Tim Doyle
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So like it's early and nobody knows anything is probably the two things.
And then it's pretty easy to like log on to platforms like LinkedIn and think that everyone's an expert because like it's a platform that has created a new type of corporate speak where everyone is an expert and there's rewards to self-promotion.
And none of that is true, right?
Like everything is messy and everyone's figuring it out.
So like I guess that leads into the second part of the answer, which is like how is it impacting eucalyptus?
The main area that I've seen is it has raised the speed and quality of decision making because people can get access to numbers much faster.
The equalization of SQL, like kind of the ability to write database queries because you can now write them in natural language has been such an unlock, I think, in business, for my business at least.
Then, you know, you're hoping software engineers go faster, but it's really hard to know.
I haven't seen that much impact on visual creation yet, even though we do a lot of it.
So that feels like it'll come.
Then on the patient experience side, the cost of high quality advice is going to zero, right?
So where we typically would have had to put humans from the perspective of providing advice or kind of at least routing advice, AI can do that now.
So patient expectations for speed, for quality, for personalization,
rising so quickly because I used to always think when I was creating like engagement based products that like Instagram was two swipes away.
So you always had to compete with someone's Instagram feed.
Whereas now I'm like, well, uh, ChatGPT is two swipes away.
And so if we can't provide something of the quality of information or more personalized or easier than ChatGPT would do the same thing, then we shouldn't make the thing.
And so there's a pretty substantial change coming there.
Yeah.
So I think of my opportunities there are like, firstly, proprietary data.