In this interview with Bizcommunity Marketing & Media editor, Danette Breitenbach, Saunders shares insights from his latest publication, Human Centric, a framework for building a Business that will thrive in the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
This report looks at how people will engage with technology in the future and what it means for technology to be human-centric.
“Ultimately technology doesn’t mean much unless it means something to someone. When tech succeeds in any business or any intervention it makes in society, it’s always valuable to people – that is the success point for all tech,” says Saunders.
Technology: an accelerator of human potential
Human-centric is about making technology human, building it in that way, and looking at it from the point of view of what human-centricity means and how technology can learn from it.
“The human element is crucial because the ultimate reason for a lot of technology is to accelerate the human nature of who we are,” says Saunders.
He explains that technology interventions tend to take care of things that make us less human.
“So whenever new technology revolutions occur, they’re met with questions like ‘What are we going to do now?
But we always find ourselves being more human, opening the door to being more of ourselves, and doing less of the menial tasks.”
For Saunders technology is an accelerator of who we are and our potential. “At the end of the day, if we weren’t bringing technology into the space for human beings, then what would the point of it be?”
One of the most exciting things about AI, especially in the ad industry, is that it’s pushing creatives to be more creative
Technology specific trends
Saunders says when he first got into technology and the digital space, it was the social media rush, and post that, there was a period of innovation, followed by a phase of non-innovation.
“AI is a huge trend. For me, AI is the next accelerator push. It’s challenging us to say, ‘What makes us more human?’ It’s the only place we can show our identity as human beings.”
Mike Saunders
He adds that one of the most exciting things about AI, especially in the ad industry, is that it’s pushing creatives to be more creative.
“AI is pushing people to become problem solvers, strategists, dealing with bigger issues, which our brains are meant to do.”
Mike Saunders
He says we are not meant to just process information all day.
“We’re meant to be creative and solve problems. This is why we’re going to have to prepare future generations to be problem solvers and creatives, as these will be the skills that make us human.”
Mike Saunders
The role of data
Underpinning social media, the internet, information, and AI is data.
Data is crucial to succeeding in the digital world. AI simplifies data analysis and processing, making it easier for us to understand and use. Without a solid understanding of data, we can’t compete in the digital space.
Mike Saunders
For Saunders, businesses have prioritised the front end of digital – like making their websites beautiful, their social media, and customer service – but they’ve neglected the back end, which is where they’re now struggling.
“We’re going to see a big divergence of people leading the data game and AI game and a lot of laggards. There won’t be much middle ground.”
Marketing is a technology business
Mike Saunders
Leveraging marketing technology
The ones that are driving a data-driven strategy hard are the ones leaning on marketing technology tools.
“Marketing is a technology business. We must think about systems that can trigger off data more than just managing data.”
Mike Saunders
Along with this, he says we will see more product-related skill sets, with technology-driven marketers coming into play.
The tension between technology and humanity
“Businesses relying on data and AI to run creative and engagement would be remiss not to understand the value of human creativity and human connection points.
Conversely, he adds that businesses trying to do everything themselves and be human and gut-driven would be remiss not to understand the beauty of data and how it allows you to scale and drive your business forward.
“There’s got to be a marriage somewhere in the middle. We need to find the balance between what is human and what is tech, leaning into humanness but also understanding the value of technology.”
The article first appeared on Bizcommunity