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Vince Quill
Written by Vince Quill,Staff Writer
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Why I won't invest in companies that ignore AI — Kevin O'Leary

Ignoring the reduced customer acquisition costs made possible by AI places businesses at a significant disadvantage, O'Leary said.

Why I won't invest in companies that ignore AI — Kevin O'Leary
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Artificial intelligence significantly reduces the cost of new customer acquisition, and any company neglecting AI is not a worthwhile investment, according to investor and television personality Kevin O’Leary.

In an interview with Cointelegraph, the investor said that new-customer acquisition, which is primarily done through content creation and multimedia marketing, has been “the highest cost increase in the last 36 months.” 

“When you look at the cost of creation of that content, it has more than quadrupled. In some cases, it’s 10x,” he said before adding that AI has reduced content production costs by 60%. 

China, Bitcoin Mining, United States, Data Center
Kevin O’Leary, also known as “Mr. Wonderful,” is widely known investor and television personality. Source: Kevin O’Leary

He also told Cointelegraph that before investing in any prospective businesses, he inquires about their use of AI:

“Before I meet the CEO, I want to know who is running the show in terms of generating and maintaining customer acquisition, customer growth, reducing customer acquisition cost, and increasing ROI on ad spend.” 

“My first question is, who is running your AI program? What stacks are you on? What tools are you using, and who is doing your social media?”

The reduced acquisition costs, while beneficial to businesses, are eclipsed by the geo-strategic importance of AI and the need to maintain US leadership in the sector, he added. 

Related: XAI teases Grok upgrades; Musk says AI could discover new physics

Investment in Bitzero

O’Leary is also an investor in Bitzero, a Bitcoin (BTC) mining and high-performance computing company that operates data centers in Norway, Finland, and the US state of North Dakota.

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Bitzero’s data center in Namsskogan, Norway is one of the company’s four facilities, which are all located in colder climates. Source: Bitzero

He told Cointelegraph that owning the infrastructure behind Bitcoin and AI would likely prove to be a more sustainable and profitable business model than pursuing the businesses that this infrastructure serves.

“It’s the old analogy from the gold days hundreds of years ago. The guys who made the most money with the least risk sold the jeans and the picks and shovels,” he said.

US and China are in AI cold war

“We are in a technological war with China — we really are,” he said, before comparing AI chips to the queen bee in a bee colony and AI developers to the worker bees.

Developers and programmers gather around new AI chips and produce the “honey” or computer code, the investor told Cointelegraph.

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Private investment into AI by country 2013-2024. Source: Visual Capitalist

By limiting the use of AI chips built by US companies through sanctions and punitive trade policies, it allows competing nations to have their chipsets, software, and architectures proliferate, steering AI development, he concluded.

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