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Chief Product Officers See GenAI as Strategic Ally Not Job-Killer

DATE POSTED:April 28, 2025

Fears of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) replacing human workers on a massive scale are overblown — at least for now, and possibly in the long term.

On the one hand, GenAI has rapidly moved from futuristic speculation to must-have tool for corporate product leaders. Chief product officers (CPOs), who oversee the innovation, development, production and growth of everything from cookware and cars to credit products, have embraced the technology with near-universal adoption.

Yet a closer examination of its deployment in a forthcoming PYMNTS Intelligence report, “From Spark to Strategy: How Product Leaders Are Using GenAI to Gain a Competitive Edge,” reveals a seeming paradox: While confidence in GenAI’s effectiveness is remarkably high, the technology remains firmly tethered to human oversight. This symbiotic relationship, rather than purely autonomous role, holds implications for the future of work and innovation. We are not alone.

The report, drawing on a survey of 60 product leaders at large U.S. firms, highlights how GenAI is predominantly used for product innovation and ideation, eclipsing its use in monitoring existing products by a factor of nearly two. The usage underscores a perception of GenAI as a “front-end creative partner,” capable of accelerating concept development, prototyping and visual design, particularly within the goods and technology sectors.

Key word: partner. Services companies leverage GenAI’s prowess in generating reports, summarizing insights and dissecting the competitive landscape. Those tasks help human workers get the bigger job done, instead of voting them off the island. Either way, the sectoral divergence underscores GenAI’s versatility and adaptability to specific roles, all while retaining the role of human work. We’re still in charge.

Humans for the Win

The report reveals that fully autonomous AI, operating without any human control, remains a rarity. Even in areas considered ripe for automation, such as fraud detection and workflow management, product leaders say human oversight is a must. For more intricate applications such as cybersecurity and strategic planning, GenAI is almost invariably guided by human prompts and subjected to human review.

This reality challenges the notion of an independent AI-driven future, highlighting the crucial role that humans continue to play in corralling ideas, ensuring accuracy, mitigating risks and providing contextual understanding. For now, the technology serves humans, not the other way around.

The most intriguing aspect of this reliance on human input comes via the unwavering confidence CPOs express in GenAI’s effectiveness across a range of functions, from chatbots and code generation to cybersecurity and production monitoring. This near-universal seal of approval, despite the acknowledged need for human checks and balances, suggests that product officers are viewing “effectiveness” through a lens of enhanced capabilities rather than as complete autonomy.

The data shows that this enthusiasm might reflect the rapid assimilation of GenAI into specific, useful niches, rather than a conviction in its current capacity for independent operation. It’s a hybrid human-AI model.

The study also indicates a growing demand for analytically skilled workers capable of leveraging GenAI tools effectively. Not surprisingly, this means that the need for lower-skilled staff will diminish.

The good news: GenAI is not simply replacing jobs wholesale but rather creating new jobs and augmenting the capabilities of those who can effectively harness its power, all while potentially rendering purely routine tasks obsolete.

The report shows that product leaders view GenAI as an enabler of growth and efficiency that facilitates faster development cycles and improves end-user interactions, rather than as primarily as a cost-cutting mechanism. Humans are still in the driver’s seat.

Read more:

Smart Spending: How AI Is Transforming Financial Decision Making

What Amazon, Meta, Uber, Anthropic and Others Want in the US AI Action Plan

Generative AI Tracker®: Rerouting the Telecom Industry: Generative AI’s Impact on Communication Services

 

The post Chief Product Officers See GenAI as Strategic Ally Not Job-Killer appeared first on PYMNTS.com.