Toggle navigation
MBA Watch Logo
MBA Watch Sponsor
Stanford GSB | Mr. Anti W2
GRE 331, GPA 3.0
MIT Sloan | Ms. Sassy
GRE 329, GPA 3.46
Kellogg SOM | Mr. HealthAI
GMAT 700, GPA 3
MBA Watch Sponsor
Harvard | Mr. Global Consultant Leader
GMAT GMAT FE 705, GPA 7
INSEAD | Mr. SE To PM
GMAT 675, GPA 3.0
Harvard | Mr. Data Econ
GMAT 750, GPA 4
MBA Watch Sponsor
Harvard | Mr. Energetic Indian
GMAT 760, GPA 9
Stanford GSB | Ms. Multifaceted Desi
GRE 309, GPA 4
Tepper | Ms. MRI Gal
GRE N/A, GPA 3.3
MBA Watch Sponsor
Columbia | Ms. Big4 CPA To MBA
GMAT 730, GPA 3.69
Cornell Johnson | Ms. Indonesian Tech
GMAT 740, GPA 3.02
Stanford GSB | Mr. IB To TFA
GMAT 750, GPA 3.4
MBA Watch Sponsor
NYU Stern | Ms. CA – Controller
GRE 321, GPA 8
Chicago Booth | Ms. Low GPA High Impact Care
GMAT 685, GPA 2.56
Columbia | Mr. CRMprofff
GMAT 760, GPA 3
MBA Watch Sponsor
PQ Logo
Featured Schools
Auburn Herbert College of Business logo
UVA Darden Logo 440 x 200 University of Virginia
IESE Business School logo 440 x 200
IE Business School Logo Horizontal 440 x 200
Indiana Kelley School of Business
Today's Featured Schools
Featured Schools
Auburn Herbert College of Business logo
UVA Darden Logo 440 x 200 University of Virginia
IESE Business School logo 440 x 200
IE Business School Logo Horizontal 440 x 200
Indiana Kelley School of Business
  • Home
  • Main Menu
  • Most Recent
  • This Week’s Most Viewed
  • GMAT Master
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Events
  • Study In France
  • Special Reports
Rankings
  • MBA
  • Online MBA
  • Specialized Masters
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Executive MBA
  • Undergraduate Business Schools
News & Features
  • All Business School News
  • MBA
  • International MBA News
  • Online MBA
  • Specialized Masters
  • Admissions
Inside Business Education
  • THE Register
  • Thought Leadership
MBA
  • School Profiles
  • Rankings
  • News
  • Jobs
  • Faculty & Leadership
  • Best 40 Under 40 Professors
  • Events
Students
  • News & Features
  • Meet The Class
  • Best & Brightest MBAs
  • Best & Brightest Online MBAs
  • Women In Business School
Careers & Pay
  • News, Advice, & Trends
Online MBA
  • News & Advice
  • School Profiles
  • Rankings
  • Events
Masters Degrees in Business
  • News & Advice
  • Specialized Masters Directory
  • Rankings
  • Business Analytics
  • Master's In Management
  • Events
Financing
  • Financing Your Degree
Study IN Series
  • Study In France
Admissions
  • News & Advice
  • Admissions Consultant Directory
  • Your MBA Game Plan
  • Admissions Gateway
  • Getting Into HBS, GSB, & Wharton
  • Handicapping Your MBA Odds
  • MBA Watch
  • Events
GMAT & GRE
  • News & Advice
  • GMAT Master
More Resources
  • FREE: Insider Guides
  • FREE: Successful Essays To The GSB & HBS
  • Special Reports
Events
Videos
Podcasts
Executive MBA
Undergrad
Full Archive

About | Privacy Policy | Advertising| Editorial | Contact Us

Follow Us

Subscribe | Login

  1. Home
  2. Admissions News & Features
  3. How To Succeed In Business With AI On Your Side

How To Succeed In Business With AI On Your Side

by: University of Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business on March 20, 2024 | 524 Views
March 20, 2024
    • Copy Link
    • Share on Facebook
    • Share on Twitter
    • Email
    • Share on LinkedIn
    • Share on WhatsApp
    • Share on Reddit

Abstract glowing polygonal brain on dark background. Artificial intelligence and future concept. 3D Rendering

Artificial intelligence is transforming business and the way people work. To succeed in this new world, you’ll have to embrace AI. And that means everyone – not just those in tech jobs – will need to know how to work with AI.

“Every employer out there is talking about AI,” says Balaji Padmanabhan, Dean’s Professor of Decisions, Operations & Information Technologies at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business. “They are really looking to bring people in who can help them with this.”

The Washington, D.C., region and many other regions outside of the tech epicenter of California are quickly rising in their share of job postings requiring skills in AI, according to the new UMD-LinkUp AI Maps jobs tracker developed by Smith professors Anil Gupta, Siva Viswanathan and Kunpeng Zhang. You can use the tool to find where the jobs are, but you’ll need the right skills to land them. 

That’s where business schools come in.

At the Smith School, we’re giving students what they need to stand out to employers looking for AI skills.

Here’s how to thrive with AI for the future of work: 

  • Embrace the technology. Companies that don’t use AI will fall behind. It’s too risky to not understand how to work with AI, no matter what area of business you want to go into. At Smith, nearly 40 faculty members – in every discipline – are churning out new AI research and using both their findings and the technology in the classroom with students. Smith Professor Sean Cao is writing the textbook on how to use AI in accounting and finance, and because it’s so important to learn he’s making it available for free as part of Smith’s AI Initiative for Capital Market Research. In addition, professors Wendy Moe, Liye Ma, Kunpeng Zhang, and Wedad Elmaghraby work closely with companies such as Amazon, Deloitte and Meta on AI-related initiatives and translate those experiences into the classroom. And professor P.K. Kannan’s executive education initiatives in AI are making inroads with more companies.
  • Know how to work with it. You don’t have to be a tech person, but you do have to make an effort to understand the technology. At Smith, we just introduced a new MBA specialization in AI and business strategy. It has a series of courses that cover the foundations of AI, governance, applications and design of artificial intelligence. Students learn to critically dissect AI’s capabilities, and then use this understanding to explore its business applications, appreciate the importance of ethics and responsible use, think through “return on investment” both in the short- and long-term horizons, discuss AI’s direct and second-order impacts (including putting unintended consequences front and center), and collectively explore what the future of work itself might look like. The specialization is great for students with tech backgrounds who want to round out their problem-solving and management skills, and also for those with managerial backgrounds who want to learn more about the technical and business foundations of AI, says Padmanabhan, emphasizing that there will be plenty of jobs related to AI for both types of students.
  • Use business-centric thinking. Jobs that are easily automated with AI will likely disappear, but many new types of jobs will be created. That’s the central theme of Smith professor Roland Rust’s book “The Feeling Economy: How AI is Creating an Era of Empathy,” in which he says workers who have the best intuition, empathy, creativity and people skills will thrive. That means students who have the problem-solving and return-on-investment business mindset, as well as the knowledge of what AI is and how it can help, will be tremendously attractive in the marketplace, says Padmanabhan. “A big component of this is thinking business-centric,” he says. “It’s about going after the right set of problems or opportunities through an informed, design-centric lens that prioritizes returns on investment and long-term value.” That requires being smart about choosing the right problems, being very intentional about how you design, develop and deploy AI in business, allowing both the AI-first and People-first mindsets to mingle, and having great clarity on how to measure effectiveness. “These are all highly non-trivial to do, and is where business school thinking can pay a lot of dividends for companies and policy makers as well today,” he says.
  • Recognize AI’s flaws and manage risks. That means creating governance mechanisms that can manage AI risks without excessively curbing AI’s potential for transformation. Now that we all know more about how AI works, feigning ignorance about problems just isn’t an option anymore, and there’s absolutely no excuse for the misuse of AI. “When an organization deploys AI in any manner, and then later on realizes there is an unintended consequence, you simply cannot use the ‘we didn’t know this might happen’ excuse any longer,’” says Padmanabhan. Companies have to have a good governance process in place and think about how to design AI applications to get the best that the tech can offer while mitigating the downsides – the main topic of the Smith School’s recent AI Symposium on Design and Governance with industry leaders and academics. That also means finding and fixing flaws quickly. For example, Smith Professor Lauren Rhue’s research found racial bias in facial recognition software that analyzed emotions. Her findings and other similar research pushed Microsoft to remove emotion-detecting features from its facial recognition software.

Business school graduates will have an enormous opportunity to shape the future of work with AI, and that starts now.  

“One of the big opportunities is thinking of how work itself – every single person, every single task within a business – can be transformed using smart humans with an AI friend,” Padmanabhan says. And sometimes that requires thinking about what starting with a clean slate today might look like – an exercise that by itself can unlock tremendous value.

The AI-future is here for all businesses, perhaps a little sooner than we thought, but life doesn’t come with an undo button to buy us any more time to figure things out. The time is indeed very much NOW to equip ourselves with the understanding and thinking that can help shape this future. 


Smith Brain Trust features business expertise from the faculty at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business. Professors offer insights on hot business topics in a weekly newsletter that focuses on current events and practical tips for busy working professionals.

Trending

INSEAD vs. London Business School: The Ultimate Smackdown

Anxiety Builds For International Applicants & Students As Trump Prepares To Take Office

How To Write Stellar Wharton MBA Essays

No Vanishing Act: This MBA & Magician Has Written A New Book About His Tech Journey

On Earth Day, B-Schools Double Down On Climate Innovation

Northwestern Kellogg vs. Chicago Booth: The Ultimate Smackdown

Emory MBAs Visit Denmark For A Lesson In Happiness

The Curtain Is About To Rise On NYU Stern’s Big Mideast Venture: An Accelerated MBA In Abu Dhabi

Tagged: ai, AI in business, Artificial Intelligence, How To Succeed In Business With AI On Your Side, University of Maryland

Post navigation

Previous Article: TCU Neeley Names A New Dean: Long-Time Notre Dame Prof Craig Crossland
Next Article: France’s EDHEC Business School Launches An Online MBA
  • Stay Informed. Sign Up! Login
    Logout
    Search for:
  • PQ Consultant Directory PQ Consultant Directory
  • Sponsored Blogs

    GRE vs. GMAT For MBA: Which Test Should You Take?

    by Judith Silverman Hodara, Fortuna Admissions (1 day ago)

    The Real ROI Of An MBA: Still Worth The Investment?

    by Caroline Diarte Edwards, Fortuna Admissions (2 weeks ago)
    NEW Karen Marks Photo

    Advice Column: Real Talk About The MBA Waitlist

    by Karen Marks, North Star Admissions Consulting (3 weeks ago)
    Fortuna Admissions MBA

    The Future Of MBA Careers In An AI-Driven World

    by Heidi Hillis, Fortuna Admissions (3 weeks ago)
  • Advice and Articles
    • How To Use Poets&Quants MBA Admissions Consultant Directory
    • How To Select An MBA Admissions Consultant
    • MBA Admission Consulting Claims: How Credible?
    • Suddenly Cozy: MBA Consultants and B-Schools
    • The Cost: $6,850 Result: B-School

Our Partner Sites: Poets&Quants for Execs | Poets&Quants for Undergrads | Tipping the Scales | We See Genius

About Poets&Quants | P&Q News Archives | Privacy Policy | Advertising & Partnerships | Editorial | Contact Us | Sign In / Register

Copyright© 2025 C Change Media, LLC All Rights Reserved.

Website Design By: Yellowfarmstudios.com