Wir haben über 2.000 Amerikaner dazu befragt, wie sie KI bei der Arbeit nutzen: Wer nutzt sie, wie oft, welche Dienste und ob sie Aufgaben ersetzt oder schafft
From the article
AI is becoming a mainstream work tool. Half of employed Americans who used AI in the past week reported using AI tools at least as much for work as for personal tasks.
AI is changing what people do at work. It has replaced existing tasks for 27% of employed AI work users and created new ones for 21%.
AI work use is higher among paid subscribers. Employer-paid subscribers are far more likely to use AI for work than free-tier users, and self-payers fall in-between.
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„employed Americans who used AI in the past week“ is very key here. This is equivalent to Dave’s mayonnaise doing a survey of their customers and then publishing something saying „half of all Dave’s mayo customers put it on their sandwiches“. This study could be useful for their internal marketing, because it gives them some information about how their product is used, but you can’t actually draw any conclusions from this study about usage among the general population. Also, don’t trust a study directly from a company on how important their product is. This is marketing, not science.
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From the article
AI is becoming a mainstream work tool. Half of employed Americans who used AI in the past week reported using AI tools at least as much for work as for personal tasks.
AI is changing what people do at work. It has replaced existing tasks for 27% of employed AI work users and created new ones for 21%.
AI work use is higher among paid subscribers. Employer-paid subscribers are far more likely to use AI for work than free-tier users, and self-payers fall in-between.
„employed Americans who used AI in the past week“ is very key here. This is equivalent to Dave’s mayonnaise doing a survey of their customers and then publishing something saying „half of all Dave’s mayo customers put it on their sandwiches“. This study could be useful for their internal marketing, because it gives them some information about how their product is used, but you can’t actually draw any conclusions from this study about usage among the general population. Also, don’t trust a study directly from a company on how important their product is. This is marketing, not science.