Monday, 20 May 2019

Microsoft launches business school focused on AI strategy, culture and responsibility

In recent years, some of the world’s fastest growing companies have deployed artificial intelligence to solve specific business problems. In fact, according to new market research from Microsoft on how AI will change leadership, these high-growth companies are more than twice as likely to be actively implementing AI as lower-growth companies.

What’s more, high-growth companies are further along in their AI deployments, with about half planning to use more AI in the coming year to improve decision making compared to about a third of lower growth companies. Still, less than two in 10 of even high-growth companies are integrating AI across their operations, the research found.

“There is a gap between what people want to do and the reality of what is going on in their organizations today, and the reality of whether their organization is ready,” said Mitra Azizirad, corporate vice president for AI marketing at Microsoft in Redmond, Washington.

“Developing a strategy for AI extends beyond the business issues,” she explained. “It goes all the way to the leadership, behaviors and capabilities required to instill an AI-ready culture in your organization.”

On the road to developing a strategy, executives and other business leaders are often stalled by questions about how and where to begin implementing AI across their companies; the cultural changes that AI requires companies to make; and how to build and use AI in ways that are responsible, protect privacy and security, and comply with government rules and regulations.

Today, Azizirad and her team are launching Microsoft’s AI Business School to help business leaders navigate these questions. The free, online course is a master class series that aims to empower business leaders to lead with confidence in the age of AI.



Focus on strategy, culture and responsibility


AI Business School course materials include brief written case studies and guides, plus videos of lectures, perspectives and talks that busy executives can access in small doses when they have time. A series of short introductory videos provide an overview of the AI technologies driving change across industries, but the bulk of the content focuses on managing the impact of AI on company strategy, culture and responsibility.

“This school is a deep dive into how you develop a strategy and identify blockers before they happen in the implementation of AI in your organization,” said Azizirad.

The business school complements other AI learning initiatives across Microsoft, including the developer-focused AI School and the Microsoft Professional Program for Artificial Intelligence, which provides job-ready skills and real-world experience to engineers and others looking to improve their skills in AI and data science.

Unlike these other initiatives, AI Business School is non-technical and designed to get executives ready to lead their organizations on a journey of AI transformation, according to Azizirad.

Nick McQuire, an analyst who covers artificial intelligence for CCS Insight, said more than 50 percent of the companies his firm has surveyed are already either researching, trialing or implementing specific projects with AI and machine learning, but very few are using AI across their organization and identifying business opportunities and problems that AI can address.

“That’s because there’s limited understanding in the business community about what AI is, what it can do and, ultimately, what are the applications,” he said. “Microsoft is trying to fill that gap.”

Teaching by example


INSEAD, a graduate business school with campuses in Europe, Asia and the Middle East, partnered with Microsoft to build the AI Business School’s strategy module, which includes case studies about companies across many industries that have successfully transformed their businesses with AI.

For example, a case study on Jabil describes how one of the world’s largest manufacturing solutions providers was able to reduce overhead costs and increase production line quality by using AI to check electronic parts as they are manufactured, freeing up employees to focus on value added activities that machines are unable to do.

“There is still a lot of work that has got to have the human capital piece in it, especially if it is not something that lends itself to standardized processes,” explained Gary Cantrell, senior vice president and chief information officer for Jabil.

A key to implementing AI, Cantrell added, was the leadership team’s focus on clearly communicating to employees the company’s strategy around AI – to eliminate routine, repetitive activities in order to free them up to focus on activities that cannot be automated.

“If they are guessing or they are speculating, it is undoubtedly going to become counterproductive at some point,” he said. “So, the better job you do at keeping the team glued together with where you are going, the better the adoption will be and the faster it will be.”

Prepping an AI-ready culture


The culture and responsibility modules of AI Business School also place a core focus on data. After all, companies that successfully embrace AI need to openly share data across departments and business functions, explained Azizirad, and make sure all employees can participate in the development and implementation of data-driven AI applications.

“You need to start out with an open approach to how the data of an organization is going to be used, which is the foundation of AI, to get the results that you are banking on,” she said, adding that successful leaders foster an inclusive approach to AI that brings different roles together and breaks down data silos.

To illustrate the point, the Microsoft AI Business School surfaces a case study from Microsoft’s marketing team, which wanted to use AI to better score leads for the sales team to pursue. To build the solution, marketing employees partnered with data scientists to create machine learning models that weigh thousands of variables to score leads. The collaboration brought together marketing employees’ knowledge on lead quality with the machine learning expertise of data scientists.

“In the case of AI and in the case of culture, the people closest to the business problem you are trying to solve really need to be involved,” said Azizirad, adding that the sales team is embracing the lead-scoring model because they trust it will produce high-quality leads.

AI and responsibility


Building trust also comes from developing and deploying AI systems in a responsible manner, an area that Microsoft’s market research has found resonates with business leaders. Among high-growth companies, the research found, the more leaders know about AI, the more they recognize that they need to make sure the AI is deployed responsibly.

The AI Business School module on the implications of responsible AI showcases Microsoft’s own work in this area. Course materials include real-world examples in which leaders at Microsoft learned lessons such as the need to safeguard AI systems against malicious attacks and the need for systems to detect bias in datasets used to train models.

“Over time, as companies become operationally dependent on these machine learning algorithms and models that they built, there’s going to be much more focus on governance,” said McQuire, the CCS Insight analyst.

Friday, 22 February 2019

Microsoft announces commitment to help affordable housing in the Puget Sound region


In 1979, Microsoft made the Puget Sound region our home when the company’s first 30 employees moved into an office building next to The Burgermaster in Bellevue. Over the decades, we’ve grown from a small start-up to become one of the world’s leading technology companies. And along the way, the entire region’s economy has diversified and expanded, bringing new jobs, people and prosperity. It’s an amazing place to call home and it’s a community that has always helped nurture Microsoft’s success.

But the Puget Sound area’s growth has also created new challenges. In recent years, our region hasn’t built enough housing for the people who live here. Since 2011, jobs in the region have grown 21 percent, while growth in housing construction has lagged at 13 percent. This gap in available housing has caused housing prices to surge 96 percent in the past eight years, making the Greater Seattle area the sixth most expensive region in the United States. 

Today, we are committing $500 million as a company to advance affordable housing solutions. We’ll put this money to work with loans and grants to accelerate the construction of more affordable housing across the region. We will invest:

  • $225 million at lower than market rate returns to inject capital to subsidize the preservation and construction of middle-income housing. These investments initially will be made in six cities east of Seattle and Lake Washington: Bellevue, Kirkland, Redmond, Issaquah, Renton and Sammamish.
  • $250 million at market rate returns to support low-income housing across the entire King County region. We believe that additional capital at market lending rates can help accelerate the construction of low-income housing across the region.
  • $25 million in philanthropic grants to address homelessness in the greater Seattle region. We are announcing today the first $10 million of these grants. This will include a $5 million philanthropic grant to the newly announced Home Base program created by the Seattle Mariners, the United Way of King County and the King County Bar Association. This program helps keep people facing eviction in their homes through legal aid, access to flexible funds and case management. We are also committing $5 million to support a new joint agency on homelessness being formed by the city of Seattle and King County.

Our goal is to move as quickly as possible with targeted investments that will have an outsized impact. For example, we’ve learned from efforts we’ve studied elsewhere that one effective approach is to provide short-term loans to enable those who want to build affordable housing the time needed to navigate the process of acquiring land from the public sector and raise longer-term construction financing. With these and similar investments, it’s possible to lend money, accelerate progress, be repaid and then lend this money again. While this is just one of the many ways that we’ll seek to put money to good use, it illustrates our financial commitment can have a multiplier effect.

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