Sunday, August 18, 2024

Some Execs Say Generative AI Already is Boosting Revenues, Albeit at a Cost

According to a survey by Gartner, respondents have reported 15.8 percent revenue increases, 15.2 percent cost savings and 22.6 percent productivity improvement, on average, after deloying generative artifficial intelligence.


Gartner notes that GenAI requires a higher tolerance for indirect, future financial investment criteria versus immediate return on investment (ROI). 


One suspects we should take those quantifiable results with a bit of skepticism, as most of the returns from GenAI are indirect and hard to measure. 


Nevertheless, some argue that early adopters already are seeing revenue upside. A global survey of mid-market and enterprise firms conducted on behalf of Google Cloud suggests that 74 percent of organizations surveyed are currently seeing return on investment from their generative artificial intelligence investments.


Furthermore, 86 percent of respondents with GenAI in production mode claim annual revenues have climbed about six percent as a result. 


As with any survey of respondent attitudes, there is room for disagreement. Respondents might simply be inferring AI-driven growth when other forces are at work. Since many of the reported use cases deal with operations, contributions to revenue might often be estimates. 


Also, it might be the case that top-performing firms are most likely to be putting GenAI into use at scale. In other words, the top performers grow revenues more effectively, as a rule, and might be able to deploy new technologies more effectively as well. 



source: Google Cloud 


What we can probably say is that some firms supplying infrastructure, such as Nvidia, and some firms offering AI consulting, already can claim revenue boosts from AI. Accenture, for example, says its AI revenues for the first six months of 2024 were $2 billion. 


Boston Consulting group is projecting 20 percent of its 2024 revenue, and 40 percent of its 2026 revenue, will come from AI integration projects. IBM’s consulting arm has also made more than $1 billion from generative AI from WatsonX and generative AI, since inception


There’s a reason increasing use of generative and other forms of artificial intelligence is linked to data center capacity: model training is getting more compute intensive. So large language model training costs are growing. 


Still, generative AI costs are significant, both to create models and train them.


 

source: Epoch AI


A Gartner survey of 822 business leaders, conducted between September and November 2023, suggests that various generative AI projects cost between $5 million to $20 million. But that might not be the biggest impact, as costs for inference operations (asking questions, getting answers) could run between $8,000 to $21,000 per user. 


For a 1,000-user firm, that might suggest $8 million to $21 million annually in inference operations. 


source: Gartner 


All that noted, it might also be the case that some industries and use cases are more likely to be able to create direct revenue, though virtually any industry might claim indirect revenue benefits from any form of AI. 


Industry

AI Use Case

Direct Revenue Potential

Indirect Revenue Potential

Automotive

Autonomous driving

High (ride-sharing revenue, vehicle sales)

High (enhanced safety, driver experience)

Healthcare

Medical image analysis

Medium to High (e.g., diagnostic fees)

High (improved patient outcomes, operational efficiency)

Finance

Fraud detection

Medium (fraud prevention savings)

High (customer trust, regulatory compliance)

Media & Entertainment

Content generation (e.g., scripts, music)

Medium (licensing fees, content sales)

High (increased audience engagement)

Education

Personalized learning

Low

High (improved student outcomes)

Agriculture

Crop yield prediction

Low to Medium (potential premium for high-yield crops)

High (increased crop productivity, resource optimization)

Manufacturing

Predictive maintenance

Low

High (reduced downtime, increased efficiency)

Retail

Personalized product recommendations

Low

High


Some of us would not be at all surprised if disappointment with GenAI outcomes becomes more pronounced as projects seem not to provide the anticipated financial outcomes, in the near term. 

To the extent AI is the next general-purpose technology, as was the internet, we could ask the same questions about near term return from internet investments. 


How many firms will see near-term and quantifiable results from their capital investments and operating expenses directly related to GenAI? Perhaps anot so many.


Are AI Firm Valuations Really in a Bubble?

Many are concerned about “bubble” valuations for firms linked to artificial intelligence. And looking at price-to-sales ratios, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft and Nvidia have higher ratios than prior to the launch of ChatGPT, for example. 


That also applies to the “technology-heavy” Nasdaq index as well. Hence the concern about valuations being in a "bubble."

source: Blake Heimann, Wisdomtree 


But it might also be worth noting that price/sales ratios for Amazon, Alphabet and Meta are not out of line with their respective 10-year P/S ratios. In fact, Meta seems to have lower P/S than it did a decade ago. 


That cannot be said for Microsoft and Nvidia, both of which have much-higher P/S ratios than has been the case for most of the past decade. The Nasdaq index likewise seems to show significantly-higher P/S ratios at present than over the past 10 years. 


So if you are looking for possible overvaluation, Nvidia is where the greatest danger lies, with Microsoft and the Nasdaq index both showing possible overvaluation (or simply higher growth expectations). Right now we simply cannot tell whether the valuations are merited or not. 


source: Wisdomtree 


In fact, some might argue that Amazon has lower P/S and price-to-equity ratios than it has had over the last decade. Some will argue that is because so much of Amazon’s revenue comes from e-commerce and is at risk if a recession occurs and shoppers reduce their spending. 


Company

Current P/E Ratio

10-Year Average P/E

Current P/S Ratio

10-Year Average P/S

Alphabet (GOOGL)

22.5

19.8

5.2

4.7

Amazon (AMZN)

34.2

62.1

3.8

5.1

Meta (META)

25.8

22.3

8.1

7.4


As always, one’s perspective matters. Are sales going to grow enough to justify the higher ratios and valuations, or is too much growth expected? Or, looking at it another way, even if the higher growth does materialize, will that growth take longer than presently expected?


Friday, August 16, 2024

Which Generative AI platforms do Software Developers Use Most?

A Stackoverflow survey of developers including 65,437 responses from 185 countries suggests that ChatGPT is the generative artificial intelligence tool most used by software developers, followed by GitHub Copilot and then Alphabet’s Gemini. 


source: Stackoverflow 


AI use is increasing in most industries, say McKinsey consultants. In addition to general-purpose platforms such as OpenAI’s GPT-4; Alphabet’s Gemini or Meta’ Llama, industry-specific platforms are proliferating as well. 


Adobe Firefly is integrated into Adobe's Creative Suite, it excels in image and video generation for marketing materials and might be used by marketing and advertising staffs. 


Midjourney seems popular for generating highly artistic and creative images, especially in fashion and design.  

 

In healthcare, Nvidia Clara focuses on medical imaging, drug discovery, and genomics, providing specialized tools for healthcare professionals.   


Google DeepMind's AlphaFold is used in protein structure prediction, aiding in drug development and biological research.


BloombergGPT is tailored for financial data analysis and generation of financial reports, news, and code, and is used in the finance industry. 


Goldman Sachs's SECURE-LLM is built for secure financial applications, focusing on data privacy and compliance, and likewise is used in the financial industry. 


Nvidia’s  Drive Sim is used in the automotive industry for simulating autonomous vehicle environments and training AI models for self-driving cars.

   

Tesla's Autopilot is used for self-driving vehicles.


Generative AI Poses Evaluation and Learning Issues as Did Calculators

Educators might say we are at a point with student use of generative artificial intelligence that resembles the teaching and learning of mathematics once calculators were available for use, which is to say a mix of positives and negatives. 


Study Name

Publication Date

Publication Venue

Key Conclusions

The Effects of Calculator Use on Mathematics in Schools and in the Certificate Examinations

2008

Educational Research Centre, Ireland

Calculator use can enhance problem-solving and conceptual understanding, but it's essential to maintain a balance with mental math and paper-pencil skills.

Calculator Use and Mathematical Thinking

1998

The Mathematics Teacher

Calculators can support higher-order thinking skills when integrated effectively into instruction.

The Impact of Calculator Use on Students' Algebraic Thinking

2005

Journal of Research in Mathematics Education

Calculator use can facilitate algebraic reasoning and problem-solving, but it's essential to focus on conceptual understanding.

Calculators in Mathematics Education

1992

NCTM Yearbook

Provides an overview of calculator research and recommendations for effective implementation.


To the extent that traditional exercises, such as writing essays, has been a proxy for testing understanding while arguably improving thinking and writing skills, generative AI poses issues, especially as learning moves away from in-person to online formats. 


In principle, generative AI could enhance creativity, but could also reduce originality; improve writing skills or leave them undeveloped; replace thinking skills or sharpen them; allow personalized learning but also possible plagiarism. 


A  key remaining question is how generative AI affects learning, namely, how humans acquire new skills as they perform tasks. One recent study, for example, involved a thousand students using two generative AI tutors, one that mimics a standard ChatGPT interface (called GPT Base) and one with prompts designed to safeguard learning (called GPT Tutor). 


“Consistent with prior work, our results show that access to GPT-4 significantly improves performance (48 percent improvement for GPT Base and 127 percent for GPT Tutor),” the researchers say. “However, we additionally find that when access is subsequently taken away, students actually perform worse than those who never had access (17 percent reduction for GPT Base).”


In other words, the researchers say, “access to GPT-4 can harm educational outcomes.”


“Our results suggest that students attempt to use GPT-4 as a ‘crutch’ during practice problem sessions, and when successful, perform worse on their own,” the study says. 


One college professor I spoke with noted that her work had switched almost exclusively to online teaching and online testing formats, which means that GenAI use cannot be prevented. 


She noted that GenAI obviously is being used for essays and tests, which does make it harder to assess actual student comprehension of the material, to say nothing of critical thinking, reasoning or writing skills development. 


But one way or the other, schools are going to have to cope with GenAI and its impact on teaching methods, learning and assessment. 


Ultimately, that all will be reflected in labor force skills as well. But cognitive skills will continue to be vital for some industries and job roles, compared to others. 


Industry

Job Function

Higher-Order Cognitive Skills Importance

Technology

Software Engineer, Data Scientist, AI Researcher

High

Healthcare

Physician, Nurse Practitioner, Medical Researcher

High

Finance

Financial Analyst, Investment Banker, Risk Manager

High

Consulting

Management Consultant, Strategy Consultant

High

Education

Teacher, Professor, Curriculum Developer

High

Law

Lawyer, Judge, Legal Analyst

High

Marketing

Marketing Manager, Brand Strategist, Market Research Analyst

Medium-High

Sales

Sales Manager, Account Executive, Sales Engineer

Medium

Manufacturing

Operations Manager, Quality Control Engineer

Medium

Retail

Store Manager, Buyer, Visual Merchandiser

Medium

Hospitality

Hotel Manager, Event Planner

Medium

Customer Service

Customer Service Representative, Call Center Agent

Low-Medium

Administrative Support

Office Assistant, Data Entry Clerk

Low


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