▲ 1 r/u_spidy-pranavvvv+1 crossposts

Has social media made us smarter or just more confident?

Some people believe social media democratized knowledge and accelerated learning.

Others argue it created an environment where being persuasive matters more than being correct.

What do you think?

Are people today generally more informed than previous generations?

Has social media improved critical thinking or weakened it?

What's one example where social media changed your mind on an issue?

Genuinely curious to hear different perspectives.

reddit.com
u/spidy-pranavvvv — 26 days ago
▲ 4 r/u_spidy-pranavvvv+3 crossposts

Would You Trust AI With a $1 Million Business Decision?

What would you do?

Imagine this scenario:

Your company is about to make a strategic move worth $1 million.

Before deciding, an AI system analyzes:

-Market trends

-Competitor activity

-Customer feedback

-Financial forecasts

-Industry news

After processing thousands of data points, the AI recommends a specific strategy and claims it has the highest probability of success.

The AI has been right before.

But there's still risk.

u/spidy-pranavvvv — 26 days ago
▲ 3 r/AI_Sales+1 crossposts

Are B2B Buyers Trusting AI More Than Salespeople?

Who Do B2B Buyers Trust More Today: AI Or Sales Reps?

B2B buying behavior has changed dramatically.

Before speaking with a salesperson, many buyers now spend hours researching on ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Perplexity, review sites, LinkedIn, and Reddit.

By the time a sales rep joins the conversation, the buyer often:

- Knows the top vendors

- Has compared features

- Has read reviews

- Has formed an initial opinion

u/spidy-pranavvvv — 30 days ago
▲ 2 r/u_spidy-pranavvvv+1 crossposts

Are Traditional Market Research Reports Becoming Obsolete?

​

A question we've been discussing internally:

By the time many market research reports are published, has the market already changed?

Buyers are changing behavior faster than ever.

Competitors launch new products overnight.

Pricing strategies shift monthly.

New startups emerge before annual reports are updated.

We're seeing more organizations invest in:

• Continuous market intelligence

• Buyer intent monitoring

• Competitor tracking

• Real-time industry signals

• Ongoing customer feedback loops

The goal is no longer to understand what happened.

It's to understand what's happening right now.

For market research professionals, does the future belong to static reports or always-on intelligence?

Curious to hear how your organization is adapting.

reddit.com
u/spidy-pranavvvv — 1 month ago
▲ 79 r/AIMain+3 crossposts

Does anyone else feel like AI is replacing the wrong jobs?

Whats your view?

u/spidy-pranavvvv — 20 days ago