Upskilling for AI is an important part of the career growth plan for next-gen finance professionals. Finance leaders are seeing the positive impacts of AI, according to Part III of our recently released research survey, The state of finance hiring & careers. But they pointed out plenty of potential threats to their organizations’ data quality and controls as well as employee productivity. Half of the 352 finance executives responding to our survey indicated that employees in their organizations have adopted AI slowly or very slowly, compared with roughly two-fifths (39%) who said their employees have adopted AI fairly to very quickly. One in 10 respondents said employees hadn’t meaningfully adopted AI technology yet (8%) or that their organization doesn’t permit AI use (2%). Roman Telerman, CFO of application security firm Black Duck, called AI “a change agent, and so you can be fearful of it, you can adapt to it…the spectrum is broad.” CFOs can make all sorts of promises to boost efficiency and productivity, and cut down on the time to complete tasks. But it’s up to the finance professionals, not the person training them on AI, to determine “how they best drive value or innovate in their role,” Conor Grennan, CEO of AI training consultancy AI Mindset, told CFO Brew in an email. Keep reading.—CV, AZ |