Living/Working Business in Vancouver

#artificialintelligence 

Walk in to any major grocery store and shoppers will no doubt find an unmanned terminal subbing in for a cashier, allowing customers to scan their own groceries before paying their bill. So it's little wonder a June report from Ryerson University's Brookfield Institute for Innovation Entrepreneurship (BIIE) cautions service-oriented workers like cashiers and retail salespeople are at a 92% to 97% risk of being affected by advances in automation and artificial intelligence (AI) within 20 years. Davyde Wachell, CEO of Vancouver's Responsive Capital Management, even envisions artificial intelligence going so far as to shake up the job market in the financial sector. "Wealth management businesses that don't use AI and don't use machine learning are going to get left in the dust," he said. Already, robo-advisers are using automated tools to manage portfolios – a system known as passive portfolio management that relies on price averages to match market returns. Wachell, who studied AI and machine learning at Stanford University in the early 2000s "before it became a craze," told Business in Vancouver that it's only natural for AI to make a play for the robo-adviser market.