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Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership Roles – an experiment by a CEO

Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership Roles – an experiment by a CEO

by Gunther Fürstberger | Nov 14, 2023 | International leadership development, Leadership and AI, Leadership in the digital transformation | 0 comments

Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership Roles:

Learn more about the ongoing ChatGPT experiment by MDI CEO Gunther Fürstberger

Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click below to access our AI-generated version. 

Exploring the Influence of AI on Leadership Roles:

Learn more about the ongoing ChatGPT experiment by MDI CEO Gunther Fürstberger

In a ChatGPT experiment, our CEO Gunther Fürstberger tried to test the boundaries between artificial intelligence and humans. He asked himself and ChatGPT the same questions to determine the differences. Read this blog post to see the results.

You can connect with Gunther Fürstberger on LinkedIn and join the conversation! 

“How much can the 4 main roles of a leader according to Covey be supported by AI”

Answers from Gunther Fürstberger:

1. Creating trust: Transparency: AI can visualize the most important things. AI can provide reliable and well-founded answers.

2. Develop visions: AI can calculate the probability of achieving a vision and create proposals for the Strategic Roadmap

3. Implement strategies: AI can coordinate alignment and coordination of priorities between departments and over time

4. Coach potentials: AI can make learning suggestions

Answers from ChatGPT:

The four main roles of a leader according to Covey – building trust, developing vision, implementing strategies, and coaching potential – can be supported to varying degrees by AI technologies. Here is an assessment of how each of these roles could benefit from AI:

Creating trust

AI can help bring transparency and objectivity to decision-making processes. Data-driven analytics can help leaders make informed decisions and build trust by demonstrating that decisions are based on verifiable information.

Developing visions

AI can help extract information from large amounts of data and identify trends that can help develop long-term visions and strategies. AI models can recognize patterns that are difficult for humans to perceive, providing valuable insights for the development of plans.

Implementing strategies

AI can assist in project and resource management. By analyzing data and predicting outcomes, AI can help leaders to better plan and adapt their strategies. Automation of recurring tasks can also create more time for strategic thinking.

Coaching potential

This is one of the biggest challenges for AI. While AI can assist to some extent in identifying individual strengths and weaknesses, the interpersonal and emotional intelligence required for effective coaching is a capability that AI has not yet fully achieved. However, AI can support learning platforms and personalized training to support the individual growth of team members.

It is important to note that AI is not meant to replace human leaders, but rather to complement and support them. Human intuition, interpersonal skills, and the ability to solve problems creatively remain crucial, especially in situations that require empathy, emotional understanding, and complex decision-making.

Better Leadership World with IDGs

“What can humans do better?”

Answers from Gunther Fürstberger:

1. Creating trust

When we talk about leading people, humans have a similar advantage. Trust is made up of integrity and competence. In terms of integrity, humans can draw on more experience with people (e.g. in the family) than with AI and would probably currently place more trust in a human leader. People can draw on intuitive skills.

2. Develop visions

Humans can use their own emotions to check how much a vision appeals to them.

3. Implement strategies

People can sometimes better recognize and deal with resistance.

4. Coaching potential

Some people are passionate about supporting the development of others.

ChatGPT answers:

Humans bring a set of skills and qualities that are difficult or even impossible to replicate by Artificial Intelligence (AI). Here are some areas where humans are often better:

Emotional intelligence and empathy

Humans can perceive subtle emotional nuances, understand interpersonal relationships, and show empathy. These skills are crucial in leadership positions, especially when it comes to motivating employees, resolving conflicts, and creating a supportive work environment.

Creativity and innovation

Creativity involves linking different ideas and concepts in unexpected ways. Humans can come up with unconventional solutions, develop ideas, and drive innovation beyond the programmatic capabilities of AI.

Complex interpersonal communication

Interpreting body language, non-verbal communication, and subtle signs is a human strength. In complex interpersonal situations, such as negotiations or conflict resolution, human understanding of communication is invaluable.

Values and ethics

People have moral and ethical considerations that influence their decision-making. The ability to weigh up right and wrong is strongly influenced by individual values and social norms, which AI does not have in the same way.

Intuition and gut feeling

People often make quick decisions based on intuition or gut feeling, based on experience and emotional signals. This can be useful in situations where data is incomplete or decision-making needs to be quick.

Contextual understanding

People can better grasp the context of a situation, including cultural, social, and historical aspects. This is important for making decisions based on a broader perspective.

Adaptability

People can adapt quickly to unexpected changes and new situations. They can react flexibly to unforeseen events and develop alternative solutions.

It is important to emphasize that AI and human skills can complement each other. AI can automate repetitive tasks, facilitate data analysis, and serve as a source of information, while humans bring their unique skills to manage complex situations and foster human relationships.

The 5 most important soft skills for leaders in the age of AI

How does AI influence the management task of delegation?

What do we delegate?

Answer from Gunther Fürstberger:

What we delegate and what we prefer to do ourselves is a personal question. It has to do with our abilities and wishes. If you want to build up a large company or a corporation should delegate as much as possible. If you want to learn as an expert, keep the exciting topics for yourself and delegate routine tasks.

As it ultimately comes down to the question of what work you want to do, what you find meaningful, and what you enjoy, it is probably better to engage in an internal dialogue about this than to leave these decisions to an AI app. AI programs such as Insightful can coach you on this, however.

Answer from ChatGPT:

Task automation

AI can automate repetitive and time-consuming tasks. This allows leaders to focus on more strategic and creative tasks.

Data analysis and decision-making

Leaders can delegate the analysis of large amounts of data and the derivation of insights to
AI systems to make informed decisions.

Communication and information management

Chatbots and intelligent assistance systems can support the management of communication and information by filtering emails, scheduling appointments, and organizing information.

Who do we delegate to?

Answer from Gunther Fürstberger:

AI itself takes on the function of an employee to whom it can be delegated. And the most interesting thing is that this employee is sure to get better, can take on more, and deliver higher-quality results. It wasn’t so long ago that we were hiring translation agencies to translate training materials into other languages.

Now this works in seconds with good quality. Learning search engines provide us with relevant information, and travel portals with suitable and affordable transportation and accommodation options. Navigation systems save us from traffic jams and radar fines. OpenAI can summarize books in 1000 characters or write poems for the Christmas party.

Which “human employees” you delegate to depends, for example, on their available capacity, skills, and wishes. If you as a line leader have a management span of e.g. 10 employees, then your assessment based on interviews is probably sufficient to decide which tasks you pass on to which person.

If the number of delegation candidates is very high, machine learning can help to create a selection of suitable candidates. There are consultant or coach databases and recruiting programs that suggest the top selection from a large number of people according to defined criteria.

Answer from ChatGPT:

AI systems and robots

Tasks can be delegated to specialized AI systems or robots that have been developed for specific tasks or processes.

Employees and teams

Leaders must decide which tasks are delegated to employees and teams and ensure that the resources and skills are in place to complete these tasks successfully. 

ai's developments

How do we delegate?

Answer from Gunther Fürstberger:

How you delegate determines the confidence and motivation with which your employees will carry out the task. Depending on their level of experience, employees should be given more or less autonomy. If the person receiving the delegation is a professional, it is sufficient to state the purpose of the task. “For example, could you please make sure that the visitors are happy”.

This would be too much for a beginner. This assessment of employees is currently still the responsibility of the leader and not an AI program. However, ChatGPT could be used to design skill tests or self-assessments. However, AI tools such as Taskade.com are good at generating lists of detailed tasks from main tasks.

Answer from ChatGPT:

Skills assessment

Leaders need to assess the skills and strengths of their employees and AI systems to delegate the right tasks to the right people or systems

Clear communication

Clear communication is crucial to set the expectations and goals of delegation. This is
particularly important when delegating tasks to AI systems as the programming and configuration must be correct.

Monitoring and feedback

Leaders need to monitor the progress and performance of delegated tasks and provide regular feedback to ensure that objectives are being met. Overall, integrating AI into delegation processes allows for a more efficient and targeted use of resources, enabling leaders to focus on strategic and valuable tasks while improving the overall performance of the organization.

However, it is important to consider the human and ethical aspects of delegation in the context of AI and ensure that it is in line with the organization’s values and goals.

How can AI contribute to corporate management?

Answer from Gunther Fürstberger:

Artificial intelligence has had a permanent place at the table in our leadership meetings since July 2023. It’s not yet a robot dressed in a costume or suit with speech recognition and output, but a member of the leadership team who gives AI a voice. At the moment, I’m taking care of it and doing it as follows:

1. We have a shared agenda document in MsTeams. About 1 day before our weekly 50-minute leadership meeting, I look at the agenda and select 1 topic, for which I usually create a ChatGPT4 prompt.

2. I show the answer in the meeting and we discuss it. There are almost always good suggestions that give us new ideas.

3. AI does not yet have a (co-)decision-making role. At the moment, it is more of a valued advisory role.

We have decided to integrate AI into company management for 2 main reasons:

As a management development institute, we see it as our responsibility to help shape the opportunities and risks of AI in leadership in general. This raises many interesting and challenging questions, such as “Do we want organizations in our society that will one day no longer be led by humans, but by AI?”

At the moment, we believe in the co-creation of leaders with AI and also want to learn from our own experiences in the spirit of “walking the talk“.

b. As a company, we are convinced that we need to keep disrupting ourselves to develop further and make a relevant and efficient contribution to society. AI currently offers enormous potential for disruption, which we want to exploit with passion and a sense of responsibility.

An interesting side effect of integrating AI at the management level is that we are using AI more consistently in a wide range of operational areas. We have now also launched an AI transformation journey for all areas of the company and introduced AI co-trainers. But there will be separate blog posts about this.

From today’s perspective, we can recommend the integration of AI in corporate management and would be delighted if you would also share your experiences with us, for example in the comments.

Leadership between Connectedness and AI-2

Now the answer from ChatGPT-4 to a slightly customized prompt:

“Please describe an example of the integration of AI in board meetings”

AI integration in board meetings: a practical example

Initial situation

An international technology company wants to increase the effectiveness of its board meetings. The meetings are often characterized by extensive reports, presentations, and data analyses, which slows down decision-making processes. It is decided to introduce an AI-powered solution to streamline discussions and facilitate real-time, data-based decisions.

Solution

1. Preparation of the meeting

An AI system consolidates all relevant data and reports from the various departments in advance. It checks these for completeness, up-to-dateness, and consistency. It then generates a summary of the most important points and visualizes them in easy-to-understand diagrams and graphics.

2. During the meeting

An AI-supported assistant projects information onto a screen in real-time. For example, if a board member asks a question about sales development in a specific market, the AI immediately displays the relevant data, historical trends, and forecasts. Through machine learning and pattern recognition, the AI can also suggest potential causes for deviations or anomalies.

3. Interactive discussions

The system enables board members to run through “what if” scenarios in real-time. For example, when discussing how an increase in the marketing budget could affect sales, the AI simulates the potential impact based on historical data and current market conditions.

4. Recording and task management

The AI records the meeting and transcribes it in real-time. Based on the discussion, it recognizes action items and assignments and automatically creates meeting minutes with a list of tasks, responsibilities, and deadlines.

5. Feedback loop

After the meeting, the AI collects feedback from the participants to continuously improve the process and the data presented. It learns from this feedback to make future meetings even more effective.

Conclusion

Integrating AI into board meetings can significantly speed up and improve the decision-making process. Providing data in real-time enables fact-based discussion and helps the board to make informed and strategic decisions. However, it is important to ensure that AI recommendations are transparent and that human intuition and expertise continue to play a central role in the decision-making process.

Insight from the ChatGTP response

So far, we have mainly used AI as a source of inspiration in management meetings. We will soon be trying out AI meeting software to optimize meeting documentation, including the formulation of action items.

Hopefully, these questions have given you something to think about. As you can see, there are still some differences between human and AI-created answers. 

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

CEO | MDI Management Development International

Gunther Fürstberger is a management trainer, author and CEO of Metaforum and MDI – a global consulting company providing solutions for leadership development. His main interest is to make the world a better place through excellent leadership. He has worked for clients including ABB, Abbvie, Boehringer Ingelheim, DHL, Hornbach, PWC and Swarovski. His core competence is leadership in digital transformation. He gained his own leadership experience as HR Manager of McDonald’s Central Europe/Central Asia.  At the age of 20 he already started working as a trainer.

  • LinkedIn

Download our International Whitepaper:

 

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AI as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development

AI as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development

by Gunther Fürstberger | Nov 14, 2023 | Impuls series, International leadership development, Leadership and AI | 0 comments

Artificial Intelligence as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development

Do you prefer to listen to this blog article? Click below to access our AI-generated version. 

Artificial Intelligence as a Co-Trainer in Leadership Development

In a world that is constantly evolving, we at MDI always strive to be at the forefront of finding innovative ways to promote and sustainably improve leadership development.

Our collaboration with the MDI AI co-trainer “AICo” represents an exciting step in this direction. This ongoing experiment allows us to explore the role of artificial intelligence in leadership development and understand its impact on our participants. It’s about making the future of leadership training even more sustainable.

In this interview, we are pleased to share our initial experiences and insights from this exciting phase. We have asked some of our outstanding MDI partners to reflect on their experiences and observations. Together we will explore how the AI co-trainer has the potential to bring about a revolutionary change in leadership development.

What exactly is and does an AI Co-Trainer?

An AI co-trainer represents artificial intelligence (AI) that works together with human trainers to optimize the learning experience and learning success. I positioned a fabric owl as a symbol in the center of the seminar room and introduced it with the name AICo (Artificial Intelligence Co-Trainer). Seminar participants can ask AICo questions at any time. And I also regularly include AICo in the training.

How has the use of the AI Co-Trainer influenced your leadership development training?

I’m still in an early experimental phase, but the experience so far makes me want to do more. AICo helps in the preparation, implementation, and follow-up of a seminar. During preparation, AICo saves time in creating and updating seminar material. During the implementation, we let AICo ask e.g. ChatGPT4 if I am not sure as the main trainer.

2 current participant questions as an example: “Can the DISG typology of the sender be recognized by the wording of an email?” “Can I ask AI to reformulate my email to suit my DISC type?” AICo’s answers were convincing and fun. For the transfer phase, participants are given the task of performing a role play, for example, to consolidate what they have learned.

What challenges were better overcome thanks to the AI co-trainer?

I see the biggest challenge and opportunity in the fact that learning and adult education are being fundamentally transformed by artificial intelligence. The a-synchronous part is constantly growing and learning experiences are being tailored to the individual with AI.

The personal encounter in the seminar room will continue to have its place due to our social needs. With AICo, we can also make good use of some of the advantages of AI in face-to-face meetings. For example, AICo opened and closed a 3-day seminar with a really good 8-line poem on the seminar topic of “Lateral Leadership”.

What positive effects has the use of the AI Co-Trainer had on the training participants?

There is still the novelty and surprise effect, which leads to curiosity and therefore a willingness to learn. It also brings something playful into the room and we know that playing and learning go hand in hand. Other effects were

 

  • Gaining knowledge
  • Interest in experimenting more with AI ourselves
  • Energy management, e.g. through the music playlist selected by AICo or relaxation exercises that match the topic
Leadership 4.0

Can you share examples of situations in which the AI co-trainer was particularly helpful?

Another example is that I was able to get tips on how best to interact with the group based on a seminar group description. So AICo helped me to resonate even better with the group.

Are there specific areas where the AI Co-Trainer works particularly well or where there is still room for improvement?

The AI co-trainer is particularly helpful with participant questions to bring in a different perspective based on analyzing large amounts of data and to provide variety. I see room for improvement in the interaction interface.
An interface that enables voice input and output with the entire group, similar to Alexa, would of course be more elegant and can certainly be implemented soon.

At the moment, I am still acting as a “translator”, and shared access for the entire group to a program like ChatGPT with shared visualization would also be the next step. However, crystal-clear transparency and trust must be ensured that data is handled in the interests of the participants and the companies to which they belong.

The documentation can be left to an AI meeting assistant such as Otter.ai. However, the consent of all relevant stakeholders, such as the commissioning HR department, must be obtained.

How did the participants react to the AI co-trainer? Did you receive feedback from them?

Mostly with curiosity, fascination, and fun. At the same time with respect and uncertainty about where the AI journey will take us.

Which tools and functions of the AI Co-Trainer have proven to be particularly valuable for leadership development?

ChatGPT4, DeeplPro, Youtube playlists, image generators.

To what extent has your way of teaching and learning changed or expanded as a result of the AI Co-Trainer?

I see AICo and myself as a team and try to combine our different strengths. AICo has access to much more know-how, I concentrate on the interaction with the group and the overall control/facilitation.

Can you imagine integrating the AI co-trainer into your leadership development training courses in the long term? Why or why not?

AICo is now permanently engaged. People will not be replaced by AI but by people working with AI. This is especially true for the training industry. As the head of a leadership development provider, I am passionate about seizing the AI opportunity with a sense of responsibility.

Have your training materials or content changed as a result of working with the AI co-trainer?

Yes, in text, PPt, and image generation, and also by responding to inspiration from AICo. However, I think it’s essential that human creativity retains a high proportion.

What tips or advice do you have for others who are thinking about using an AI co-trainer in their leadership development training?

Just get started and keep pausing to reflect on the risks as well as the opportunities.

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

CEO | MDI Management Development International

Gunther Fürstberger is a management trainer, author and CEO of Metaforum and MDI – a global consulting company providing solutions for leadership development. His main interest is to make the world a better place through excellent leadership. He has worked for clients including ABB, Abbvie, Boehringer Ingelheim, DHL, Hornbach, PWC and Swarovski. His core competence is leadership in digital transformation. He gained his own leadership experience as HR Manager of McDonald’s Central Europe/Central Asia.  At the age of 20 he already started working as a trainer.

  • LinkedIn

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The 5 most important soft skills for leaders in the age of AI

The 5 most important soft skills for leaders in the age of AI

by Jana Wölfl | Sep 29, 2023 | Impuls series, Leadership and AI, Leadership Tips | 0 comments

The 5 most important soft skills for leaders in the age of AI

Prefer to listen to the article? Click below to access our AI speech-generated audio. However, if you want to read it as usual, keep scrolling.

The 5 most important soft skills for leaders in the age of AI

In times where artificial intelligence knows no boundaries and numerous programs can seemingly replace any work, leaders are placing more and more value on so-called soft management skills.

In this blog post, you will learn what exactly we mean by this and why soft management skills are indispensable, especially in the context of artificial intelligence. However, if you want to learn more about the basics of artificial intelligence, you can read the first blog post of our AI series here.

Hard vs. soft management skills

While hard management skills focus more on actually doing the job, e.g. dealing with data, managing and analyzing projects, and allocating budget, soft skills are mainly about the human aspect of leadership.

Thus, it is more about empathy, cohesion, transparent communication, etc., which means that leaders should pay more attention to social interaction with their employees. While both areas of leadership are equally relevant, there is one important factor that differentiates them:

Artificial intelligence can replace the hard aspects of leadership, but not the “soft” ones.

Especially in the aforementioned areas – i.e., data analysis and management, forecasting and budgeting – but also in project management, marketing, and HR, there are now quite a few programs that significantly simplify a leader’s tasks and make them more efficient. 

While artificial intelligence can save us some work, it cannot replace the human aspect. So the more AI takes over these technical tasks, the more important it is for leaders to focus on soft skills.

The 5 most important soft skills for leaders in the age of AI

The 5 most important soft skills for leaders in the age of AI

Of course, there is a wide range of relevant soft skills that you should apply as a leader in your everyday work. Here we present the 5 most essential ones.

1. Transparent communication

As a leader, you should be able to talk openly and honestly with your employees about internal and external topics. Also, in the context of artificial intelligence, it is important to clearly communicate to your employees where AI will be used and how your work structures will now change.

You can find more about Transparent Communication in Gunther Fürstberger’s book “Winning Commitment as a Lateral Leader” in the chapter “The Communicator and the Three Commitment Steps”.

2. Empathy and social understanding

Especially in times where roles in the company are changing rapidly and new programs and devices are constantly being introduced, it is important to be able to empathize with your employees and also understand what they need.

Because in the end, of course, it’s not just about your vision as a leader, but also about making sure your employees feel comfortable with the move to artificially intelligent programs and that any concerns about the issue can be listened to and addressed as far as possible.

More on how to boost your empathy in this article.

3. Adaptability

As a leader, you should be constantly learning about new programs and technologies to stay current. It is important not to be afraid of these changes and adapt to them as soon as possible.

soft skills

4. Awareness of cultural and gender differences

The use of artificial intelligence varies from culture to culture, which you should be especially aware of when working with other countries. Also, there is a large gender gap in the tech industry, and some AI algorithms harbor unintended biases and gender stereotypes.

Being aware of these factors can help you be mindful of the inclusive use of artificially intelligent programs.

You can read more about this topic in this article.

5. Critical thinking

While AI programs can handle some of our routine tasks, their flawless problem-solving is not guaranteed. Therefore, it is up to you as a leader to review the programs’ solutions and critically question whether they have actually handled the problem ideally.

In this article, you will find tips on how to improve your critical thinking.

Conclusion

Especially now that artificial intelligence can take over more and more tasks and facilitate processes, it is important for leaders to strengthen and develop their soft skills. Thus, a smooth transition to AI programs can succeed not only for you but also for your team and the entire organization.

Jana Wölfl

Jana Wölfl

Marketing Assistant

Jana Wölfl works at MDI as a marketing assistant and writes blog posts for our site in addition to her studies at Leiden University.

She also works for SDI and supports us with writing content there as well.

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