Working with chatbots and AI: The future for your job
Working with chatbots and AI: The future for your job
Talking to a
chatbot, working with an intelligent assistant and
augmenting your role with various other artificial
intelligence (AI) systems will become standard components of
your job as the implementation of automation continues to
ramp up, says recruiting experts Hays.
Intelligent assistants are already used in our personal lives, and organisations are now exploring how they can take advantage of these technologies in the workplace. But while they can streamline many processes, such technologies also bring challenges, according to Hays in its recent Hays Journal.
“Many of us think nothing of speaking into a device and asking it to add an item to a shopping list or play a song we cannot remember the title of,” says Jason Walker, Managing Director of Hays in New Zealand. “We understand that when companies use Facebook Messenger or Twitter to communicate with us, we’re really ‘talking’ to a chatbot, not a human being.
“Now AI is set to make a big impact in the world of work.”
AI is already growing in use across some sectors: 38 per cent of 10,400 respondents from 140 countries surveyed for 2017 Deloitte Human Capital Trends research said they are already using AI in their workplace, and 62 per cent expect to do so by 2018. A third of employees surveyed said they think their jobs will be augmented by AI in the future.
The challenge for employees, says Jason, is that many will need to upskill in digital literacy, while for organisations the cost of implementing such systems is high.
As for the initial changes to the way we work, Hays shares the following insights:
1. 1. Automation of repetitive
tasks: Repetitive task based work can soon be
expected to become automated, freeing up valuable time and
allowing workers to concentrate on other areas of their
role.
2. 2. Automated self-service:
Machine learning chatbots that recognise speech and
text-based conversation will be used to respond to HR
queries from workers.
3. 3. Intelligent
assistants: Intelligent assistants could help to
process large amounts of data to provide businesses with
information, allowing workers to make better informed
decisions.
4. 4. Learning & development:
Algorithms could identify an employee’s area of
learning and where their skills could be
strengthened.
5. 5. Identify passive
jobseekers: Machine learning also has the potential
to detect passive candidates by means of their online
behaviour.
“Chatbots and the use of AI for internal
communication is definitely on the rise and, apart from the
automation of repetitive tasks, this is where we expect
people to see the greatest initial impact of AI systems in
their daily jobs,” Jason explains. “HR and payroll are
obvious areas where we can expect this technology to be
implemented initially.”
This issue is explored further
in the latest Hays Journal.
Hays, the world’s
leading recruiting experts in qualified, professional and
skilled people.
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