![]() ![]() I also have been working on games for a while. Went to MIT to get an MBA and then stayed there for a PhD, when I realized nobody knew what they were doing about start-ups.ĭuring that time I also started working at the Media Lab with some of the folks there who were interested in AI. And then I decided, since I didn’t know anything I was doing-we were making it up as we went along-I’d get an MBA to learn how to do it right. We invented the paywall, which I still kind of feel bad about. And then did undergraduate at Harvard, started a company with a college roommate after my mandatory stint in management consulting. But I have a love for cheese curds to prove it. ![]() Where’d you grow up? What did you study? How’d you end up doing what you’re doing today?Įthan Mollick: I may speak like an East Coaster, but I’m born and raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which surprised everybody. Michael Chui: Ethan, welcome to the podcast.Įthan Mollick: I’m so glad to be here. I am fascinated to hear what he has to say. Janet Bush: Well, I like that because it means, if I write using ChatGPT, I won’t be cheating. And as a business professor teaching entrepreneurship, he actually requires students to use generative AI as they develop business plans in his courses. And not only has he thinking about it and tweeting about it, but he has been experimenting with these ideas, too. But today’s guest has also been struck by the enormous potential of generative AI in business. Michael Chui: Well, as you know, we will actually be publishing research about the economic potential of generative artificial intelligence in June, including its impact on the labor force. So I am fascinated to hear more about it. And I was absolutely gob smacked-that’s an English word for amazed. I was really nervous about it, but then you persuaded me to sign up for it just before we had this conversation. Michael Chui (co-host): Janet, have you tried using ChatGPT? What he learned when he made the use of generative AI mandatory in his classes.What generative AI means for the future of work and trust.How to use human management skills to get better results from generative AI.How substantial are the performance improvements workers can gain from using generative AI.Mollick covers topics including the following: He is an associate professor at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. In this episode of the McKinsey Global Institute’s Forward Thinking podcast, co-host Michael Chui talks with business professor Ethan Mollick.
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