Skip to content
MarketScale
‹ Back to IndustriesEducation Technology

Businesses That Ignore ChatGPT Could Find Themselves Left in the Dust

Recently, OpenAI’s Natural Language Processing tool ChatGPT went viral for all the right (and wrong) reasons. On one hand, it’s giving users a seemingly-limitless array of use cases for creative, academic, and business-use language generation. On the other hand, ChatGPT is taking students’ tests; the tool passed a core MBA exam at the University of…

This story was produced through MarketScale. See how Education Technology teams put it to work with Executive Thought Leadership.

Share

Recently, OpenAI’s Natural Language Processing tool ChatGPT went viral for all the right (and wrong) reasons. On one hand, it’s giving users a seemingly-limitless array of use cases for creative, academic, and business-use language generation. On the other hand, ChatGPT is taking students’ tests; the tool passed a core MBA exam at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business.

This has, understandably, led to concerns around the ethics of using AI tools and the possibility of powerful language generation tools like ChatGPT putting people out of work. But before business professionals get worried, remember that tools like ChatGPT are only as good as their users. They still need humans to ask the right questions — before probing and critically analyzing the answers.

Does ChatGPT have the power to revolutionize the way we work for the better? As of now, it’s capable of generating ideas for marketing campaigns, writing complex code, creating chatbots that engage with customers, generating leads, and even responding to DMs and messages on Instagram. Even if there are valid concerns about the tools accuracy, if businesses engage with it as a tool that’s still sorting out its own kinks, businesses could find that its efficiencies outweigh its early issues. If the number of users registered on the platform is any indication, adoption of ChatGPT isn’t slowing down. Like most cutting-edge technologies, early adopters benefit the most in the long-run; if businesses don’t start weighing how ChatGPT could support their operations, by the time they do implement the tool, it could be too late to make a competitive difference.

David Boyle, co-author of PROMPT, a “practical guide to brand growth using ChatGPT,” is convinced of ChatGPT’s utility in business settings, but still urges caution when using the tool.

David’s Thoughts

“The biggest lesson for ChatGPT is to start with a very clear view of what it is you are trying to do. Don’t ask what it can do. Don’t start there. Start with your life. Say, what am I struggling with? I hate writing proposals. So that’s the first place I start to work out how to use ChatGPT to help me.

And it helps amazingly once you work it out! Start with a pain point, like a job you are trying to do, and then work out how to use ChatGPT to help you to do that job.

The biggest risk I see is that companies do not embrace AI. Just imagine your competitors who are better, faster, and cheaper. I think AI like ChatGPT is like an electric bike for the mind. You still have to pedal. You have to do some work. It’s not free, but you can embark on longer journeys. So, the biggest threat I see is not embracing it when everybody else will. It’s a superpower. It’s an electric bike for the mind. It’s a 20 or 30% productivity saver, minimum!

I think it’s important for business leaders to use it in the right way. Don’t rely completely on AI. Always use human judgment, expertise, and experience to kickstart the process, to pick the task, to pick the prompts, and to craft them. The first round of output is never what you want to go with. You always want to use judgment to say, ‘huh, let me change that!’”

Education Technology: are you visible to AI?

Before they reach out, Education Technology buyers ask AI engines which vendors to trust. See how AI describes your company today, and where competitors show up instead.

Free workspace

You just read one expert. Imagine publishing your whole team.

This article was produced through MarketScale. Create a free workspace and turn your own team's expertise into articles, video, and social posts. No credit card, no demo required.

NPS +73 · 1,000+ creators · 38+ countries

What you get, free

Your own MarketScale Studio workspace
One video edit a month, on us
AI writing, editing, and publishing tools
In-platform coaching to learn the system

More Education Technology Insights

Higher Ed's Seed Round: How Universities Decide Which Programs to Build

Higher Ed's Seed Round: How Universities Decide Which Programs to Build

The decision-making process for universities when choosing which online programs to develop and fund involves strategic considerations. These decisions are influenced by factors such as demand, resources, and institutional goals. Administrators need to weigh these elements to ensure successful and sustainable online education offerings.

  • 01Universities consider demand and resources in online program planning.
  • 02Institutional goals influence the choice of programs to fund.
  • 03Strategic decision-making is crucial for successful online education.

Jun 30, 2026

Teacher Stress Is Still at Crisis Levels in 2026. EdTech Vendors Selling Into Schools Need to Understand Why That Matters.

Teacher Stress Is Still at Crisis Levels in 2026. EdTech Vendors Selling Into Schools Need to Understand Why That Matters.

In 2026, more than half of US teachers continue to face significant job-related stress. This ongoing issue poses a primary adoption barrier for EdTech vendors and enterprise L&D teams targeting school districts. Understanding and addressing teacher stress is crucial for the successful implementation of educational technology.

  • 01Over half of US teachers experience high stress levels in 2026.
  • 02Teacher stress is a major barrier for EdTech adoption.
  • 03EdTech solutions must address stress to succeed in schools.

Jun 29, 2026

How Raptor's StudentSafe tackles behavioral threat assessment and student well-being

How Raptor's StudentSafe tackles behavioral threat assessment and student well-being

Raptor Technologies has transitioned from visitor management to enhancing student well-being with its StudentSafe platform. This move addresses school district needs for improved behavioral threat assessment. StudentSafe is designed to bolster educational security and student safety.

  • 01Raptor Technologies is expanding into student well-being.
  • 02The StudentSafe platform focuses on behavioral threat assessment.
  • 03StudentSafe responds to demands from school district customers.

Jun 26, 2026

Explore More Education Technology Insights

Read more expert perspectives from across Education Technology.

Browse Education Technology Hub

For B2B teams

Your experts could be publishing here

Stories like this one run on content MarketScale captures from real practitioners. See how your team's expertise becomes coverage in Education Technology and beyond.

Book a 15-minute demo

Or call us. No forms required. We pick up. 214-945-2512