When I think of white collar workers, I think first of consultants.
Armed with MBAs and case studies, these consultants parachute into the biggest companies in the world to find efficiencies, sharpen strategy, and justify tough decisions.
There’s been a lot of talk recently around how AI might impact these kinds of so-called knowledge workers. That’s why I was fascinated to see the results of a study that gave hundreds of consultants access to AI.
The experiment involved 758 individual contributors at Boston Consulting Group. One group had no access to AI, and two groups were given access to GPT-4 with different approaches. The takeaways:
AI can be incredibly powerful. There were 18 consultant tasks where AI proved capable. Across these tasks, those using AI quite simply crushed it. They completed more tasks, completed their tasks more quickly, and the work was of a higher quality.
AI can’t do everything. For tasks deemed to be “outside the frontier” of what AI is capable of, those using it were significantly more likely to make mistakes than those not using AI.
AI benefits the lower performers most. Everyone using AI tools in the right places benefited, but it was the lower performers who did so most, allowing them to close the gap to their higher-performing peers.
The study supports earlier research that’s found AI increases productivity overall while elevating the less experienced and lower performers most.
The findings also hint at how AI might impact knowledge workers everywhere. After all, the management consultant advising your CEO might just have been a part of this study.
The IPO market saw further signs of life last week as Instacart and Klaviyo went public.
Instacart’s IPO might trigger mixed feelings for founder Apoorva Mehta, even if it did make him a billionaire. See who else made money from the IPO. Insider also mapped out the Instacart mafia who’ve raised millions for their own startups since leaving.
Over at Klaviyo, founder Andrew Bialecki built the company into an email titan by breaking all the norms. The IPO confirmed his status as a billionaire, and bolstered the wealth of many other high-profile investors.
So is the famed IPO window now open?
Trading in Instacart, Klaviyo, and Arm, which went public a week earlier, has been solid rather than spectacular. As one VC told Insider, the IPO window is neither closed nor fully open.
Instead, it’s “half cracked to get some fresh air.”
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This week’s top reads
Why we left Goldman Sachs
It’s one of the most prestigious jobs on Wall Street, but that hasn’t stopped people from walking away from the gig.
Making partner at Goldman Sachs is rarified air, with the group representing only 1% of the prestigious bank’s entire workforce. But Insider found at least 202 partners have left the firm during CEO David Solomon’s volatile five-year tenure. The bank, meanwhile, has pushed back on any whisper of a partner exodus.
Former partners detailed what led them to leave the high-profile role, with some pointing to the strategic missteps by Solomon.
The Federal Reserve’s attempt to get inflation under control is the equivalent of trying to catch a greased pig: Even when you think you have it in your grasp, it can still slip away.
And the longer the battle to tame inflation goes, the higher the risks are. The Fed is eyeing a soft landing whereby it addresses inflation while avoiding a recession. But if rate hikes persist, that becomes harder to navigate.
American consumers have proved to be resilient in their spending, but that won’t last forever.
It’s undeniable that destruction from extreme weather events like Hurricane Idalia is pricey, but try $2,615,000,000,000. That’s the total tab for the 371 extreme weather events in the US since 1980 that topped $1 billion in damage.
And the jarring figure doesn’t even include the mental and physical trauma people faced with these events endure
The hidden costs of these disasters also trickles down to all of us in the form of higher insurance premiums or taxes.
A longtime Microsoft vet is leaving for rival Amazon amid big changes to his unit.
Panos Panay, the tech giant’s chief product officer and a 20-year vet of the company, made a surprise exit. Panay is a creator of the company’s Surface line of laptops and tablets, and is the biggest name to switch between the two companies since Charlie Bell jumped to Microsoft.
Insiders pointed to changes in the Windows+ Devices division he oversaw, including budget and staff cuts and canceled products.
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