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As AI advances into all industries it will eliminate millions of jobs but will generate more employment than it consumes. That general finding from the World Economic Forum last year would seem to hold true for the creative industries too where there’s growing understanding that AI/ML can help talent to their core competency — creativity — faster by speeding up the time-consuming mundane stuff.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/invest-in-digital-skills-and-ai-to-improve-creativity/
According to the World Economic Forum report, the rapid
acceleration of automation and economic uncertainty caused by the pandemic will
shift the division of labor between humans and machines, causing 85 million
jobs to be displaced and 97 million new ones to be created by 2025.
Many of these are tech jobs requiring skills in artificial
intelligence, blockchain, data security and emerging coding languages.
Those are all relevant skills to the future of media which
is why media organizations better take note of a survey from LinkedIn,
which reports that resilience and digital fluency are the skills which are most
prized by learning and development professionals.
Resilience here means the ability to adapt to rapid-fire
change — a clear consequence of the pandemic. Digital fluency is means having
the technology skills to effectively operate in an increasingly digital world.
It includes everything from understanding how to use communicate with video to
advanced artificial intelligence.
This trend is global. Resilience and digital fluency landed
the #1 or #2 spots across every country LinkedIn surveyed, including the US and
Canada, France, Australia, Southeast Asia, and India.
Companies and governments are stepping up to the plate to
retrain millions of their staff for the digital economy. As cited in the
report: JPMorgan Chase added $350 million to its existing $250 million plan to
upskill its workforce. Amazon is investing over $700 million to provide
upskilling training to their employees. PwC is spending $3 billion to upskill
all of its 275,000 employees over the next three to four years; Microsoft
(LinkedIn’s parent company) said it would upskill 25 million people with
LinkedIn Learning programs.
“The goal is not to replace the animator but to get it to
the point where the animator can bring it to the next level. AI has a lot of
potential to help express our creative potential by simplifying a lot of
frustrating tasks and accelerating work and enabling artists to get that aha!
moment as quickly as possible.”
— Roy C. Anthony, DNEG
AI/ML has entered media and entertainment to automate speech
to text captioning or to analyze and reduce the cost of storage. Algorithms are
also thought foundational for next-gen video compression schemes.
On the creative side, AI tool-sets such as Adobe Sensei are
already helping creatives speed the process of video assembly. Colourlab Ai can
quickly match footage to take the pain out of the more laborious aspects of
grading allows colorists to then make the most of their time by focusing it on
the more creative aspects of the task.
Other AI’s can assist in performing a lot of the routine
work of visual effects. Researchers at the University of Toronto have built an
AI that uses audio as an input to drive character animation for multiple
languages.
“The goal is not to replace the animator but to get it to
the point where the animator can bring it to the next level,” argues DNEG’s
global head of research Roy C. Anthony. “AI has a lot of potential to help
express our creative potential by simplifying a lot of frustrating tasks and
accelerating work and enabling artists to get that aha! moment as quickly as
possible.”
A 2020 study by London Research found that content
creators only spend about 48% of their time actually creating content, with the
rest being spent on administrative tasks associated with content creation.
Marketing and creative teams in particular could benefit
from using creative automation tools to overcome time-consuming, low-value
tasks — whether it is tweaking banner ads, making small changes to campaign
videos, or editing the copy on a Google ad.
“If it’s used for data driven content, it opens new
possibilities in terms of creative outputs,” brand and visual designer Pamela
Giani tells Creative Review.
“Imagine you want to create 15,000 videos based on real-time
data and publish them online on different platforms. That is just impossible to
achieve without automation.”
She continues, “I think automation can be great to allow us
to spend more time on creative thinking and skip the manual and low skill-based
tasks. Because humans make mistakes, I think machines allow for a higher level
of consistency and quality.”
Her company, Monzo, won’t be the only one exploring the
potential benefits, as well as the downsides, of automation.
It seems that introduction of an AI is best run in parallel
with upgrading the digital skills of the workforce. If that happens, there
could be a huge upside in greater human attention on creating stuff.
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