Box Inc. (NYSE:BOX) CEO Aaron Levie said advances in artificial intelligence are rapidly expanding the ability of businesses to automate complex professional tasks, as newer AI models become more capable of handling specialized knowledge work.
AI Models Expand Enterprise Capabilities
On Wednesday, in a post on X, Levie said that the latest AI models are showing significant improvements in areas that require advanced reasoning and industry expertise.
"The latest AI models being dropped are getting insanely good handling complex knowledge worker tasks, and especially dealing with sophisticated domains of work like legal, professional services, healthcare, and more," Levie wrote.
He highlighted Grok 4.5 as another example of improving AI capabilities, particularly in terms of cost and performance.
Levie added that as AI models continue to improve in coding, mathematics and reasoning, businesses will unlock new ways to use their internal information.
"As models get much better at coding, math, reasoning, and are trained on a variety of key verticals, we’re going to see more leaps in what you can do with enterprise data and documents," he said.
AI Automation Reshapes Jobs And Productivity
Earlier, JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon warned that AI could reshape the workforce by eliminating some jobs, urging companies and governments to prepare for potential disruption.
He said JPMorgan is already using AI widely, with about 150,000 employees using large language models weekly, while focusing on retraining workers affected by automation.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt said AI’s potential is being underestimated and could transform industries including finance, healthcare and scientific research.
He argued that AI is a powerful business tool, helping automate tasks while creating opportunities for innovation.
Meanwhile, Anthropic’s internal research on its Claude Code AI tool found that employees experienced higher productivity but raised concerns about reduced teamwork, declining technical skill development and uncertainty about future job roles.
The study found workers could delegate up to 20% of their tasks to AI, highlighting both the benefits and challenges of rapid AI adoption.
Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.
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