An Analogue Starting Point
Trinidad and Tobago is still, in many ways, an analogue society. Printed documents, manual processes, phone calls instead of systems, and word-of-mouth workflows still dominate large parts of our economy. While the rest of the world debates advanced automation and digital ecosystems, many of our businesses are still taking their first steps online.
In my previous article, “AI Is Here, but It Doesn’t Matter for Trinidad,” I discussed how our slower digital adoption shapes how AI will realistically impact us. That same analogue reality, however, may be the very reason AI becomes so useful for us.
AI as the Bridge
In highly digitised countries, AI is often layered on top of already complex systems. In Trinidad and Tobago, AI can act as a bridge, helping people move from analogue to digital without needing to master every step in between. Instead of forcing a long technical transition, AI allows individuals and businesses to begin adopting digital behaviour almost immediately.
For the first time, someone with minimal technical knowledge can automate customer responses, generate marketing content, organise information, and streamline operations, all without building complex systems. AI does not demand digital maturity; it encourages it. And that is where the opportunity lies for Trinidad.
Job Evolution, Not Job Loss
Much of the global conversation around AI focuses on job displacement. Locally, a more realistic outcome is job evolution. AI expands what individuals are capable of doing within their existing roles, rather than removing those roles altogether.
The Overworked Employee Reality
There is also a very familiar local dynamic to consider. Many businesses, both small and large, operate with lean teams. It is common for one employee to handle the responsibilities of multiple roles, often driven by cost-saving decisions and the practical realities of running a business here. The result is employees who are stretched thin, juggling customer service, administration, marketing, and operations all at once.
AI can ease some of that pressure. Responding to common customer questions, organising schedules, drafting emails, preparing reports, and generating marketing content can all be partially automated. Instead of replacing the employee, AI supports them. The same person can remain productive without carrying the entire workload manually. In many cases, this makes jobs more manageable and less stressful rather than making them redundant.
Real-World Improvements in Everyday Workflows
Our analogue habits also highlight areas where AI can make immediate improvements. Small businesses that rely on handwritten records can begin digitising and analysing their operations. Service providers who depend on phone calls and memory can organise schedules and follow-ups. Entrepreneurs who struggle with marketing can create consistent online content. Educators working with limited resources can adapt materials for different learning needs. Community organisations can coordinate communication more effectively.
Building Our Own Digital Gold Standards
Beyond individual businesses, AI can help us build the very digital infrastructure we currently lack. In my previous article, I spoke about the absence of local digital “gold standards” for discovery, reviews, and business credibility. AI lowers the barrier to creating these platforms. Developers, entrepreneurs, and even small teams can use AI to build directories, recommendation engines, customer service tools, and content-driven platforms much faster than before. Instead of waiting for imported solutions, we can start building our own.
Gradual Capability Building
These kinds of small improvements add up. Each one nudges individuals toward digital workflows, building familiarity and confidence. Over time, more people become comfortable using digital tools, and a more capable workforce starts to emerge naturally.
As Trinidad and Tobago gradually becomes more digitally advanced, a population already familiar with AI will be better prepared for that shift. Workers will already know how to use intelligent tools, automate routine tasks, and operate in hybrid analogue-digital environments. The transition becomes smoother because the learning is happening along the way.
The Rise of the AI-Enabled Solopreneur
This also creates room for a new class of independent professionals. Individuals using AI-supported workflows can operate as solo entrepreneurs, managing marketing, administration, customer service, and operations on their own. What once required a team can now be handled by one person supported by intelligent tools. This lowers the barrier to starting businesses and encourages grassroots innovation.
A Practical Path Forward
AI, in this context, becomes less about disruption and more about gradual capability building. It allows Trinidad and Tobago to modernise at a pace that matches our reality, while helping workers adapt instead of leaving them behind.
Our analogue starting point gives us room to grow without the shock of sudden transformation. With thoughtful adoption, AI can help us move forward while strengthening the workforce at the same time. When we eventually reach a more digitally mature stage, many people will already have the skills, experience, and confidence to participate fully in that economy.