Start with proprietary data. For a start-up considering taking the long journey to building an enterprise software company, it is imperative to have a relevant and hard to replicate data set. There are several ways start-ups tackle this problem. The first way is to convince a Charter Customer to provide their operational data in exchange for an economic incentive for being the Charter Customer (Tensility’s 2DA Analytics did this to get started). The second way is to devise a strategy to gather and create your own data set. This is particularly useful if the process or behavior you are trying to model is not stored in any enterprise operational systems (Tensility’s Triggr Health is a good example of this path). A third way is to leverage research sponsored projects in exchange for an economic incentive (Tensility’s Health DataLink proved out their product in this fashion). Other less valuable ways to gain access to data, such as procurement of 3rd party data services or gathering publicly available sources, lead to unattractive start-ups because the primary data set can be easily replicated. Develop models to frame and validate the size of the problem. Leverage open source AI platforms to show your models are valid and provide the proper amount of predictive and/or prescriptive results. Problems requiring ML and Deep Learning platforms can utilize Google’s Tensorflow, Caffe from UC Berkeley, Microsoft’s CNTK, Tencent’s Angel, Baidu’s PaddlePaddle or MXNet by AWS/Baidu/CMU. For Natural Language Processing problems, open source projects like NLTK, TextBlob, Gensim or spaCy are good places to start. The goal of this effort is to develop a set of tested results that can be shown to knowledgeable prospects. This feedback will ensure you are headed in the right direction of solving a high value problem (Tensility’s Genivity did an outstanding job at this). Design the workflow. A well-designed AI solution will have the ability to modify the current workflow in the enterprise and thereby realize the full potential of providing new capabilities to enterprise workers. Start-ups should map out the current workflow and roles of current users, then creatively and collaboratively move to a re-engineered workflow. The new workflow is likely to start with a “human in the loop” process to help the enterprise understand how and why the AI system works better than status quo. Use good UI design to help with adoption. There will be some skeptics in the enterprise regarding using an AI solution. Good product design should identify the limitations and opportunities the enterprise has in making decisions currently. The UI design should provide visibility into data integrity, scenarios and reasonability testing by key potential users to improve adoption. AI start-ups that integrate these four elements into their product design are likely to be more successful and require less risk capital to get started.
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Online consumer companies, including Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, and Google (FANG), have embraced Artificial Intelligence (AI) to deliver individualized, satisfying customer experiences. As a result, FANG has gained tremendous market dominance, exhibited above average revenue growth, and been rewarded with high market capitalization. The adoption of AI by the enterprise will unlock similar results for all companies in all industries. AI in the enterprise enables faster and better decisions, promotes creativity, and increases productivity. Empowering employees to prioritize, optimize, and respond to high value work streams and processes, like customer leads, sales pipelines, security threats, and patient outcomes (to name a few), at an unprecedented scale brings significant competitive advantages to the enterprise. In effect, AI brings “super-powers” to employees to enhance their abilities at a scale that has never been possible. The learning capabilities inherent to AI, using machine learning and deep learning and other methods, will allow enterprises to quickly adapt to changing business situations. AI learning goes beyond older approaches of programmatic rules in systems, and instead uses statistical methods or algorithms to automatically detect and articulate complex patterns within data that changes over time. This approach to learning leads to applications that can predict future outcomes and thereby make recommendations. The outcome for enterprises that embrace AI will be a massive increase in productivity and wealth creation. Cloud technology and decreasing storage and computing costs make AI methods commercially viable today, therby ushering in the AI economy for investors, unlocking a $3T dollar[1]opportunity of incremental income and wealth creation. [1] Nicolaus Henke, Jacques Bughin, Michael Chui, James Manyika, Tamim Saleh, Bill Wiseman, and Guru Sethupathy. “The Age of Analytics: Competing in a Data-driven World.” McKinsey & Company. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Apr. 2017. |
AuthorArmando and Wayne Archives
April 2023
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