In my last blog, “ Three questions we need to ask about AI in the workplace,” I considered how Artificial Intelligence (AI) and robotics is perceived in popular culture...
Three questions we need to ask about AI in the workplace
1. If machines develop feelings, how will employers deal with them?
A common issue in popular AI stories is that we don’t value or respect synth ‘life’ in the same way that we do human life. If machines evolve to the point that they have feelings, how will we address their individual needs? Will the term human resources (HR) become outdated as it excludes the needs of “non-human employees”?2. Will we need to pay humanoid machines?
In the same vein as the above question, how equal will synths be? There is a lot of concern about the inequality AI could inequality could foster by providing a presumably cheaper alternative to human employees. So, will businesses actually ‘pay’ their synth employees? If so, would it be a direct payment to the AI manufacturer, a government tax or would there be some way to reward the AI machine itself?3. How would we track their progress?
How career-focused will machines be? Will they learn the concept of excelling at simpler tasks and earning further responsibility? Would a machine need a ‘line manager’ to assess it is performing and whether it deserves a promotion? If so, would its line manage be a human or another machine, like an outsourced arm of the manufacturer who could re-programme the AI and upgrade its ability. Great power, great responsibility These are but a few of the questions we would need to think about if the dystopian vision of Humans were to ever come true. While this, for me, is a fun way of looking at employee relations through a totally different lens, there is a serious takeaway from this. Businesses, like humans, can use AI to improve almost anything and everything. It requires a clear strategy and an understanding that, to quote a very different work of fiction, Spiderman, “with great power comes great responsibility”. My prediction is that AI will be as useful, predictable and inherently “good” as humans and businesses make it to be. In reality, it’s completely up to us. Read more about preparing employees for the digital-first workplace here.Leaders In Our Own Right
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