live event
Executive Briefing: Measuring the AI Proficiency of the Workforce
Featuring Taylor Malmsheimer, COO of Section
October 23, 2024
4 - 5 p.m. ET
This event has passed.
You can watch the recording of the event here.
What AI Experts are doing differently
It’s been 18 months since AI hit the knowledge workforce and nearly every organization has since sent out a press release on their AI strategy.
But inside most organizations, a big question mark remains – what portion of the workforce is actually getting meaningful AI gains? At Section, we developed our proprietary AI Proficiency Report to measure AI proficiency (not just usage) across industry, role, and level in the US workforce.
Here’s what we found: Very few employees are actually AI experts (aka the ones getting material gains from AI). So what sets these people (and their organizations apart) and how can you replicate their success?
Join Section’s COO, Taylor Malmsheimer, on October 23 from 4 - 5 p.m. ET as she unpacks the results from our most recent AI Proficiency report including insights on:
– The building blocks of AI proficiency: Usage, knowledge, and prompting skills.
– The state of AI proficiency in the modern US workforce – including the industries that are already pulling ahead.
– The 3 things AI Experts said their companies all do.
MEET YOUR SPEAKER
Taylor Malmsheimer
Taylor Malmsheimer is the COO and Head of Strategy at Section, where she champions internal AI efforts and built Section’s first AI-powered learning experience from the ground up. Before Section, Taylor led client strategy at L2, where she delivered recommendations to brands like P&G, Unilever, and Nike.
MEET YOUR SPEAKER
Taylor Malmsheimer
Taylor Malmsheimer is the COO and Head of Strategy at Section, where she champions internal AI efforts and built Section’s first AI-powered learning experience from the ground up. Before Section, Taylor led client strategy at L2, where she delivered recommendations to brands like P&G, Unilever, and Nike.
Unboring business education you can use immediately
No bad PowerPoints, cheesy ukulele music, mandatory quizzes to prove you were watching, smart-but-super-boring professors, or un-diverse panels. Ever.