Your 7 Biggest Questions About ChatGPT, Answered
No. 1: What role will ChatGPT play in the enterprise?
No. 2: What are the different ways you can use ChatGPT?
- Generating and helping to improve prose and code development
- Summarizing text
- Classifying content
- Answering questions
- Translating and converting language (including programming languages)
Beyond that, there are four main ways to deploy the ChatGPT technology:
- As-is: Input text prompts and receive results via the web-based interface. This is by far the most popular approach when starting out.
- Prompt engineering without APIs: Prompt engineering refers to the use of a service like ChatGPT in conjunction with other technologies, as part of a workflow. You can create this workflow manually or by using screen scrape and robotic process automation (RPA) technologies.
- Prompt engineering using APIs: This approach allows you to set and evaluate prompts programmatically and directly integrate ChatGPT with a broad range of applications.
- Custom build/direct interaction with a foundation model: It is possible to leverage your own version of GPT2/GPT3 or other foundations model for a bespoke implementation. However, you would not be using the customized version of GPT3 or GPT4, which users cannot change.
No. 3: What will the workforce impact be?
No. 4: What are the current limitations of ChatGPT?
- It is only trained on data through September 2021, so it has limited knowledge of events that have occurred since then.
- It cannot cite its sources, and it’s only as reliable as these sources, which may be wrong and inconsistent, either in themselves or in how they are combined by ChatGPT.
- It cannot yet accept image input or generate images (though in the future, it could be used in combination with visual generative AI models).
- You cannot train ChatGPT on your own knowledge bases.
- Although it gives the illusion of performing complex tasks, it has no knowledge of the underlying concepts; it simply makes predictions.
- Its data privacy assurances have not yet been subject to rigorous audits.
- Despite some recent improvements, it cannot be relied on to do the math.
No. 5: How secure is ChatGPT for my staff to use?
With all of this in mind, we recommend you create a company policy around rather than block ChatGPT. Your knowledge workers are likely already using it, and an outright ban may lead to “shadow” ChatGPT usage, while only providing the organization with a false sense of compliance. A sensible approach is to monitor usage and encourage innovation, but ensure that the technology is only used to augment internal work and with properly qualified data, rather than in an unfiltered way with customers and partners.
No. 6: What’s next for ChatGPT — and generative AI more broadly?
No. 7: In the meantime, what actions do you recommend we take?
- Proceed but don’t over-pivot. Recognize that this is a very early stage and that much of what you are hearing is hype. That said, the potential is significant.
- Explore other emerging generative AI use cases. Go beyond GPT language-focused ones.
- Encourage careful experimentation. Encourage out-of-the-box thinking about work processes, but not before you define usage guidelines, ensure understanding of the risks, issues, and best practices, and have all generated text reviewed by humans.
- Create a task force reporting to the CIO and CEO. Explore existential threats and posed and major opportunities, plan a roadmap for discovery, and scope the skills, services, and investments needed.
Source: GWFM Research
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