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Why SafetyCulture is paying millions for its first chief AI officer

Australian Financial Review

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Date Published
5 Aug 2024
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0
Australian
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Created
8 Mar 2025, 02:41 pm

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SafetyCulture is on the hunt for its first AI boss as companies scramble to find executives to help unlock billions of value from the hot technology.

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TechnologyAIPrint articleTess BennettTechnology reporterAug 5, 2024 – 11.22amSaveLog inorSubscribeto save articleShareCopy linkCopiedEmailLinkedInTwitterFacebookCopy linkCopiedShare via...Gift this articleSubscribe to gift this articleGift 5 articles to anyone you choose each month when you subscribe.Subscribe nowAlready a subscriber?LoginTech unicorn SafetyCulture is on the hunt for a new C-suite executive to take charge of the $2.7 billion-valuedworkplace compliance and safety software maker’sartificial intelligence program, with a multimillion-dollar compensation package on offer – but not everyone is convinced such a role is necessary.SafetyCulture will become one of a handful of organisations hiring chief AI officers – a new executive role, which is expected to leap in popularity – as companies try to close the gap between AI hype and reality.Loading...Tess Bennettis a technology reporter with The Australian Financial Review, based in the Brisbane newsroom. She was previously the work & careers reporter.Connect withTessonTwitter.EmailTessattess.bennett@afr.comSaveLog inorSubscribeto save articleShareCopy linkCopiedEmailLinkedInTwitterFacebookCopy linkCopiedShare via...Gift this articleSubscribe to gift this articleGift 5 articles to anyone you choose each month when you subscribe.Subscribe nowAlready a subscriber?LoginLicense articleFollow the topics, people and companies that matter to you.Find out moreRead MoreAIJobsHiring & firingAccentureXeroTechnology OneTechnologyOnePwCBusiness ITFetching latest articlesOlympic weightlifting is hard. This boss uses the 1pc rule to get it doneLucy DeanOut-of-control watch price rises give housing a run for its moneyKnow your craft: How the biggest airlines rate at the pointy end‘We’ll fight’: Alex Waislitz on family battles and bad betsPatrick DurkinJob appointments have never been purely merit-based: CEW chiefWhy this CEO saves creative work for after her periodNew Zealand pops its cork for one of the world’s great wine festivalsMax AllenWhy Hawaii’s data-driven wellness retreat is a haven for high-flyersA last-chance tote bag and a groovy case for trumpetersVictor Smorgon’s star fundie eyes 50pc returns for new fundAlex GluyasForrest family powerbroker had alleged role in big Fortescue decisionsEllison-run garnet mine faces punishment over unsanctioned development