AI Automation – Lauren Maffeo
Finding Genius Podcast
Richard Jacobs
4.4 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 11 July 2018
⏱️ 24 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Bio: Lauren Maffeo has reported on and worked within the global technology sector. She started her career as a freelance journalist covering tech trends for The Guardian and The Next Web from London. Today, she works as a senior content analyst at GetApp (a Gartner company), where she covers the impact of emerging tech like AI and blockchain on small and midsize business owners. Lauren's research and writing have been cited by sources including Forbes, Fox Business, The Atlantic, and Inc.com. She has spoken at events including Gartner's Symposium in Florida, The Global Talent Summit at ETH Zurich in Switzerland, Women Techmakers Montreal in Canada, and Mashable's Social Media Day. In 2017, Lauren was named to The Drum's 50 Under 30 list of women worth watching in digital. That same year, she helped organize Women Startup Challenge Europe, which was the continent's largest venture capital competition for women-led startups.
Lauren Maffeo holds a certificate in Artificial Intelligence: Implications for Business Strategy from MIT's Sloan School of Management. She has consulted and reported as a senior content analyst for GetApp, covering the influence of various emerging technologies, such as blockchain and artificial intelligence, on small to midsize businesses. Maffeo has extensively studied machine learning, natural language processing, and robotics.
Maffeo discusses how the perception of AI can sometimes be that it is a monolithic entity devoid of humanity, but in fact, AI has a significant swath of use cases that make it ideal for many human-powered, customer service oriented businesses. Maffeo states that AI is often best when introduced alongside human workers to enhance the overall workflow. Many businesses state that they simply don't have the staffing necessary to implement AI projects, while others state that they have difficulty in defining their overall AI strategy. Still, other businesses state that they are unsure of how to get started with AI altogether. Ultimately, at current, AI is touted as a transformative tool, but hype aside, some businesses are simply struggling to understand how to best utilize it.
The technology consultant outlines some of the aspects of AI that will become more advanced and specialized in the coming years, such as AI's social perception and context. While automation with AI will facilitate many industries, such as construction or other industrial types, Maffeo states that the perception of AI taking jobs from human workers is skewed. In fact, in many industries, it is a lack of available human workers that is spurring the advent of AI in certain workplaces.
Maffeo discusses the potential impediments to complete implementation of AI in a wider scope. Cost would be an issue, but even before the consideration of cost, there are some other issues to consider. The topic of 'use cases,' essentially knowing how AI can be used effectively, is a fundamental issue. The need for quality data scientists is also a critical issue—to regulate data in an AI system to ensure that it is healthy, unbiased data. Additionally, high-level architects that are capable of building networks become an issue simply because they are in demand but are not readily available.
Maffeo provides further insight into some of the areas of AI that will proliferate. Innovations in advanced AI such as chatbots will be a growing industry in the coming years. Predictions indicate that as many as 10% of new IT hires will be tasked with writing bot scripts as chatbots become ubiquitous in online commerce. Machine learning will allow chatbots to interface with customers at an advanced level as chatbots can access a wealth of data about the user. And although current data demonstrate that the majority of people prefer a human interaction, as AI refines the chatbot experience the expectation is that users will acclimate to the advancing technology.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to Almost Here, Around the Corner of Future Technology Podcasts with Richard Jacobs. |
| 0:07.0 | Future Technologies is to transform our lives for better or worse or the focus of this podcast. |
| 0:13.0 | Almost here means these technologies are now here and starting to be used. |
| 0:17.0 | Or just around the corner, for Bitcoin to artificial intelligence, |
| 0:21.0 | 3D printing, blockchain, virtual reality, and more. |
| 0:25.0 | Hello this is Richard Jacobs with FutureTech Podcast. My guest today is Lauren |
| 0:31.6 | Mepheo. She's coming out of MIT. We'll be talking about how |
| 0:35.2 | AI is going to be disrupting business, current and future. So Lauren, how are you doing? |
| 0:40.1 | I'm doing well. Thanks for having me. Yeah. Tell me a little bit about yourself and your background and then the work you're working on right now. |
| 0:46.2 | Sure. I don't actually have a highly technical background and so if you had asked me when I was in college if I would be working with artificial |
| 0:56.0 | intelligence at all I wouldn't have even known how to answer the question because I didn't know at that time |
| 1:02.4 | really much about what |
| 1:04.4 | artificial intelligence was. I went to college with intent to become a |
| 1:10.0 | journalist hopefully in broadcasting when I graduated and so I oriented everything |
| 1:15.1 | from my college major to my internships around that goal. I was a radio |
| 1:20.5 | reporter for a while for a DC news station and I got to |
| 1:24.2 | intern at a TV station in New York. So I really tried to hone my writing and |
| 1:30.2 | reading skills as much as possible so that I could go into that career. |
| 1:34.0 | Unfortunately, my college graduation coincided not only with the hump of the global |
| 1:40.7 | recession, but both of those things coincided with a decline in ad revenue |
| 1:46.2 | within the news industry and that had a huge impact on jobs. |
| 1:49.9 | So one thing led to another and I ended up going to graduate school at the |
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