Goldman's tech boss discusses the future of AI on Wall Street - and how it will reshape careers
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Goldman's tech boss discusses the future of AI on Wall Street - and how it will reshape careers
"He also plays in a Seattle rock band and has long been fascinated by philosophy - particularly the ways technology can shape people and their decisions. That perspective has helped shape his view of AI. At Goldman, Argenti oversees a 12,000-person engineering team - one of the largest on Wall Street - and has helped lead the bank's push into artificial intelligence, including the rollout of its internal generative AI platform, GSAI Assistant."
"Goldman has a workforce of roughly 12,000 coders reporting to you. What do different groups do, and how is their work being impacted by AI? There are several ways to slice it. We have developers sitting in the business units. Developers working on our trading stack; developers working on our private wealth advisory website; or developers working on our Marquee platform for institutional and corporate clients for example."
Marco Argenti combines technical leadership with interests in music and philosophy. He leads a roughly 12,000-person engineering organization at Goldman Sachs and has driven the bank's adoption of generative AI through an internal platform called GSAI Assistant. His teams include business-unit developers for trading, wealth advisory, and Marquee, plus a Core Engineering group of more than 3,000 people building shared platforms such as cloud, networking, storage, middleware, and APIs. Argenti frames AI as a tool to increase productivity, redefine career trajectories, and enable managers to learn to operate with machines before supervising people.
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