There's a very interesting article on The Times today about Tony Bloom. Well worth a read (not sure if there is a pay wall).
Lots of chat about his gambling and Starlizard and how he and Brighton are the company's largest client - we spend £3m a year with them.
It got me wondering. What will the impact of AI be on this kind of business? Putting the existential threat to one side if you can, the democratising effect of AI seems evident. Could the insights that previously needed a computing power and PhD-led organisation to succeed soon be available to all?
In which case, where does that leave Brighton's much praised data-led recruitment strategy?
Brighton owner Tony Bloom: Poker still influences a lot of what I do
Tony Bloom is talking about the best bet he ever had. Not the biggest, not the most lucrative. The one that gave him most pleasure. It’s 1996, long before Starl
www.thetimes.co.uk
Lots of chat about his gambling and Starlizard and how he and Brighton are the company's largest client - we spend £3m a year with them.
It got me wondering. What will the impact of AI be on this kind of business? Putting the existential threat to one side if you can, the democratising effect of AI seems evident. Could the insights that previously needed a computing power and PhD-led organisation to succeed soon be available to all?
In which case, where does that leave Brighton's much praised data-led recruitment strategy?