Imagine if NASA built a rocket ship, laid out a plan to go to the moon, but didn’t train the astronauts on how to crew the new vessel. NASA would never. In fact, the Artemis II crew trained for three years in a replica Orion capsule practicing real-world (pun intended) scenarios in order to master the tech they’d be using away from Earth. The crew sometimes spent more than 30 hours at a time training ahead of its mission, which safely splashed down in the Pacific Ocean on Apr. 10. Compare that to your department’s last AI training session. A gap in AI readiness is impacting AI’s potential gains across industries, according to a new report from study.com on the state of AI jobs and skills. The report follows two complementary surveys, each of 1,000 employed US adults, done in March. It found companies and enterprise orgs are rapidly deploying AI tools across their businesses, but their human employees are falling behind and need more job-specific training. For more on the AI readiness gap, and its effect on productivity, keep reading here.—AD |