New innovations in AI sound exciting, but how will they actually change the way we work? Marcus Wohlsen is here to share some insights. Wohlsen is a journalist, author, and the head of editorial at the storytelling firm Godfrey Dadich Partners, and he has a special expertise on the past and future of AI. He provides a unique perspective—and some much-needed context—to help us as we try to wrap our heads around how AI will transform the future of work.

Wohlsen is the fourth guest of season 4 of Microsoft’s WorkLab podcast, in which host Elise Hu has conversations with economists, designers, psychologists, and technologists who explore the data and insights into why and how work is changing.

Three big takeaways from this conversation: 

  1. “I’ve been thinking about AI as this kind of relevance engine,” Wohlsen says. “It has this amazing ability to personalize the information that we consume, and that’s because we can talk with it in the way that we talk with one another.” He gives a hypothetical example: “Let’s say you’ve been on vacation for a week and your inbox is stuffed with hundreds of emails. Imagine being able to just ask the AI agent to go through that inbox and pull out the action steps you need to take. Or imagine being able to just say, what’s the status of this particular project?”

  2. AI can do your work for you, but it can also help you get past the terror of a blank page by quickly generating a raw initial draft that can serve as a valuable jump-start. “One of the things that’s going to start to become really pervasive as AI becomes more widespread is that we probably aren’t going to start with a blank page,” Wohlsen says. “You can simply pose a question and the AI tool will give you an answer. It might not be the right answer, but you’re going to have something there to start with.”

  3. We will always need to have a human scrutinizing the outputs of AI and using their judgment to make sure it’s accurate and useful. “A machine can simulate that kind of judgment, but it’s just running probabilities and making predictions based on data that comes from us,” Wohlsen says. “We’re feeding these machines with information that it’s giving back. It’s still on us to figure out whether what we’re making with these things is any good, whether it matters, whether we need it or not.”

WorkLab is a place for experts to share their insights and opinions. As students of the future of work, Microsoft values inputs from a diverse set of voices. That said, the opinions and findings of the experts we interview are their own and do not reflect Microsoft’s own research or opinions. 

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Here’s a transcript of the episode 4 conversation.

ELISE HU: This is WorkLab , the podcast from Microsoft. I’m your host, Elise Hu. On WorkLab , we hear from leading thinkers on the future of work. Economists, designers, psychologists, technologists all share surprising data and explore the trends transforming the way we work. 

MARCUS WOHLSEN: One of the things that is going to start to become really pervasive as AI becomes more widespread is that we probably aren’t going to start with a blank page. You can simply pose a question, and the AI tool will give you an answer. It might not be the right answer, but you’re going to have something there to start with.