
After admitting he uses ChatGPT, Narayana Murthy says management and technology graduates are same for him
As artificial intelligence continues to reshape the job landscape, confusion around which field is more relevant—technical or management—continues to linger in the minds of young graduates. While some argue that AI is driven by technical skills and therefore holds dominance, others may lean towards the importance of management skills to create a collaborative workspace between humans and AI. However, Infosys co-founder N.R. Narayana Murthy rejects this divide altogether. In his view, both fields are equally important and relevant in navigating the AI-led future.advertisementIn a recent interview with Moneycontrol, the 78-year-old software industry titan said he sees no meaningful distinction between the two educational streams. He argues that both fields simply approach problems from different angles. 'I do not see any difference between a management graduate and a technology graduate because they attack the problem at different levels,' Murthy said. 'One asks 'what,' while the other focuses on 'how'.'Murthy also expressed his disagreement with the idea that AI is a threat to human jobs in the future. He believes AI is a tool that can significantly boost human productivity. 'It is all about improving productivity. It is all about solving problems that are beyond human effort,' he added. Sharing his own experience with AI he reveals that ever since he started using ChatGPT to prepare lectures, the chatbot has significantly helped him improve his productivity. What once took him up to 30 hours now he is able to finish it in just five. 'I improved my own productivity by as much as five times,' he noted, emphasising how AI can act as an assistive agent, not a replacement.advertisement
Murthy believes that AI will elevate, not eliminate, the role of the human worker. Instead of mass job losses, he anticipates that AI will bring about transformation and more jobs based on evolving skill sets. 'Everybody said when computers came to the banking sector, jobs would go away. But jobs have multiplied by a factor of 40 to 50,' he noted. On the same lines, he suggests that AI will help in making people smarter and work smarter. 'Our programmers and analysts will become smarter and smarter... They will solve bigger problems, more complex problems.'What will change, however, according to Murthy, is the kind of thinking that will be required. He believes future professionals will need to become sharper in defining problems and crafting better, more complex questions. 'The smartness is in asking the right question,' he said. According to him, the true value of human input in jobs will lie not in routine execution, but in strategic thinking and creative problem-solving.

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