McKynsey Exploring Opportunities in The Gen AI Value Chain - McKinsey
McKynsey Exploring Opportunities in The Gen AI Value Chain - McKinsey
McKynsey Exploring Opportunities in The Gen AI Value Chain - McKinsey
AI value chain
April 26, 2023 | Article
O
ver the course of 2022 and early 2023, tech innovators
unleashed generative AI en masse , dazzling business leaders,
investors, and society at large with the technology’s ability to create
entirely new and seemingly human-made text and images.
A key difference is its ability to create new content. This content can
be delivered in multiple modalities, including text (such as articles or
answers to questions), images that look like photos or paintings,
videos, and 3-D representations (such as scenes and landscapes for
video games).
Exhibit 1
Computer hardware
While there are a few smaller players in the mix, the design and
production of these specialized AI processors is concentrated.
NVIDIA and Google dominate the chip design market, and one player,
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (TSMC),
produces almost all of the accelerator chips. New market entrants
face high start-up costs for research and development. Traditional
hardware designers must develop the specialized skills, knowledge,
and computational capabilities necessary to serve the generative AI
market.
Cloud platforms
GPUs and TPUs are expensive and scarce, making it difficult and not
cost-effective for most businesses to acquire and maintain this vital
hardware platform on-premises. As a result, much of the work to
build, tune, and run large AI models occurs in the cloud . This enables
companies to easily access computational power and manage their
spend as needed.
Foundation models
Exhibit 2
For open-source models, which provide code that anyone can freely
use and modify, independent model hubs are emerging to offer a
spectrum of services. Some may act only as model aggregators,
providing AI teams with access to different foundation models,
including those customized by other developers. AI teams can then
download the models to their servers and fine-tune and deploy them
within their application. Others, such as Hugging Face and Amazon
Web Services, may provide access to models and end-to-end MLOps
capabilities, including the expertise to tune the foundation model with
proprietary data and deploy it within their applications. This latter
model fills a growing gap for companies eager to leverage generative
AI technology but lacking the in-house talent and infrastructure to do
so.
Applications
Exhibit 3
There are many ways that application providers can create value. At
least in the near term, we see one category of applications offering
the greatest potential for value creation. And we expect applications
developed for certain industries and functions to provide more value
in the early days of generative AI.
The second category represents the most attractive part of the value
chain: applications that leverage fine-tuned foundation models—
those that have been fed additional relevant data or had their
parameters adjusted—to deliver outputs for a particular use case.
While training foundation models requires massive amounts of data,
is extremely expensive, and can take months, fine-tuning foundation
models requires less data, costs less, and can be completed in days,
putting it within reach of many companies.
While generative AI will likely affect most business functions over the
longer term, our research suggests that information technology,
marketing and sales, customer service, and product development are
most ripe for the first wave of applications.
Information technology. Generative AI can help teams write code
and documentation. Already, automated coders on the market have
improved developer productivity by more than 50 percent, helping
to accelerate software development.[ 10 ]
Services
As with AI in general, dedicated generative AI services will certainly
emerge to help companies fill capability gaps as they race to build
out their experience and navigate the business opportunities and
technical complexities. Existing AI service providers are expected to
evolve their capabilities to serve the generative AI market. Niche
players may also enter the market with specialized knowledge for
applying generative AI within a specific function (such as how to
apply generative AI to customer service workflows), industry (for
instance, guiding pharmaceutical companies on the use of generative
AI for drug discovery), or capability (such as how to build effective
feedback loops in different contexts).
1. Guido Appenzeller, Matt Bornstein, Martin Casado, and Yoko Li, “Art isn’t dead; it’s just
machine generated,” Andreessen Horowitz, November 16, 2022.
2. Hugh Son, “Morgan Stanley is testing an OpenAI-powered chatbot for its 16,000
financial advisors,” CNBC, March 14, 2023.
3. “Government of Iceland: How Iceland is using GPT-4 to preserve its language,” OpenAI,
March 14, 2023.
4. “Salesforce announces Einstein GPT, the world’s first generative AI for CRM,”
Salesforce, March 7, 2023.
5. “What is generative AI?” McKinsey, January 19, 2023.
6. “GPT-4,” OpenAI, March 14, 2023.
7. “What is generative AI?” January 19, 2023; and Kindra Cooper, “OpenAI GPT-3:
Everything you need to know,” Springboard, November 1, 2021.
8. “Shutterstock partners with OpenAI and leads the way to bring AI-generated content to
all,” Shutterstock, October 25, 2022.
9. Kif Leswing and Jonathan Vanian, “ChatGPT and generative AI are booming, but the
costs can be extraordinary,” CNBC, March 13, 2023; and Toby McClean, “Machines are
learning from each other, but it’s a good thing,” Forbes, February 3, 2021.
10. GitHub Product Blog, “Research: Quantifying GitHub Copilot’s impact on developer
productivity and happiness,” blog entry by Eirini Kalliamvakou, September 7, 2022.
11. Jackie Wiles, “Beyond ChatGPT: The future of generative AI for enterprises,” Gartner,
January 26, 2023.
12. NVIDIA Developer Technical Blog, “Build generative AI pipelines for drug discovery with
NVIDIA BioNeMo Service,” blog entry by Vanessa Braunstein, March 21, 2023; and Alex
Ouyang and Abdul Latif Jameel, “Speeding up drug discovery with diffusion generative
models,” MIT News, March 31, 2023.
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