IBM Doing Important HR tasks like promotion, assessment of people with AI: CEO Arvind Krishna

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The entire AI deployment will boost productivity and assist in pursuing additional commercial opportunities, resulting in a higher per capita GDP, IBM's chairman and CEO Arvind Krishna stated.
IBM Doing Important HR tasks like promotion, assessment of people with AI: CEO Arvind Krishna

IBM Completing Important HR tasks like promotion, assessment of people with AI, said CEO Arvind Krishna at B-20 Summit.

IBM, the global technology company, is employing artificial intelligence (AI) internally to boost efficiency in lower-order cognitive tasks. It is using technology in 90% of the “important” tasks performed by the human resources department, such as promoting and evaluating candidates.

 

According to IBM’s chairman and CEO Arvind Krishna, the entire AI deployment will boost productivity and assist in pursuing additional commercial opportunities, resulting in higher per capita GDP.

 

“This is something we are very excited about.” This is a method of expanding a business so that it can serve more people. Human resources, higher-level cognitive jobs like counseling people on what kind of team to form, developing individuals–those are very much human for the time being and in the foreseeable future,” Krishna added.


“However, there are a number of acts that go unnoticed… They are more humdrum in my opinion, and they could be automated but are difficult to implement. Whether it is about promoting or appraising people, AI can begin to do so. “In our case, we’re doing 90% of those with AI,” he remarked during a roundtable discussion at the B-20 Summit in India in New Delhi.

 

He further claimed that with AI assistance, overall coding productivity can be “improved” by 30% in terms of delivering new apps and maintaining and upgrading old ones, albeit coordination and requirement collection may still be required. “We believe that about 20-30% of total activity that revolves around these–called lower-order cognitive works–can be more productive with AI,” he continued.

 

 

He stated that technology deployment will begin in the “global south,” referring to more than half of the world’s population, which includes Japan, China, Italy, and the majority of Western Europe and the United States.

 

 

News Bureau PM

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