Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月22日
Is Your Board Ready for AI?
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随着生成式人工智能的快速发展,企业董事会正面临着巨大的机遇和挑战。一些董事会已经开始利用生成式AI来优化工作流程,例如准备董事会会议、模拟投资者行为以及风险管理等。然而,如果没有合适的AI治理,滥用生成式AI也可能带来风险,例如泄露敏感信息等。文章指出,董事会成员需要了解生成式AI的基本原理,并制定相应的安全政策和流程。此外,企业管理层需要向董事会清晰阐述生成式AI的应用场景和风险,并积极探索如何利用生成式AI来推动业务创新,甚至主动寻求颠覆自身业务的机会。

🤔 **董事会需要了解生成式AI的基本原理:** 许多董事会成员对生成式AI的理解还处于初级阶段,需要通过培训和学习了解其基本概念、应用场景以及潜在风险,才能更好地指导企业进行AI相关的决策。

⚠️ **AI治理至关重要:** 随着企业对生成式AI的应用日益广泛,建立完善的AI治理框架变得尤为重要,这包括制定安全政策、数据隐私保护措施以及风险管理流程,以避免潜在的风险和负面影响。

🚀 **管理层应主动引导董事会了解生成式AI的应用:** 管理层需要向董事会清晰阐述生成式AI在不同业务场景中的应用潜力,例如内容生成、个性化服务等,并制定相应的战略规划,引导董事会积极探索AI带来的创新机会。

💡 **主动寻求颠覆性创新:** 董事会应鼓励管理层从外部视角审视企业,思考如何利用生成式AI来颠覆自身业务,甚至创造新的商业模式,以保持企业在市场中的竞争优势。

⏳ **AI应用并非一蹴而就:** 企业需要认识到,AI应用是一个循序渐进的过程,不能期望短期内就能解决所有问题。需要做好数据准备、模型训练和应用场景选择等工作,才能充分发挥AI的价值。

There’s a growing disparity in organizations with boardrooms that are well versed in generative artificial intelligence and those that need to play catchup, warns Florian Rotar, chief AI officer at Avanade. “I’m a little bit worried that we’ll see this building divergence, and some will be left behind,” says Rotar, during a virtual conversation hosted by Fortune in partnership with Diligent for The Modern Board series.Avanade, an IT services and consulting firm, has worked with hundreds of organizations and in those conversations found some boardrooms are getting “quite sophisticated in terms of using AI themselves,” Rotar says. Some use cases that have been deployed include relying on generative AI to better prepare for board meetings, piloting and prototyping simulated activist investor exercises, and AI-enabled tabletop exercise to better plan for risks to the business. Risks without proper AI governanceBut as board members dive into applying generative AI to their workflows, it could present some risks to companies if the proper AI governance isn’t in place. That includes clear guidelines on how to adhere to safety, policies, and procedures without exposing sensitive company information. Over the past two years, employers have had to quickly set up policies about safe AI use, especially after the explosion of consumer interest in AI following the debut of chatbot ChatGPT.The thinking was that employees were going to use generative AI whether it was blessed by management or not, so HR and IT teams had to set up restrictions, upskill classes, and other forms of training, as well as internal AI playgrounds to allow for safe exploration. Experts say that the same logic should apply to board members too.“I think what we’re seeing is there’s definitely a need for a more fundamental understanding of the basics with the board,” says Nithya Das, chief legal officer and chief administrative officer at Diligent, a governance , risk and compliance SaaS company. “You should assume that they are going to find their own tools, and that may raise different security and privacy concerns for you as an organization, just given the sensitivity of board work and board materials.”Das says training classes can be helpful to get boards up to speed on AI, similar to the education that had to be done when cybersecurity threats came into focus in recent years. One such course, recommended by Rotar, is Stanford University’s “The AI Awakening: Implications for the Economy and Society.”AI is a growing priority for corporate directorsDiligent previewed a survey it will soon publish from the company’s research arm showing that generative AI will rank sixth on the priority list for board directors at U.S.-based public companies in 2025, trailing behind pursuing growth and optimizing financials, but higher than cybersecurity and workforce planning. Sixth may not sound very high, but Das says it is an indication that AI is top of mind. Leaders are still sorting out how well versed their management team is on AI, working through concerns about data privacy, and worries about hallucinations, which can occur when AI models generate incorrect information based on unsound data.“We do think that most boards and companies are at the beginning of their AI journeys, but they’re definitely very AI curious,” says Das. “We expect to see this to be a continued area of focus for 2025.”Fiona Tan, chief technology officer at Wayfair, an e-commerce furniture and home goods retailer, says even at digitally native companies, management had to explain to their boards the difference between generative AI technologies and more traditional use of AI and machine learning that was already deployed. “For a board, it’s actually realizing some of the nuances between what was predictive…what are the generative capabilities, what are the large language model capabilities, and what are the risks,” says Tan. From that point, they can think through where to deploy generative AI. For a company like Wayfair, that could include content generation and making more personalized content for each specific shopper’s needs.The management team, Tan says, should be responsible for looking at the various opportunities to enhance the business with generative AI and articulate that vision to the board. That should also include a close eye at AI startups that are emerging and building solutions that may be better to buy rather than build internally from scratch. Looking for ways to disrupt your own company“For the board, it is pushing to ensure that we are taking a little bit of an outside-in approach,” says Tan. “Where do we need to go in and disrupt ourselves?”Omar Khawaji, chief information and security officer at Databricks, a data and AI software company, says board members and management should not conflate being an avid user of AI with actually understanding how these systems work and can be applied to the business.“In fact, a trap that I often see boards and other leaders falling into is, ‘I’ve used AI, I know how it works, it’s been three months, why haven’t you magically solved problems x, y, and z,’” says Khawaji.He likens this common miscalculation on AI readiness to watching a cooking video on TikTok. It may only take a few minutes to watch a dish get whipped up by an influencer, but to do the same task at home could take hours.“The challenge of managing and governance, governing and curating, and organizing your data is where 90% of the work happens,” says Khawaji. The rest, he says, is related to training a model and leveraging it with the appropriate use cases.How many degrees of separation are you from the globe's most powerful business leaders? Explore who made our brand-new list of the 100 Most Powerful People in Business. Plus, learn about the metrics we used to make it.

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生成式AI 董事会 AI治理 风险管理 业务创新
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