I’d say marketing is business-critical, and the difference between phone-it-in, good, great, and stellar content is important to bottom lines (depending on industry/product/service). That said, if the general point is that grammar issues on a site will have a lesser negative effect than buggy code that crashes that site, I agree. I’d also agree that unless you’re a marketing or content agency, marketing and content may be part of your business but they’re not the core of it. In contrast, almost every business in every industry runs on software today...
Still, I don’t know how long things like scale, complexity, and strategy will be meaningful hurdles for LLMs and other AI technology (nobody does), but it feels like we’re accelerating toward an end point. Regardless, software engineering seems like a good aptitude to add to the toolbox, and it’s good to hear that I may not be too late to the game.
I’d say marketing is business-critical, and the difference between phone-it-in, good, great, and stellar content is important to bottom lines (depending on industry/product/service). That said, if the general point is that grammar issues on a site will have a lesser negative effect than buggy code that crashes that site, I agree. I’d also agree that unless you’re a marketing or content agency, marketing and content may be part of your business but they’re not the core of it. In contrast, almost every business in every industry runs on software today...
Still, I don’t know how long things like scale, complexity, and strategy will be meaningful hurdles for LLMs and other AI technology (nobody does), but it feels like we’re accelerating toward an end point. Regardless, software engineering seems like a good aptitude to add to the toolbox, and it’s good to hear that I may not be too late to the game.