Grow slowly, stay small
The article advocates for a sustainable business approach focused on slow growth and remaining small. It suggests this model can lead to greater stability and fulfillment compared to traditional rapid expansion strategies.
The article advocates for a sustainable business approach focused on slow growth and remaining small. It suggests this model can lead to greater stability and fulfillment compared to traditional rapid expansion strategies.
Job seekers face a tough environment, but widespread AI-caused job losses have been overblown so far. Instead, AI is creating demand for workers with AI skills, while those who don't adapt may face replacement. Companies are building smaller, AI-native teams as AI makes individuals more productive.
The article examines how 4,000 companies faced a disruptive technology in the early 20th century, with only one surviving. It explores why leaders often fail to adapt to technological changes that threaten their existing business models.
Andrew Ng writes from the World Economic Forum that businesses need to move beyond incremental AI efficiency gains to achieve transformative impact. He argues that workflow redesign, rather than isolated AI projects, is key to creating significant business value, using loan processing as an example where end-to-end changes can transform product offerings.
The article argues that people actually love to work hard when given clear goals, shared values, autonomy, and trust. It criticizes the common narrative that workers are lazy, suggesting instead that poor motivation often stems from dehumanizing work conditions and lack of meaningful purpose.
Founders are frustrated that venture capitalists often won't meet with them unless their pitch includes AI, while AI startups receive high valuations. The article explains why investors prioritize certain business models over others.