show. We really appreciate your time. Thank you for having me. And hey, as a reminder, everyone, yeah, that was a lot. So much knowledge that just got dropped on our heads. It's like we need a hard hat. So make sure if you haven't already, go to your everyday AI.com. Sign up for that free daily newsletter.
Starting point is 00:33:06 We'll be recapping today's show and a whole lot more. Thank you for joining us. Please join us tomorrow. Join us. I'll see you tomorrow and every day for more Everyday AI. Thanks, y'all. Meet Firefly AI Assistant. Now live in Adobe Firefly, the Allman One Creative AI Studio.
Starting point is 00:33:29 Just describe what you want to create in your own words and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step workflows across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface. You direct the outcome while the assistant accelerates execution. Stand control with the ability to step in and refine at any time. See it today at firefly.adobie.com. And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI. Thanks for joining us.
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