Artificial intelligence
fromZDNET
2 days agoBuilding an agentic AI strategy that pays off - without risking business failure
Not all agentic AI tools are effective; poor prompts and rogue agents can lead to significant failures.
Decathlon's Portugal warehouse doubled its order preparation capacity from 57,000 to 114,000, showcasing the significant impact of Exotec's robotic systems on productivity.
AI could have significant upsides for productivity, but countries will first have to navigate a complicated and expensive landscape as they create digital infrastructure and support disrupted workforces. For countries that already deal with constrained public finances, AI's capital costs could end up sharpening the policy trade-off between assuming higher near-term fiscal risk and delaying participation in AI-driven growth opportunities.
We're not making this decision because we're in trouble. Our business is strong. Gross profit continues to grow, we continue to serve more and more customers, and profitability is improving. But something has changed. AI is unlocking a new way of working with smaller and flatter teams.
A significantly smaller team using the tools we're building can do more and do it better. And intelligence tool capabilities are compounding faster every single week. Something happened in December last year where the models just got an order of magnitude more capable and more intelligent.
'There could be a little bit of, almost, quiet time in the labor market,' Hassett told show host Joe Kernen, 'Because firms are finding that AI is making their workers so productive that they don't necessarily have to hire the new kids out of college and so on.' Hasset, however, maintains the position that AI will eventually create more jobs in the long run.
If firms face a costly adaptation process for automation to replace workers, then the cost of adjustment comes down during recessions when the opportunity cost of not producing is relatively low.