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Ian Bremmer advocates for strategic thinking in a rapidly changing world by broadening perspectives, engaging with diverse viewpoints, and understanding root causes, while also stressing the need for personal authenticity and connection to effectively tackle global challenges.
As generative AI transforms society, leaders must model responsible use by fostering collaboration, setting realistic guidelines, encouraging exploration, creating a cooperative culture, ensuring data privacy, and demonstrating effective AI practices to guide their teams.
In late 2022, ChatGPT popularized “generative artificial intelligence,” which encompasses large language models capable of producing diverse outputs, prompting Professor Ethan Mollick to explore their implications and how we can effectively coexist and thrive with this transformative technology.
Ethan Mollick highlights the importance of recognizing our agency in shaping artificial intelligence’s future, urging us to balance its potential benefits and risks while ensuring it enhances human flourishing rather than succumbing to polarized narratives.
Business innovation expert Rita McGrath emphasizes the importance of recognizing market inflection points and adapting strategies around emerging technologies and new business models to ensure survival and success, while also preparing for increased competition.
In a global market, organizations must navigate opportunities and pitfalls by enhancing their global intelligence (GQ) through empathy, understanding, and authentic experiences to effectively adapt strategies and connect with diverse customers and cultures.
Professor Cass Sunstein highlights that “sludge,” or bureaucratic frictions like excessive paperwork and waiting times, hinders access to benefits, and suggests conducting a sludge audit to streamline workflows and improve quality of life by identifying and reducing these inefficiencies.
Ethical companies should consider the cognitive burden their products impose, as limited bandwidth can hinder marginalized populations from navigating administrative barriers, leading to distributional unfairness and potential human rights violations, necessitating thoughtful design to ensure equitable access.
Cultural assumptions, often perceived as common sense, can lead to misunderstandings in international relations; thus, David Kang emphasizes the importance of questioning these biases, particularly Eurocentrism, and integrating local knowledge to better understand Asia’s diverse perspectives and trends.