On a macro level, there’s obviously a lot of talk about AI and how agentic AI is going to takeover automation for businesses. But on a micro level, how are these tools built and actually implemented into businesses? Will it be centralized by product or do you think the ai tools will need to be tailored to each business’ specific workflow.
I’m currently working on a product for health clinics so would love your input.
Interesting and helpful insights. I have a question about no IV - is Ai navigating browsers/ apps and so on not likely to be a very temporary thing? These are great ways for humans to use computers but surely AI will find better ways to do thing?
I think there are enough custom apps / old interfaces that aren't API friendly but have UI that is human friendly in industries like healthcare, finance, insurance, etc that AI agents will have to learn them to reliably do that work. The same way we might see a world shortly where AI voice agents are calling other AI voice agents because phone calls is the way certain workflows are being done today and both sides start using AI.
Like everything hard to know - will definitely be true for a while but maybe not for long. On the other hand, finance and health systems have survived a long time without changing much
On a macro level, there’s obviously a lot of talk about AI and how agentic AI is going to takeover automation for businesses. But on a micro level, how are these tools built and actually implemented into businesses? Will it be centralized by product or do you think the ai tools will need to be tailored to each business’ specific workflow.
I’m currently working on a product for health clinics so would love your input.
Interesting and helpful insights. I have a question about no IV - is Ai navigating browsers/ apps and so on not likely to be a very temporary thing? These are great ways for humans to use computers but surely AI will find better ways to do thing?
I think there are enough custom apps / old interfaces that aren't API friendly but have UI that is human friendly in industries like healthcare, finance, insurance, etc that AI agents will have to learn them to reliably do that work. The same way we might see a world shortly where AI voice agents are calling other AI voice agents because phone calls is the way certain workflows are being done today and both sides start using AI.
Like everything hard to know - will definitely be true for a while but maybe not for long. On the other hand, finance and health systems have survived a long time without changing much