There is an unprecedented wave of speculation and investment in Artificial intelligence (AI) sweeping the industry with ideas like machine learning (ML) appearing as a magic wand of business innovation. Beneath the seemingly boundless hype of AI, however, there is something quite simple at play -- the idea of finding ways to perform well-understood, common tasks more efficiently, according to leading data and analytics company GlobalData.
An analysis of GlobalData’s Disruptor Tech Database reveals that enterprise AI practitioners are primarily seeing very pointed benefits within problems that directly impact the bottom line.
For instance, one of the compelling areas where businesses have been using AI is generating leads. Harley-Davidson in New York chose AI to automatically craft the most appropriate digital marketing and advertising campaign on a customer-by-customer basis. The technology captures existing customer data from the company’s customer relationship management (CRM) system and analyzes user’s online and offline past purchasing behavior to scale up marketing campaigns across channels. Within three months of deployment, leads of the dealership grew by nearly 3,000% and more importantly the sale of motorcycles by 40%.
Another, pointed, pragmatic use cases for AI can be found in boosting operating efficiency. General Electric (GE), for instance, unlocked millions in cost savings using AI. Given its long operating record in multiple sectors and numerous enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, GE has often faced challenges in arriving at a conclusion on its overall expenditure. AI enabled GE to combine all its 270 separate ERP systems into a single platform. The company realized more than $100 million in return on investment in different ways, including optimizing sourcing strategies, renegotiating contract terms, identifying cross-selling opportunities and reducing landing cost of products.
AI has been increasingly touted by enterprises as a key to customer personalization. Spotify stands a classic example in using AI to facilitate its customers with personalized music listening experience. Although players in the music streaming business such as Apple and Pandora offer curated playlists, they often fail to match individual listener’s music taste over time. Spotify’s “Discover Weekly” feature, curated algorithmically, became a sensation in personalizing music playlists more accurately at exceptionally large scale.
AI is of course the game changer of risk management to businesses in many ways. Online money transfers and payments company PayPal moved from using linear models to neural networks with deep learning (DL) for analyzing money transactions in real-time. The advanced platform helps to create scenarios related to positive and negative user behavior and contribute to improving the accurace of fraud detection over time. PayPal claims to have reduced the fraud rate to 0.32% of its total revenue, as compared to many peers at 1.32%.
The aforementioned are just a few in the expanding list of companies realizing tangible benefits with the use of AI.
“The operationalization of AI has allowed nearly every enterprise to grow smart, leveraging AI not globally but very specifically in solving well-understood problems, all without having to invest heavily in data sciences. However, while many are witnessing desirable results, potential AI practitioners should approach AI with caution, carefully weighing internal expertise against business needs,” concludes Brad Shimmin, Service Director, Global Technology and Services at GlobalData.
For more on how AI is being used in the AEC industry, and how the AEC industry can look to other sectors for how to best capitalize on the technology, check out BD+C's article, "Say 'Hello' to erudite machines," in the August issue.
Related Stories
| Jan 25, 2013
Applied Software Earns Autodesk MEP Systems Engineering Specialization Designation
Designation underscores firm’s success in supporting and educating customers in MEP design and BIM.
| Jan 9, 2013
Panasonic and Bluebeam preview new architect app at CES 2013
Panasonic and Bluebeam Software collaborate to develop and introduce the 4K tablet and software to the design and construction industry.
| Jan 3, 2013
Top BIM/VDC articles of 2011-2012
A compendium of BD+Cs top building information modeling and virtual design + construction articles from 2011-12.
| Jan 2, 2013
Global data center market to ‘slow’ to 14.3% this year
Total global investment in data centers is expected to slow down somewhat this year but still increase at a respectable 14.3%, according to DCD Intelligence.
| Jan 2, 2013
BIM market value to hit $6.5 billion by 2020
Sales of BIM software and services are expected to grow at a compound annual rate of 17.3%, to a market value of $6.5 billion in 2020.
| Nov 28, 2012
Cummins announces ratings classification for data center power systems
The Data Center Continuous ratings span the range of Cummins Power Generation’s high horsepower diesel generator sets, from 1 MW up to 2.5 MW, and will apply to both 50 Hz and 60 Hz configurations.
| Nov 5, 2012
Trimble acquires Vico assets, extends design-build-operate capabilities
Software to add 5D management to Trimble’s Solutions for vertical construction contractors.
| Oct 4, 2012
2012 Reconstruction Awards Gold Winner: Wake Forest Biotech Place, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Reconstruction centered on Building 91.1, a historic (1937) five-story former machine shop, with its distinctive façade of glass blocks, many of which were damaged. The Building Team repointed, relocated, or replaced 65,869 glass blocks.