P2P

winter23

Peer to Peer: ILTA's Quarterly Magazine

Issue link: https://epubs.iltanet.org/i/1515316

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 36 of 94

37 I L T A N E T . O R G J an Brady 'would' have said it best, "Well all I hear all day long at work is how great Marcia data is at this and how wonderful Marcia data did that. Marcia, Marcia, Marcia. Data, Data, Data." (taken from The Brady Bunch: Her Sister's Shadow) I stand with Jan Brady. Data is getting a disproportionate amount of our attention today. Years ago, data was scarce. You had to dig for it. Today we have so much data, we have difficulty handling it. This wealth of information is creating, as the economist and artificial intelligence pioneer Herbert A. Simon coined it, "a poverty of attention." As the volume of data grows, our attention, or ability to focus on what is important, is strained and challenged. This lack of attention makes us susceptible to a failure to generate the very insights we seek and need to focus on actionable intelligence. For actionable intelligence, we must turn to technology, albeit thoughtfully. Brian Solis recently wrote, "Technology won't solve (all) your problems." (Generative AI won't automate your way to business model innovation | CIO). He went on to tell this story, "When avant-garde artist, composer, musician, and film director Laurie Anderson was named artist-in-residence at Australian Institute for Machine Learning (AIML), she mused about the role of AI in creative problem-solving. She recalled one of her favorite quotes by, of all people, her meditation teacher: 'If you think technology will solve your problems, you don't understand technology — and you don't understand your problems.'" Amen to that. Today, generative AI and predictive models, while not new, are front-and-center and actively discussed throughout the legal industry. And for good reason. There is a data goldmine within law firms. Law firms inherently gather vast amounts of data, ranging from case files and client interactions to market trends and industry insights. Yet, this data remains confined within traditional systems, hardly ever being used to its full potential. While many firms are now actively pursuing an overall AI strategy, where they decide to place their investments in AI and predictive models, how they are used needs to be selective and targeted to have a real impact. In the end, it is what you do with the massive amounts of data that counts. Otherwise, the risk of becoming data-rich and insight-poor will continue to increase. And data will just beget data. David Durlacher, chief executive officer of Julius Baer International, a global wealth management firm, was recently asked how technology can help wealth managers and advisors. His answer has relevance not just for wealth managers but, yes, lawyers as well: "I think you can do it in three ways, one of which is to free up client-facing people to be able to face clients more rather than being consumed by administrative tasks. The second is to gather deeper and richer insights into clients, and the third is to help you to communicate smarter." (Why A Purpose-Driven Approach Is Crucial To Your Wealth Management Business (forbes.com)). "In the end, it is what you do with the massive amounts of data that counts."

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of P2P - winter23