Artificial intelligence can offer competitive advantages, but it’s not easy to find the path without understanding how to overcome the challenges.

Guest Commentary, Guest Commentary

April 18, 2019

5 Min Read
Harsh Dhundia

Artificial intelligence will change the way we live, work and play. In the process, it will challenge existing businesses, create new ones and fundamentally shift the economy. There’s no shortage of reports on enterprises investing in AI, but there are relatively few details about lessons learned and what can be done to improve the design of those AI plans. Here are seven ways to overcome inherent technical challenges, organizational barriers and a lack of precedent for AI pilot programs:

1. Pick a high-impact business problem

Transformative AI initiatives with significant organizational and cultural barriers require sponsorship from the highest leadership levels  as they often take longer and are more complex. Start by addressing a high-impact problem that will not just get one-time executive sponsorship but ongoing executive engagement. This will also prevent the initiative from getting cut when the next budget crunch hits.

2. Understand feasible AI use cases

While headlines about the possibilities and consequences of AI abound, the reality is that current AI techniques still have several limitations. Consider an early feasibility assessment. Does the organization currently generate, store and analyze the types of data required by the machine-learning algorithm? Is the underlying process that will be improved already software-enabled? If the answer to both questions is no, chances are that even if machine learning offers potential benefits, the time and investment may not be worth the risk.

3. Know your use case and your data

Not all machine learning techniques are the same. A clear understanding of the use case and your data is imperative in picking the right machine-learning technique (or company/product). For instance, the algorithms required for targeted online advertising differ from those in healthcare. Similarly, if your use case requires extremely fast decision-making, such as applications that make real-time decisions, you must pick the appropriate algorithm. Additionally, if you’re thinking of purchasing and implementing an out-of-the-box AI capability, it’s imperative to understand what data the system was trained on and how that maps to your situation. For example, an AI capability trained on American healthcare studies may not be the best bet for a European healthcare use case.

4. Plan for IT infrastructure requirements

The IT infrastructure (network connectivity and computational power) required for machine learning applications as well as the infrastructure architecture are keys to AI success. IT infrastructure is also expensive, and once put in place, often can be hard to replace. For example, you may need to provide the ability to perform computations on a remote device (edge computing) versus centrally in the cloud (core computing). Think about what computations need to be performed and where to avoid nasty surprises later – both in terms of performance as well as the investment required for the infrastructure.

5. Assemble the right team

AI initiatives require cross-functional, multi-disciplinary teams to succeed. This includes team members who are developing the machine-learning system, members who understand the data, and those who act on the data and execute the process that will ultimately be improved. Change management and people-impact champions, project management and financial management requirements all need to be met. Compliance or enterprise risk-management team members are also critical to ensuring compliance risks are identified early in the process. Further, implementing a machine-learning system is not a one-time event. These systems need to be re-trained on an ongoing basis. Defining who is responsible for the ongoing training of the system at the very onset will help clarify organizational responsibilities and ensure that the ongoing costs associated with the training are kept in mind.

6. Ensure you have an appropriate contract

Unless you’re building an in-house team of machine-learning engineers, chances are that you are either purchasing a pre-packaged system or partnering with a vendor to develop one. However, AI is a statistical model that is closer to a service than subscription software. That means it is important to ensure that issues are appropriately addressed in your contract. For example, will your data be used to make the vendor’s product smarter? And will that smarter product then be sold to other customers? If yes, you’ll likely need to consider how to monetize your data as well as implications related to intellectual property. What are your criteria to accept the system as fully functioning? What is your recourse if the system doesn’t function as you’d expect it to? Who is responsible for ongoing training of the system? All these factors need to be addressed in the contract.

7. Be aware of brand and reputation risks and social impact

It is still early days for AI. Cautionary tales such as Microsoft’s AI chatbot tweeting offensive remarks should give organizations pause before introducing a public-facing AI. Additionally, recent research has highlighted the risks of biased data sets used for training and those of biases encoded (mostly inadvertently) into algorithms. The most cited example is that of facial recognition systems being error-prone when it comes to minorities since the training data set mostly contained images of light-skinned men. Countering algorithmic bias and its social impacts is now a big area of research. It’s important to consider what impact a bad recommendation/decision (or a series of skewed decisions resulting in a pattern) made by AI could have on your business.

AI has the potential to offer competitive advantages to businesses by offering previously unseen insights from data, increasing efficiency and supporting decision-making. It has become one of the top priorities for many organizations. However, AI initiatives face several challenges. Considering the above-discussed factors will increase their likelihood of success.

Harsh Dhundia is a Director at Pace Harmon with a background in delivering complex, large-scale business operations and IT transformations. 

 

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Guest Commentary

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