AI's Path to Profits Is Being Driven by Consumers

Markets naturally see through the lens of businesses. When tech stocks took a dive last month on concerns of an “AI winter,” investors were egged on by a study showing 95% of corporate AI pilot programs failed to deliver any gains in productivity or profit, making all this expensive AI start to look a little useless.

Consumers would beg to differ.

While businesses grapple with how best to plug generative AI tools into their systems (as they’ve naturally done with every other technology wave in history, from PCs to smartphones to social media) individuals have been embracing the technology. The phenomenon is easy to overlook when you only measure success with quantifiable metrics like time and money, and when the cost of running data centers is still so high. But some of AI’s biggest winners so far are companies who are chasing squishier value propositions like entertainment and camaraderie. A study by Harvard Business Review earlier this year found that the three most popular use cases for generative AI were therapy and companionship, organizing life and “finding purpose.”