All Content from Business Insider 10月23日 22:01
企业拥抱AI,部分品牌选择坚守“人性”
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在人工智能技术飞速发展的当下,部分企业选择拥抱AI,而另一些企业则打出“反AI”的旗号,强调人类的原创性和独特性。Aerie、Heineken和DC漫画等品牌正通过宣传其“纯粹人性”的理念,试图在日益充斥AI内容的市场中脱颖而出,吸引那些对AI泛滥感到厌倦的消费者。然而,这种策略也面临挑战,完全忽视AI的潜在优势可能是一种失误,尤其是在竞争对手积极采用AI的情况下。高层管理者对AI的青睐程度远高于基层员工,预示着AI的普及可能难以避免,即使在内部也存在观念上的分歧。

💡 **品牌营销新策略:强调“纯粹人性”以对抗AI泛滥** 在AI技术渗透的时代,Aerie、Heineken和DC漫画等知名品牌正积极宣传其“反AI”立场,以此吸引那些对AI生成内容感到疲惫的消费者。这种策略的核心在于通过强调人类的原创性、创造力和情感连接,来建立与消费者的深度共鸣,将“人性化”作为一种独特的市场区隔和价值主张。

⚖️ **平衡AI应用与人类价值的挑战** 虽然部分企业选择拥抱AI,但也有企业在AI的广泛应用中看到了潜在的风险,并尝试寻求一种平衡。完全拒绝AI可能错失技术带来的效率提升和创新机会,但过度依赖AI也可能削弱品牌独特性和消费者信任。文章指出,在AI时代,如何在技术优势和人类不可替代的价值之间找到最佳结合点,是企业面临的重要课题。

🚀 **高管与员工对AI接受度的差异** 一项研究显示,高达87%的执行管理层在工作中使用了AI,而员工层面的使用率则显著低于此(仅57%的管理人员和27%的普通员工)。这种巨大的差距反映了企业高层对AI的积极推动,但也暗示了在AI的实际落地过程中,可能存在来自基层员工的阻力或不确定性,正如在电子艺界(EA)等公司出现的内部分歧所示。

I'm closing my eyes and letting AI take the wheel. That's the proposed future for GM, where executives are touting a new "eyes-off" self-driving feature launching in 2028. Nothing like a little cat nap when you're hitting 80 mph on the highway.

In today's big story, a portion of Corporate America is proud to tell you how it's avoiding AI. But executives' deep buy-in of the tech might make its arrival inevitable.

What's on deck:

Markets: Steve Cohen's Point72 shook up its top quant unit. Here's how it all went down.

Tech: The great flattening just came for Google's ad division.

Business: If you haven't secured a "KPop Demon Hunter" Halloween costume yet, you might be out of luck. (Please don't tell my three-year-old.)

But first, all in on not going all-in.


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The big story

OnlyHumans

A human wrote the sentence you are currently reading. Is that a good enough reason for you to stick around?

That's the strategy behind some big-name corporate brands. While a good chunk of businesses tout their use of AI, another cohort is proudly declaring they're against it.

(Side note: If you'd actually prefer a robot wrote this newsletter, please don't share that opinion with my bosses.)

Aerie, Heineken, and DC Comics are some of the brands shouting from the rooftops (or massive billboards) about their anti-AI stance, writes BI's Lara O'Reilly and Jordan Hart.

For these companies, it's a bet that promoting human authenticity will resonate with people who are growing tired of AI infiltrating all aspects of life.

Finding that human-AI balance was a key theme at Advertising Week New York, Lara previously reported. And even those on the cutting edge of AI seem to recognize the need to tap into the human element.

Just look at this ad from OpenAI of a guy trying to do pull-ups. How very relatable and human!

Of course, there's no guarantee people are buying it.

"Would you like me to go ahead and do the workout for you?" reads one of the top comments on YouTube.

Workers haven't been as quick to embrace AI as their bosses have.

The anti-AI companies are toeing a fine line.

While most people have some level of AI fatigue — I'm sick of getting tricked by those fake, AI-generated post-game press conferences — it also seems foolish to disregard the technology altogether.

The benefits of leveraging AI to some degree are undeniable, and dismissing that could be a grave mistake. Some might argue that a purely human approach in a world full of AI is a differentiator, like a restaurant sourcing all its ingredients from a local farm.

But while that business model might work on a small scale, the bigger you are the harder it becomes. That's especially true if your rivals are willing to dive into the AI pool headfirst.

Marketers could also be doing a bit of self-preservation. The more you proclaim the importance of marketing your company as human-first, the more job security you give yourself.

However, one study hints at the inevitability of AI adoption. The survey found 87% of executives use AI on the job, writes BI's Sarah E. Needleman. That's compared to just 57% usage among managers and 27% of employees using it.

The split shows how those at the top of orgs are the biggest proponents of the tech. But that doesn't make the adoption any easier, as Sarah covered in the deep divide taking place at video-game giant Electronic Arts.


3 things in markets

1. Behind the shocking shakeup at Steve Cohen's top quant unit. The surprising ouster of Cubist president Denis Dancanet followed months of quiet maneuvering by Cohen and his top leader, people familiar with the matter said. Cubist is the roughly $7 billion quant division of Cohen's hedge fund Point72. Here's how it all unfolded.

2. Beyond Meat's meme-stock craze might be starting to spoil. Shares in the buzzy plant-based meat company finished down 1% on Wednesday and fell a further 20% in early trading on Thursday. Two options trading data points — and even the retail trader driving Beyond Meat's rally — suggest investors should be cautious.

3. Why gold's record-breaking rally has stalled out. After repeatedly hitting all-time highs over the course of a month, the precious metal has recently retreated. Market experts say gold's decline is likely driven by technical factors.


3 things in tech

Google CEO Sundar Pichai

1. Google is stripping back management layers (again). In a memo sent to staff last month, the search giant said it was eliminating a middle-management layer in its US ads business. The move is part of Google's larger efforts to speed up decisions and cut bureaucracy, and it reflects a wider trend happening across Big Tech.

2. Meta's AI layoffs, in its own words. Chief AI officer Alexandr Wang said the cuts, which affect 600 Superintelligence Labs employees, will help the company make decisions more quickly. Read the full memo.

3. Amazon is taking the L in AI, but can it bounce back? Bernstein's Mark Shmulik — a top Wall Street tech analyst — said in a note that while AWS might be last in the AI race, it's not dead yet. Shmulik said AWS is showing early signs of progress, and its partnership with Anthropic is promising.


3 things in business

The Tesla humanoid robot Optimus Gen-2 and new electric vehicles on display in a Tesla store in Shanghai, China.

1. Tesla's record quarterly revenue wasn't enough for Wall Street. The EV giant's profit came in below analyst expectations, causing the stock to decline in after-hours trading. Elon Musk also railed against the major proxy firms opposing his proposed pay package, calling them "corporate terrorists."

2. Good luck finding a "KPop Demon Hunters" Halloween costume. Looks like Netflix really underestimated demand: The officially licensed costumes by Spirit Halloween are sold out online and in most stores. However, unlicensed dupes abound on sites like Etsy and Amazon.

3. It may be the toughest season ever for 'Shark Tank' contestants. Why? Because Tariffs are screwing up the show's usual playbook, BI's Katherine Li writes. For businesses that rely on global supply chains, the cost of production and projected profits may have collapsed between their on-camera pitch and the time their episode airs.


In other news


What's happening today


Dan DeFrancesco, deputy executive editor and anchor, in New York. Hallam Bullock, senior editor, in London. Akin Oyedele, deputy editor, in New York. Grace Lett, editor, in New York. Amanda Yen, associate editor, in New York.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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