Taking Wayne Gretzky's famous advice—"skate to where the puck is going, not where it has been"—will get easier for businesses that embrace artificial intelligence (AI). That's the conclusion I drew from a sold-out event entitled, From Big Data to Deep Learning: How Business is Embracing Artificial Intelligence hosted at Bennett Jones. The event featured a stellar panel discussing the impact of AI on business and society. It was moderated by Deepa Kundur, chair of the Division of Engineering Science and professor and director of the Centre for Power & Information, in The Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering at the University of Toronto. Panel members were:
So how is a well-known quote about hockey relevant to AI? As Goldfarb put it, AI lowers the cost of prediction. AI allows massive amounts of data to be analyzed much more quickly and cheaply than humans can, meaning that making predictions based on experience data is much easier. That allows business to make better strategic and tactical decisions, or in hockey terms, to get their people and capital skating to where the opportunity is going to be, not where it has been in the past.
The panel was optimistic about prospects for humans in the AI era. Saarenvirta, whose company Daisy Intelligence is a leader in using artificial intelligence to assist retailers to make smarter operational decisions, noted that AI reduces the weekly burden on grocers of deciding what products to promote and what inventory to stock. This frees up their human talent for value-added tasks, including those that require human intuition.
And while there will be dislocations for workers in occupations disrupted by AI, and those need to be carefully managed, we can take comfort that our economy has made these transitions before. Carolyn Wilkins, Senior Deputy Governor of the Bank of Canada, addressed the issues of AI and technological innovation in her April 18, 2017, speech to the Toronto Region Board of Trade. One of her themes in Blame it on the Machines? was about past technological advances that did not lead to a sustained rise in overall unemployment. To cite one example, Wilkins pointed out that a century ago, agriculture went from representing more than one-third of all jobs in Canada to less than two percent today, without creating a permanent jump in unemployment.
Artificial Intelligence holds the promise of making better decisions, faster and cheaper, than ever before and if Canadian businesses embrace it, the economy could get a Stanley Cup-sized win.
Claire Kennedy is the founder of BizSkule.