Are paid AI tools like Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT Team/Enterprise actually worth it?
Well, the math checks out:
Marketing AI Institute founder/CEO Paul Roetzer broke it down in a recent LinkedIn post…
Take an employee making $75,000/year. Assume a very conservative 10% increase in efficiency if the employee has access to “a GPT-4 level solution and has been properly trained on how to use it.”
The employee could save 17 hours per month. (Assume a full-time employee works about 2,080 hours per year, or 173 per month, based on a 40-hour workweek—making 10% time savings is about 17 hours.)
The direct savings of these 17 hours is $612 per month ($75,000 yearly for 2,080 hours comes out to about $36/hour—so 17 hours x $36 = $612.)
That seems like a pretty good deal considering Copilot and others often fall in roughly the $30/user/month range.
Says Roetzer:
“Short answer is that these AI tools, when properly integrated into companies with effective education and training, will be the greatest value in business software history.”
So, should you buy your team one or more licenses to AI tools?
Well, it’s complicated.
On Episode 82 of The Marketing AI Show, Paul broke down for me what leaders need to consider when adopting paid AI tools.
Don’t just jump into buying team licenses right away. Enterprise vendors are only too happy to take your money.
“They want you to be buying as many licenses as possible and committing to a one-year engagement,” says Roetzer. “This is not what you should be doing.”
Don’t buy licenses just because the math works out until you’ve done three things:
Once you’ve done these three things, start with a pilot program.
The program should include a small number of users who are trained to use AI the right way, with guidance and oversight. It should have measurement in place, so you can gauge effectiveness before you buy the tool for the entire team.
The owners of pilot programs—and wider AI efforts—should be people who understand the internal workings of the organization. They should also be able to learn the AI products themselves and work with vendors during rollout.
This presents an exciting opportunity for forward-thinking professionals:
If you’re on the frontier of AI, you can become the champion within your organization. You may even develop your own title and career path in an AI ops role or generative AI management role in your organization.