Visit BlogAdda.com to discover Indian blogs Content & Communications-Vipin Labroo: October 2024

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Why you should never use ChatGPT for writing

 

Photo by Matheus Bertelli: https://www.pexels.com/photo/man-using-laptop-wit-chat-gpt-16094040/


For all the noise about how wonderful ChatGPT is for relegating all your writing to it and the fact that businesses, individuals, researchers, students et al are doing just that, it is the dumbest thing one can resort to. For all that ChatGPT and other similar Generative AI tools do is to regurgitate past content and present it as new. The obvious danger in this is that these will soon enough start regurgitating, the mountainous amounts of AI-created content in cyberspace.

The best parallel that one can draw is with a primitive civilization that has been gifted with a machine that is able to bake cakes if fed with the right kind of ingredients, making the natives forget how to bake cakes themselves. Once the machine breaks down, they are unable to make cake anymore, as they have forgotten how to. For all those singing hosannas to ChatGPT, just wait a few years and the AI-created drivel will drive everybody nuts.

Generating content using AI crimps a person’s ability to think critically and, therefore, learn. Imagine, how harmful it is for students who more than anyone else need to be able to think critically so as to be able to understand concepts better. All that ChatGPT will teach them is to become prompting experts. That is a very limited use of the human brain’s muscles. Just because we possess automobile technology, have we forbidden our children from learning to walk?

No matter how good one might be at prompting Generative AI tools to create content for us, one is never totally confident of the accuracy of the output. This can wreak havoc when one is engaged in carrying out high-end academic research.  The very term Generative AI is a misnomer because intelligence denotes the presence of a brain, which is substituted by an aggregator and narrator of information gleaned from here and there.

Writing recalls, relates and shapes the lived human experience. It cannot be left to machines. They can only replicate and simulate what human thought might be. If tomorrow there is sentient AI, perhaps it will be able to write about its ‘lived’ experience, which will be uniquely its own! We won’t be able to do that very effectively for it, as we are not AI, but physical beings with a carbon-based body.

Creditable publications and increasingly many businesses deploying content marketing tactics are making it clear that ChatGPT-generated content is not kosher. It is liable to invite the wrath of the readers who take it to be human-created content and find out it is a machine without feelings or emotions that is fooling them with contrived content that is often plain wrong and ill-informed. Writing and the feelings it evokes are very personal things and just as it is inconceivable that one can marry a machine or a virtual being, it is ludicrous that ChatGPT should attempt to create literature.


Monday, October 7, 2024

Solopreneurship is mainstream and how

Photo by Kuncheek: https://www.pexels.com/photo/accountant-counting-money-210990/

 Solopreneurship is the flavour of the times, thanks to the technology revolution sweeping the world.  Ostensibly, run solely by one person who is the owner and manages everything from operations to publicity and sales, it can pretty much operate at scale much like a regular company, partnership or sole proprietorship employing many people to carry out diverse functions. Ever new developments in technology have made it possible for such businesses to run cheaply and efficiently allowing them to grow and prosper.

Why become a solopreneur?

There are compelling reasons to become a solopreneur in today’s day and age and that is something that hasn’t been lost on people. In fact, solopreneurs accounted for 84% of American businesses as far back as 2020, a figure which is bound to be higher in 2024.[1] In India 22% of the unicorns that came up in the last decade started as solopreneur endeavours.[2]

Let us look at the reasons driving the surge in the number of people choosing to become solopreneurs-

Potentially limitless earning potential

If you find a lucrative niche to operate in, there is potentially limitless potential to earn, depending upon how ambitious you are and how hard you are willing to achieve those ambitions. There is no petty office politics or grave corporate intrigue to hamper your progress and you don’t have to anxiously await your performance appraisal for a less than satisfactory raise.

Looking beyond corporate life

A successful corporate life may long have been considered the pinnacle of achievement, but that is no longer the case, especially in the post-Covid scenario. People have come to realise that there is much more to life than spending every waking minute relentlessly pursuing someone else’s business goals and paying a very heavy price in terms of one’s personal well-being.

Add to that the ever-present spectre of loss of employment and the charm of the 9 to 5 routine begins to wear off quickly. People crave a work-life balance more than ever before and solopreneurship offers them just that.

The growing use of technology

The growing use of technology, especially AI has enabled solopreneurs to scale up and enhance efficiency and productivity to the enterprise level, allowing them to grow in an exponential manner. This levelling of the playing field has convinced large numbers of enterprising and ambitious people to go along the solopreneur path, often with spectacular results.

Industries Amenable to Solopreneurship

There is a whole host of industries that see a fair amount of solopreneurship activity. These include-

-Content Creation

-Digital Marketing

-E-Commerce

-Wellness

-Legal Services

-Coaching

-Consulting

-Technology (including software development)

-Creative Art

-Designing

-Real Estate

-Finance

-Accounting

-Personal Services

-Education

-Engineering Services

-Travel

-Hospitality

Do it now!

If you always felt the urge to strike out on your own and break free of the shackles of corporate slavery, but dithered and hesitated for one reason or the other, there isn’t a better time than now to take that leap of faith and carve out your own destiny. There is more chance of your finding success than there ever was in the history of mankind. Follow in the footsteps of millions of others who made it as solopreneurs, forever earning their living on their own terms.

[1] https://www.forbes.com/sites/carolinecastrillon/2024/07/21/entering-the-era-of-the-solopreneur/

[2] https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/last-decade-only-22-of-unicorns-were-started-by-solopreneurs-report/article68023643.ece

Saturday, October 5, 2024

Is Digital Marketing Over-Hyped?

 

Photo by Pixabay: https://www.pexels.com/photo/gray-and-black-laptop-computer-265087/

In an era where businesses that haven’t at least partly gone digital are looked at as relics from the Jurassic age, can one question the efficacy of digital marketing as an important means of growing a business? With a gargantuan industry size of $780 billion, can you blame them for thinking like that? [1]With the daily number of hours spent going online via one’s phones ranging between 4 and 6 hours worldwide, can it really be otherwise?

The surging popularity of digital marketing as evidenced by its huge industry size is certainly a validation of its effectiveness. Still, just because that is the case, it does not mean we can’t have doubts about it or not subject it to greater scrutiny. Unbridled and unchecked enthusiasm for any trend can lead to unmitigated disasters as the Dot Com bubble and the subprime crisis showed us not all that long ago.

The thing to consider here is that digital marketing is one part of the marketing exercise and not the whole of it as it seems to have become. You can also market digitally and not just market digitally. There is a distinction between the two and this should not be forgotten. Just getting a discussion going about a brand online does not make it a hit or a success. There is so much more that determines a brand or business’s success than SEO and social media chatter.

Every year one hears of new-fangled technologies like VR, AR, Metaverse, NFT and, of course, everyone’s current favourite Generative AI. More than anything else, these technologies raise marketing budgets, more than the ROI. Marketing has to be in the now and present which is the hallmark of traditional forms of marketing, not digital marketing, which is forever toying with new seemingly path-breaking ideas.

A Case for Traditional Marketing

There is much that is good about traditional marketing. From credibility and flexible outreach to ease of implementation and the ability to target an older audience, it retains its ability to give digital marketing a run for its money and in many cases outperform it. Besides, it may work out cheaper in some cases considering the cost of going digital including the money spent on training and familiarizing oneself with the digital way of doing digital marketing.  

Overall, of course, digital marketing is known to be a lot cheaper and provides marketers the wherewithal to reach out far and wide without breaking the bank. Besides, its results can be tracked and tabulated better and sooner. That is the reason why it has seen such growth. But to jettison traditional marketing altogether for digital marketing would be a foolhardy move.

[1] https://www.marknteladvisors.com/research-library/digital-marketing-market.html#:~:text=The%20Global%20Digital%20Marketing%20Market,%2C%20i.e.%2C%202024%2D30.