How Are You Training Your Teams on AI Skills?
Posted by Few_Chocolate9758@reddit | sysadmin | View on Reddit | 10 comments
Okay, L&D folks (and anyone else dealing with corporate training), let’s talk AI. Specifically, how are you bridging the gap between the hype and actual, practical AI skills for your employees? I was seriously struggling to find something comprehensive enough for our tech teams (ML, data science, Python for AI) but also accessible and relevant for non-tech roles (like generative AI for marketing or finance).
After a lot of searching, I found a program that somehow manages to hit all these points. It’s working pretty well for us. One thing I wannt to mention is that, it’s not just about tools, it’s about understanding how AI can genuinely transform workflow.
If you’ve figured out how to get everyone in the company up to speed with AI, I’d love to hear your thoughts and share mine. What’s been your biggest challenge and success?
Tiny-Cardiologist87@reddit
every sales droid and their ai pitches...
Few_Chocolate9758@reddit (OP)
I didn’t know we have the self-appointed pitch detectors here. Must be fun policing around posts? Got anything to share that would help L&D folks here?
Few_Chocolate9758@reddit (OP)
ohh seriously
Rhythm_Killer@reddit
You “found” a program that manages to hit all these points did you ? 😆
Few_Chocolate9758@reddit (OP)
Right
TaiGlobal@reddit
Not everyone can do that unfortunately.
fdeyso@reddit
What you need to learn? You ask a question it spits out something and you reamin sceptical about what it says and you approach the code that it gave you just like it was written by an intern on their first day.
peraving@reddit
“Prompt Engineering” is what I hear is the thing to learn.
fdeyso@reddit
Yeah me too, but to me it just looks like people learn how to describe what they want, if you can google efficiently you’re good to go.
BoltActionRifleman@reddit
Training starts at 8:00 a.m. sharp tomorrow!
8:00 - type in question
8:01 - read answer
Training is all done, folks!