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Now the headlines are cooler: There was the messy launch of ChatGPT 5, the MIT study finding that 95% of AI initiatives fail, Sam Altman and The Atlantic suggesting that we’re in an AI bubble, insane paychecks for AI talent, and even an IBM commercial showing overwhelmed corporate leaders expressing frustration as they try to implement AI across the enterprise.
So, are we in a bubble? Possibly. But does that mean AI is smoke and mirrors? Not at all. What it means is that leaders need to look past the hype and focus on what really matters: practical wins, starting with time saved.
Over that three quarters of a century, AI has gone through two other hype cycles, with the first one coming in the 1950s and 60s. Each previous peak was followed by an “AI winter” or “trough of disillusionment” and it seems that we may be inching toward another one now. But I would argue that things will be different this time simply because AI has become ubiquitous in the daily lives of hundreds of millions of people – embedding itself in everything from planning our work days to helping us find enlightenment.
For example, I’m working with a large training and education company on a multi-pronged AI transformation project, and we’ve spent the last couple months evaluating AI-driven design technologies that can help the marketers keep up with ad creation demand.
We’ve mapped the process, established evaluation criteria, demoed a half dozen tools, established baseline performance for post-pilot comparison purposes, and are just about to start a pilot project to decide which tool will best meet the company’s needs.
The potential to save the company time and money is real and significant but getting here has taken much more than a snap of the AI fingers.
Stop and think about that for a second. Reporting is a critical deliverable for a media-buying agency, and more than three-quarters of that process has the potential to be automated by AI. The time savings that represents is significant, and as I’ve argued before, time savings is a realistic first success metric for AI implementations.
Agency teams can take that time saved and spend it in all sorts of powerful ways:
The possibilities are endless. What matters is that the time saved is used on those activities that a human is uniquely suited for – strategy, creativity, empathy, relationship-building, etc. Otherwise it’s just automation for automation’s sake and the promise of AI truly will burst like so many magical bubbles.
I’ve written more about this approach:
Bubbles pop. Durable advantages don’t. If you measure minutes, not magic, AI becomes a lever – one that buys your team the time to think, create, and lead. That’s the transformation worth betting on.
Want to chat about your organization’s AI adoption journey? Get in touch.