A few months ago, Shaun Lowthorpe put out a call on LinkedIn for people willing to share real‑life experiences of using business analysis at work. Although I haven’t done what you’d call traditional business analysis for years, I work in a Product led organisation, and I love getting up in front of a room and talking. So I volunteered, and Shaun kindly accepted. I wanted to show how we use tools like Amplitude to test and measure the impact of user interface enhancements. After chatting with colleagues, I put together a short ten minute presentation about some of the A/B experiments we’d run to improve the guest booking details experience. I’d never presented this kind of material on my own before, so it was a little daunting. I was keen to make sure I had the details right, especially in case I was hit with any tricky questions. Presenting can be unpredictable. Sometimes my energy doesn’t quite match the mood of the room, even after I’ve got them all to grin and wave for a pho...
There’s something about Dom . It’s not only his depth of knowledge of the topics he speaks about. It’s his charisma and his delivery too. This is why people flock to see him. It also helps that Dom has been obsessed (in a good way) with AI for as long as I can remember. He always feels ahead of the game and I frequently learn a lot. Tonight, giving his “AI: Assisted Ignorance” talk, he started in the obvious place by reframing the Terminator story into a Software Engineering context. He then went on to show us how flawed it is and demonstrated how we shouldn’t be worried about it taking our jobs - at least not yet. There is of course the current junior developer crises, but that will soon come good when companies realise they’ll have no one to replace the senior devs who are retiring or going off to earn millions fixing other companies' AI disasters. Millenium bug anyone? The really important message was that AI doesn’t reason. It doesn’t think. It’s autocorrect on steroids, a prob...