Here is an excerpt from an article by Cole Clark for the MIT Sloan Management Review. To read the complete article, check out others, and obtain subscription information, please click here.
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Handwritten notes can help build authentic connections in an era when digital communication is everywhere.
AI entered a new era when artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT became available to the public this year. These technologies are taking over more and more aspects of business as they seep into the collective consciousness. As Vox put it, generative AI is “suddenly everywhere,” and it’s poised to profoundly change daily life within organizations in many ways, particularly in the sphere of communication.
More than ever, when people receive texts, emails, or other digital messages, they have reason to wonder whether an actual human being wrote them. ChatGPT is even being used to write custom messages to individual executives on LinkedIn. In response, tools are being created to help people determine whether a message was really written by a human. Some of these tools are made by the same companies whose technologies generate such text. But few people are likely to use these detectors in the short term, and even if they do, there will be a continuous cycle of AI-based text generators constantly working to outsmart the detectors.
The net result is clear: When it comes to digital communication, we’re unlikely to trust most “personal” digital messages for a while to come. This is why, in working to build authentic relationships, sidestepping technology altogether has newfound power.
Handwritten Messages Take on New Value
Few people answer calls from unrecognized phone numbers these days. And executives are increasingly aware that AI is also being used to schedule such calls, which can make them feel like just another name on a list.
In an effort to connect with decision-makers, I recently tried going a different route: I wrote notes by hand to several executives and dropped them in the mail. Some of these have led to very positive personal responses and meetings, and even contract discussions. These relationships are being built on meaningful foundations that could lead to long-term business growth.
There have always been people who prefer to write business notes by hand, but it’s never before carried such a significant connotation — that a real person has taken the time to write out a personalized message rather than choosing an easier option. And a recent study shows how powerful that can be: Researchers from business schools at the University of Maryland and Yonsei University in South Korea found that “presenting a
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Here is a direct link to the complete article.
Cole Clark is president of AmygdaLaunch.