Columbia University hosted two discussions on its Manhattanville Campus as part of the Columbia AI Summit, featuring cross-disciplinary insights from faculty on using AI as a tool to enhance human ingenuity, as well as the technology’s latest impact on leadership strategy.
During the AI Summit’s “AI and Creativity” discussion, faculty members noted how AI is pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in business, humanities, engineering, and the arts. The session also showcased how the University’s academic programs are integrating traditional traditional curricula with AI, empowering students to think from fresh, transformative perspectives.
Later, Stephan Meier, the James P. Gorman Professor of Business in Columbia Business School’s Management Division, introduced “ChatCEO: How AI is Influencing Leadership and Labor.” During the panel, speakers discussed the dual nature of AI as a source of both opportunity and disruption in today’s workplaces. AI tools are revolutionizing internal communications by automating the summarization of complex documents, distilling vast datasets into actionable insights, and even reshaping company culture surveys for real-time feedback. However, the use of AI is not without ethical challenges posed by opaque algorithms and over-reliance on the technology without adequate human oversight.
Together, the events offered key insights into the delicate balance between opportunity and disruption inherent in AI adoption.
AI as a Catalyst for Innovation
Researchers who spoke during the “AI and Creativity” session opened a window into how AI is redefining artistic expression and innovation. Rather than threatening the role of human ingenuity, AI is being leveraged as a powerful tool that augments the creative process, according to the speakers.
Sheena Iyengar, the S. T. Lee Professor of Business in CBS’s Management Division, has dedicated her career to studying choice and innovation. During the discussion, she explained how AI and machine learning are being leveraged to help people generate more novel and meaningful ideas, combining diverse sources of information in new ways.
Drawing on historical parallels, she highlighted how technological disruptions—like photography in the 19th century—were initially met with fears of obsolescence but ultimately led to artistic reinvention. Just as painters like Picasso evolved their styles in response to photography’s rise, today’s creatives can use AI to explore new frontiers of expression and problem-solving.
Iyengar calls her method for fostering innovation, which she has recently enhanced with generative AI, Think Bigger. The method involves six key steps: define a problem, break it down, compare wants, search for solutions both within and outside the box, map out choices, and refine ideas through an iterative process.
According to Iyengar, this process once required weeks of research and synthesis, but with AI, it can be accelerated significantly.
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“I used to teach this the hard way, the long way, and we had students spend weeks searching. But just this past July, we rolled out a generative AI app that literally does those six steps. And we found that in a five-day bootcamp, you can actually get students to now create entrepreneurial ideas which they can actually get credit for,” Iyengar said.
By leveraging AI to scan vast knowledge repositories, identify analogous solutions from different industries, and recombine insights in novel ways, people can generate breakthrough ideas in a fraction of the time, Iyengar noted. She added that AI-assisted idea generation has led to tangible innovations—such as an AI-powered system that helps restaurant-goers detect allergens in their food and another that aids in early detection of learning disabilities in children.
Transforming Leadership and Organizational Decision-Making
A recurring theme during the ChatCEO panel was the potential of AI to support strategic decision-making through enhanced data analysis, real-time feedback, and even the automation of routine tasks such as summarizing lengthy reports or distilling large datasets into actionable insights.
Andrea Prat, the Richard Paul Richman Professor of Business in CBS’s Economics Division, offered a nuanced perspective. He emphasized that while AI has the potential to improve efficiency, its true value lies in its ability to measure and analyze previously intangible aspects of corporate life—most notably, organizational culture.
Traditionally, business leaders have relied on surveys, anecdotal feedback, and limited data to assess workplace sentiment and company culture. However, Prat highlighted research into how AI-driven tools, such as natural language processing applied to platforms like Glassdoor, can extract meaningful insights from unstructured data, identifying trends in employee sentiment across companies and industries. By using machine learning to filter out noise and detect patterns, AI can provide leaders with real-time, objective measures of workplace culture—something that was previously difficult to quantify.
Prat underscored that these AI-generated insights can drive accountability by allowing executives to track cultural changes over time, benchmark against competitors, and proactively address emerging workplace issues. This shift toward data-driven leadership has the potential to improve employee engagement, refine management strategies, and ultimately enhance organizational performance. However, he also cautioned against over-reliance on AI without human interpretation, stressing that while AI can surface patterns, it is up to leaders to contextualize and act on them effectively.
Prat emphasized that organizations should have a clear understanding of how AI functions, its capabilities, and the reasoning behind its outputs before integrating it into their operations.
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