The long nose
Wire Elephant sculpture at the Tower of London by Kendra Haste. Photograph by the author.

The long nose

We all know how simple organisational change is to execute, right? It's simple stuff. Tell people what they need to do in a clear and concise fashion, and then they will take on board the new ways of working and adopt them quickly.

And... back in the room.

There's an odd thing going on at the moment. Boosters and pessimists claim we are on the precipice of unimaginable change. Artificial Intelligence is about to change the world.

And yet all is not as it seems.

I think we are witnessing two "long noses".

The first is nearly at the end. It's the long nose of the development of artificial intelligence technologies that have had a growth phase in the last decade, and particularly in the last few years, but have been in gestation for decades. They've been creeping in without us really noticing (Google Translate, for example. Or Grammarly. Or tools like Shazam.)

But more recently we have seen a spectacular increase in marketing of these tools to herald the arrival of ChatGPT and Midjourney and Bard. Tools that do the impossible. Or at least do things that we thought were impossible to do with computers until it was realised that if you chuck enough computing power at a problem then computers can do them.

Impressive tools, undoubtedly. But so was Excel when it came along.

Here begins the second long nose—the long nose of adoption. Real adoption.

The comparison with Excel is informative. Whilst most office workers probably can find their way around the spreadsheet tool, there are few "power" users with most either using it as determined by others through corporate templates and proforma, as a very rudimentary database, or as a place for occasional calculation.

However, Excel's strength is the autonomy and agency it gives to its users. It's the tool by which all the cracks within corporate systems are filled, and many gaps are bridged with it, too. Much, often, to the chagrin of the IT department, who can't figure out why people won't just use the tools that have been mandated for managing money, customers, parts, tools, people...

Generative tools can become the knowledge worker Polyfilla of the 21st Century. That stickiness is gold dust for software manufacturers. No organisation could credibly remove spreadsheets from its software estate because spreadsheets are where so much of the "real" work happens.

Is that good for software organisations? For sure. Lock in and the opportunity to drive revenue because of the huge compute resources that many of these tools demand (it's all about selling compute these days my friends) is a wonderful thing.

Is that good for the customers? Hmm.

Has Excel been good for organisations?

My hunch is that the answer is "Probably".

But we are at the beginning of the long nose of adoption. Because, as I noted up front, this sort of change takes time. And it will happen at different rates for different people in different organisations. Many people do a lot of things very manually in Excel, five decades since spreadsheet tools first appeared in our businesses.

As with all technology hypes, expectations in the short term are being massively overhyped, but the really interesting stuff will happen in the long term.

In 2007 the iPhone was introduced. By 2010 the world hadn't changed much. By 2024 it's shifted dramatically. But not everyone has shifted at the same pace. I imagine we'll see a similar path with generative AI.

Matt Desmier

Helping businesses solve issues and exploit opportunities.

9 个月

Did you participate in Henry's workshop Matt? He's bringing it to Bournemouth next week...

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Matt Ballantine的更多文章

  • The Information Horseless Carriage

    The Information Horseless Carriage

    When new technologies come along, we tend to frame them in the context of what we know. It can take a very long time to…

    1 条评论
  • Finding cars to follow

    Finding cars to follow

    This is my favourite book. It's not the best book I've ever read, but it's not bad.

    5 条评论
  • International English

    International English

    The week before last, I was part of a team that ran a reasonably successful event for executives in the Netherlands. I…

    16 条评论
  • Part bicycle

    Part bicycle

    In Flann o'Brien's amazing surrealist novel The Third Policeman, one of the running jokes is that as a result of "The…

    5 条评论
  • LLMs wrote my PowerPoint*

    LLMs wrote my PowerPoint*

    This week, I put the final touches on my first big public talk, which stems from the work on the book about randomness.…

    3 条评论
  • The 4Cs of Computing

    The 4Cs of Computing

    I'll be turning 54 next month. I know, I barely look a day over 52.

  • 3 facets of a successful product

    3 facets of a successful product

    This post comes from a chance conversation I had last week with my esteemed colleague David Hamilton..

  • AI - hallucinating for millennia

    AI - hallucinating for millennia

    At the recent Nudgestock event, Rory Sutherland uttered a throwaway line about how organizational decision-making…

    1 条评论
  • Unintuitive

    Unintuitive

    Many years ago, when working at the then commercial arm of the BBC, I came across an interesting issue of how intuitive…

    3 条评论
  • Minimum Viability

    Minimum Viability

    One of the most misunderstood product development concepts I see in organisations is that of the Minimum Viable…

    9 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了