By
Adam Mills
AI Editor
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Editor's note: This is AI Impact, Newsweek's weekly newsletter where each week, we will explore how business leaders are unlocking...
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By
Adam Mills
AI Editor
Share
Newsweek is a Trust Project member
Editor's note: This is AI Impact, Newsweek's weekly newsletter where each week, we will explore how business leaders are unlocking real value through artificial intelligence.
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What Happens When AI Removes the Work From Work?
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AI is compressing how work gets done. Tasks that once took months can now be completed in hours. The more important shift, however, is what happens to the work that remains.
At General Motors, that change is already visible. AI is not replacing the design process so much as collapsing the distance between idea and execution.
“We're really heavily focused on how we can best ride the coming tech wave of AI,” said Bryan Styles, director of design innovation and technology operations at General Motors. Without a clear strategy, he noted, companies risk being “inundated by that coming wave and left behind.”
In practice, the biggest gains are not coming from generating new ideas, but from eliminating the steps that slow them down. Tasks that once required multiple teams working across design, sculpting and visualization can now be handled by a single designer in a matter of hours.
“A year ago, going from a sketch
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