Seeking Insights on Learning AI in Different Careers

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Asked By CreativeCoder42 On

Hi everyone! I'm a student working on a school project, and I could really use your help. I'm trying to gather opinions from people in various career fields—young professionals in their 20s and 30s, as well as those in their 40s and 60s—about their experiences and feelings regarding learning how to use AI. I often see all these buzzwords around AI, but I'm curious about how individuals in roles like marketing, accounting, or business actually learn and apply it in their daily work. My goal is to design a fun and engaging course that teaches essential AI skills without being dull. But first, I need to understand whether people are interested in learning about AI and what would make that process easier or more enjoyable. If you're currently working or have experience in the workforce, could you share your thoughts? I'd love to hear if you want to learn AI for your job, how to make the learning process better, or if AI doesn't interest you at all. Thanks for any input you can provide!

2 Answers

Answered By HealthcarePro62 On

I'm a 62-year-old professional in healthcare consulting, and I've started using a company chatbot to summarize denied medical claims. It's been a game changer! Instead of spending 10 minutes on a lengthy claim before deciding the next steps, this chatbot gives me a concise summary in seconds. I’ll admit, it made me realize how much I was missing out by not trying it sooner!

SkepticalViewer88 -

Using an AI chatbot for medical claims sounds intense! It's kind of unsettling to think about, but I guess it's the reality we live in.

Answered By AIEnthusiast44 On

As a 44-year-old in identity and access management for banking, I definitely use AI for scripting daily. It really excels at logic flows and error checking, and it helps me create more concise code. Plus, it can identify trends and spot inaccuracies in permission sets, which is super handy. For learning, I wish there was more support for AI in various programming languages. And honestly, while I find AI beneficial, I think the misconception that it replaces humans is problematic. People bring years of experience and context that AI just can't replicate. It’s about using AI to enhance decision-making, not replace it.

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