Excerpted from The AI Playbook: Mastering the Rare Art of Machine Learning Deployment by Eric Siegel (February 6, 2024), published by The MIT Press.
The ML (Machine Learning) industry has bitten forbidden fruit: It has chosen to promote itself as AI, an ill-defined umbrella term that includes ML within its malleable scope. This tends to mislead, especially when discussing a more typical, practical ML initiative designed to improve business operations and not, for example, meant to generate humanlike writing or to achieve human-level “intelligence.”
While the world largely knows of ML as AI, the term AI is also how the world largely misunderstands ML. Because AI alludes to “intelligence,” which is stubbornly nebulous when describing a technology, the term tends to overstate and fetishize rather than pitching the technology’s concrete value. AI is sometimes used to specifically refer to ML or another kind of technology like chatbots or rule-based systems—but in many other uses, the term hints at exaggerated capabilities.
Vendors, consultants, and, chances are, some of your colleagues employ the AI brand rather than clearly advertising, without obfuscation, what an ML project actually offers. After all, plenty of folks with a budget have ears that perk up when they hear how advanced and “intelligent” a technology is, even without seeing precisely how it will improve business operations. So that route could serve to pad your wallet, at least in the short term.
But it can’t last. The ML industry had better tone this down or we’re all going to pay dearly. Glamorizing the core technology takes the focus off its concrete value, the specific way its deployment can improve operations. When that deployment isn’t central to the plan, the plan is unlikely to come to fruition. Instead, the organization must consider the value proposition for a candidate project and buy into the project for that tangible value. Then, a very particular change management process must commence from the project’s onset. Otherwise, you’re prone to develop a model that never gets launched—which is the most common way ML projects fail.
Capitalizing on this technology is critical—but it’s notoriously difficult to launch. Many ML projects never progress beyond the modeling: the number-crunching phase. Industry surveys repeatedly show that most new ML initiatives don’t make it to deployment, where the value would be realized.
Hype contributes to this problem. ML is mythologized, misconstrued as “intelligent” when it is not. It’s also mismeasured as “highly accurate,” even when that notion is irrelevant and misleading. For now, these adulations largely drown out the words of consternation, but those words are bound to increase in volume.
Take self-driving cars. In the most publicly visible cautionary tale about ML hype, overzealous promises have led to slamming on the brakes and slowing progress. As The Guardian put it, “The driverless car revolution has stalled.” This is a shame, as the concept promises greatness. Someday, it will prove to be a revolutionary application of ML that greatly reduces traffic fatalities. This will require a lengthy “transformation that is going to happen over 30 years and possibly longer,” according Chris Urmson, formerly the CTO of Google’s self-driving team and now the CEO of Aurora, which bought out Uber’s self-driving unit. But in the mid-2010s, the investment and fanatical hype, including grandiose tweets by Tesla CEO Elon Musk, reached a premature fever pitch. The advent of truly impressive driver assistance capabilities were branded as “Full Self-Driving” and advertised as being on the brink of widespread, completely autonomous driving—that is, self-driving that allows you to nap in the back seat.
Expectations grew, followed by . . . a conspicuous absence of self-driving cars. Disenchantment took hold and by the early 2020s investments had dried up considerably. Self-driving is doomed to be this decade’s jetpack.
What went wrong? Underplanning is an understatement. It wasn’t so much a matter of overselling ML itself, that is, of exaggerating how well predictive models can, for example, identify pedestrians and stop signs. Instead, the greater problem was the dramatic downplaying of deployment complexity. Only a comprehensive, deliberate plan could possibly manage the inevitable string of impediments that arise while slowly releasing such vehicles into the world. After all, we’re talking about ML models autonomously navigating large, heavy objects through the midst of our crowded cities! One tech journalist poignantly dubbed them “self-driving bullets.” When it comes to operationalizing ML, autonomous driving is literally where the rubber hits the road. More than any other ML initiative, it demands a shrewd, incremental deployment plan that doesn’t promise unrealistic timelines.
The ML industry has nailed the development of potentially valuable models, but not their deployment. A report prepared by the AI Journal based on surveys by Sapio Research showed that the top pain point for data teams is “Delivering business impact now through AI.” Ninety-six percent of those surveyed checked that box. That challenge beat out a long list of broader data issues outside the scope of AI per se, including data security, regulatory compliance, and various technical and infrastructure challenges. But when presented with a model, business leaders refuse to deploy. They just say no. The disappointed data scientist is left wondering, “You can’t . . . or you won’t?” It’s a mixture of both, according to a question asked by my survey with KDnuggets (see responses to the question, “What is the main impediment to model deployment?”). Technical hurdles mean that they can’t. A lack of approval—including when decision makers don’t consider model performance strong enough or when there are privacy or legal issues—means that they won’t.
Another survey also told this “some can’t and some won’t” story. After ML consultancy Rexer Analytics’ survey of data scientists asked why models intended for deployment don’t get there, founder Karl Rexer told me that respondents wrote in two main reasons: “The organization lacks the proper infrastructure needed for deployment” and “People in the organization don’t understand the value of ML.”
Unsurprisingly, the latter group of data scientists—the “won’ts” rather than the “can’ts”—sound the most frustrated, Karl says.
Whether they can’t or they won’t, the lack of a well-established business practice is almost always to blame. Technical challenges abound for deployment, but they don’t stand in the way so long as project leaders anticipate and plan for them. With a plan that provides the time and resources needed to handle model implementation—sometimes, major construction—deployment will proceed. Ultimately, it’s not so much that they can’t but that they won’t.
About the Author
Eric Siegel, Ph.D., is a leading consultant and former Columbia University professor who helps companies deploy machine learning. He is the founder of the long-running Machine Learning Week conference series and its new sister, Generative AI World, the instructor of the acclaimed online course “Machine Learning Leadership and Practice – End-to-End Mastery,” executive editor of The Machine Learning Times, and a frequent keynote speaker. He wrote the bestselling Predictive Analytics: The Power to Predict Who Will Click, Buy, Lie, or Die, which has been used in courses at hundreds of universities, as well as The AI Playbook: Mastering the Rare Art of Machine Learning Deployment. Eric’s interdisciplinary work bridges the stubborn technology/business gap. At Columbia, he won the Distinguished Faculty award when teaching the graduate computer science courses in ML and AI. Later, he served as a business school professor at UVA Darden. Eric also publishes op-eds on analytics and social justice.
Eric has appeared on Bloomberg TV and Radio, BNN (Canada), Israel National Radio, National Geographic Breakthrough, NPR Marketplace, Radio National (Australia), and TheStreet. Eric and his books have been featured in Big Think, Businessweek, CBS MoneyWatch, Contagious Magazine, The European Business Review, Fast Company, The Financial Times, Forbes, Fortune, GQ, Harvard Business Review, The Huffington Post, The Los Angeles Times, Luckbox Magazine, MIT Sloan Management Review, The New York Review of Books, The New York Times, Newsweek, Quartz, Salon, The San Francisco Chronicle, Scientific American, The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Trailblazers with Walter Isaacson, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and WSJ MarketWatch.
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The conflation of ML with AI not only oversimplifies agar io but also sensationalizes the technology, often leading to misunderstandings and unrealistic expectations!
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