Why Public Affairs Professionals Need to Embrace the AI Revolution 

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When I started telling friends and colleagues earlier this year that we were launching a new AI SaaS company for public affairs, many reacted with shock. “Aren’t you disrupting your own, existing company?”

That’s exactly what we’re doing and here’s why: Keyword search is dead — not that it ever worked well for public affairs pros anyway — and generative AI killed it. Public affairs teams are overwhelmed with information, stretched thin across a growing range of stakeholders, jurisdictions, and issues and expected to respond faster than ever before with fewer resources. 

This reality is due in part to every tool prior to generative AI relying on users to input a set of keywords to surface results. Go too wide to ensure you capture everything and get overwhelmed, go too narrow and miss critically important information. And in both cases, you already had to know every single keyword that could impact your interests.

To stay ahead, public affairs professionals need tools that surface all the right insights to move with greater speed and precision, and the capabilities of generative AI make that possible in new and exciting ways. AI isn’t going to take public affairs professionals jobs—it’s going to amplify their ability to do their work faster and with greater precision.

We’re launching this new AI-native company to build the future of public affairs intelligence because I truly believe we are at a major inflection point in how public affairs and advocacy is conducted. To tell you why this is true, we need to go back 20 years to 2004. 

Working on President Bush’s reelection, we had video trackers fedexing mini digital cassettes of campaign events back to DC for us to watch and transcribe manually. We had to mail DVDs to persuadable voters hitting John Kerry’s foreign policy record. “eCampaign” staffers were talking about “weblogs” that were going to take over the internet, while most Americans were still on dialup modems. 

Fast forward just four years to 2008 and there had been a massive digital and mobile revolution. Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, the iPhone all completely reordered how we conduct campaigns, for both candidates and causes. Today, no one would run an advocacy effort or public affairs operation without these tools in place. 

The same massive shift is happening now with AI. Four years, eight years, 20 years from now no one will run an advocacy effort or public affairs team without AI-native tools. 

Right now, though, we mostly just have the raw materials for this revolution. Foundation models are like the iPhone and social media networks. They’re just a platform to build on. Most public affairs teams will find it challenging to build their own toolset because straight out of the box, LLMs require significant fine tuning and customization to work correctly for sector-specific applications and lack access to the key datasets we in public affairs need. 

Poltical Media Opinion
The article emphasizes that public affairs professionals need to embrace AI to remain competitive in the modern political landscape. It argues that AI tools allow for faster, more precise analysis, helping professionals navigate a complex array of stakeholders and issues. However, for conservatives, there may be concern that AI could increase centralized control over political messaging, amplifying biases of the platforms and the data sources used. The key for conservatives is ensuring AI tools are used to empower grassroots efforts and maintain diverse, independent voices in public discourse.

Read more at Campaigns & Elections

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