The big buzz at this moment is AI and ChatGPT. So many unanswered questions, concerns, and opportunities. Everyone has an opinion, their version of truth as to whether it is a good thing or a bad thing and what disruption it will have on the future of work.
I have been asked many times since ChatGPT arrived as to what I think the platform will do for the future of selling.
Right at this point I am hearing Maxwell Smarts’ voice from the 60s TV show Get Smart when pondering one of K.A.O.Ss evil but disastrous plans
“If only they used it for good instead of evil”.
I know, I am showing my age.
I am aware of the irony of putting my thoughts in writing as just another opinion and truth amongst many.
I do believe that AI will find a place that supports business and will add another dimension to the way we communicate.
I also believe that it will have many unintended consequences that won’t be good for business or broader society – very much like social media.
In the world of sales, I have a much firmer belief. I believe that salespeople will continue to be the magic between what a brand promises and what a customer experiences and feels.
AI will aid salespeople in their endeavours to produce better content perhaps, find added insights perhaps, speed up the process of finding information perhaps, maybe even write better stories, but it will not replace the fundamental need for human connection.
The pandemic showed us just how important human connection is to our mental health and to the health of our communities and tribes by taking it away for a period of time.
The building of trust is a series of human interactions where we do the dance of building relationships. Used for good, AI will help salespeople enhance the dance. Used for evil, AI will erode trust and drive people to want the human connection even more so.
AI may give us much more content to play with (lucky for Marketing I suppose), but it is authenticity, empathy and purpose that makes the connection, something that only humans can deliver.
Salespeople now and in the future need to understand this and
‘be the magic’.
The dance is still the dance, just maybe some different music and some new steps.
Andrew Nisbet




