36% of executives say their primary goal for AI is to optimize internal business operations according to Harvard Business Review.
AI is coming, though not in the apocalyptic, Skynet, get-off-the-grid, “the machines are going to rise up and use us as batteries” way we feared because of the Terminator and Matrix franchises. In fact, for most people, AI is already a part of your daily life. If you use Siri, Google Assistant, or Alexa, if you shop on Amazon or subscribe to Netflix, if you have Nest or Ring, or if you are on Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube or Google, you’re already benefitting from AI.
AI, or artificial intelligence, is the science of making machines smart. When machines are fed data and then allowed to create their own algorithms to make choices based on that data, a concept called machine learning, it opens amazing possibilities. Machines can take vast amounts of data and analyze it in ways that can help humans make better choices.
For instance, if you tend to watch certain types of movies, Netflix can take that data and suggest other titles you might like based on past viewing. If you can talk into a device AI interprets your words into meaningful suggestions, like a restaurant to go to or music to listen to. Or you can enable a self-driving car to interpret what it “sees” around it and respond accordingly.
Big companies with more resources readily use AI to create opportunities and give them a competitive advantage, but how can this be applied to smaller companies? If you are in a small business, you may wear a lot of hats like marketing, HR, accounting, and IT. With AI, the time and money you spend on those things can be minimized considerably while using more data to make better decisions.
These solutions are built with small businesses in mind, and some even have a free version of their services as you are just starting out and exploring their use. And they are just a few of the possible applications using AI, with more being developed every year. As AI continues to evolve, its use will be critical for small businesses to leverage to be competitive in the market. By embracing some of these early on, you can start to integrate it into your business so that you can stay relevant.