Where are people being successful with AI in the workplace today?
This page is part of The Workplace AI Strategy Guide
This page is part of a step-by-step guide to Workplace AI strategy, which I'm currently in the process of writing. I'm creating it like an interactive online book. The full table of contents is on the left (or use the menu if you're on a mobile device).
What's this guide all about? Check out the intro or full table of contents.
Want to stay updated when this guide is updated or things are added? There's an RSS feed specifically for strategy guide content. RSS feed for guide updates .
This page is incomplete!
This page is part of my step-by-step guide to Workplace AI, which I'm in the process of writing. I'm doing it in the open, which allows people to see it and provide feedback early. However many of the pages are just initial brain dumps, bullets, random notes, and/or incomplete.
There's an overview of what I'm trying to accomplish on the "What is this site about?" page.
Want to stay updated pages get major updates or things are added? I have a news feed specifically for guide content here: RSS feed for guide updates .
—Brian (July 2024)
Random lists of things to cover in this chapter:
I want to look at anecdotes, of things random employees are doing on their own. But also link to the excellent resources out there which walk people through more details.
This guide will never be a guide to show all the ways people can use AI. That’s not my purpose, and other people are much more knowledgeable in that area anyway.
Instead I want to look at the approaches people take which are successful. (And the approaches which are not successful.)
A lot of this will focus on how AI is changing fast, so you can’t run this like a traditional IT project. It has to be agile, iterative, and really more of a change in how you think about technology adoption.
A lot can come from the employees themselves, both functionally and technically.