AI isn’t just reshaping productivity and threatening to kill jobs. It’s changing how we lead, communicate, and treat each other. It’s also creating a new gender gap
For nearly four years now, the conversation about generative AI has revolved almost exclusively around productivity, threatened jobs, automatable tasks, efficiency, and competitiveness. But there i...
Source: www.fastcompany.com
For nearly four years now, the conversation about generative AI has revolved almost exclusively around productivity, threatened jobs, automatable tasks, efficiency, and competitiveness. But there is a largely underestimated dimension to this revolution: its cultural effects. AI is not just transforming how we work; it is transforming how we are together, how we trust each other, how we communicate, and how we organize ourselves. To measure this, it helps to borrow a framework from Erin Meyer, a professor at INSEAD whose book The Culture Map identifies eight dimensions along which the cultures of the world differ. Applied to artificial intelligence, Meyer’s eight dimensions reveal a series of cultural shifts that are more profound than we know. 1. How We Communicate: AI Is Training Us to Say What We Mean Generative AI demands clarity. An effective prompt is an explicit one. There’s no room for body language. This constraint is gradually reshaping how we communicate with each other, too.