Microsoft-owned LinkedIn is experimenting with one more option to bring generative AI into the app, this time by way of an AI assistant in your LinkedIn inbox that’ll be capable of present fast solutions to questions as you interact in your DMs.

As you may see on this screenshot, shared by app researcher Nima Owji, the brand new LinkedIn inbox assistant could be accessible by way of a devoted icon within the UI, which supplies you with a generative AI assistant to your LinkedIn responses. That would make it simpler to analysis key factors, test spelling, get recommendation on conversational parts, and many others.
The addition would increase on Microsoft’s rising generative AI empire, with the tech big trying to make use of its partnership with OpenAI to include ChatGPT-like instruments into each floor that it might probably, which has already seen it add AI generated profile summaries, job descriptions, submit creation prompts, and extra into the LinkedIn expertise.
LinkedIn additionally added generative AI messages for job candidates inside its Recruiter platform final month.
It could additionally see LinkedIn lastly comply with up on its inbox assistant device, which it truly first previewed again in 2016.

This barely blurry picture was lifted from a LinkedIn presentation seven years again, the place LinkedIn previewed its coming ‘InBot’ choice. InBot, powered partly by Microsoft’s evolving AI instruments (on the time) was purported to synch along with your calendar, which might then allow it to mechanically schedule conferences in your behalf, prepare cellphone calls, follow-ups, and extra.
But it surely by no means got here to be. For no matter cause, LinkedIn deserted the venture shortly after this announcement – almost definitely as a result of LinkedIn was trying to latch onto the short-lived messaging bots development, which Meta believed could be a revolution in customer support. Until it wasn’t.
As a result of messaging bots by no means caught on, LinkedIn seemingly determined to not trouble – although it’s attention-grabbing that, even again then, shortly after Microsoft’s acquisition of the app, LinkedIn was already speaking up the potential of merging Microsoft-powered AI instruments into LinkedIn’s capabilities.
It’s taken some time for that to return to fruition, however quickly, we might have a greater model of InBot incoming, which might theoretically be capable of incorporate these initially deliberate capabilities, together with extra superior generative AI responses and prompts.
That would truly be fairly priceless on LinkedIn, with varied capabilities that would make it easier to maximize your lead nurturing efforts, together with instantly accessible information on the consumer that you simply’re interacting with, to personalize the alternate.
After all, there may be additionally a stage of danger that the extra AI instruments LinkedIn provides, the much less human the app will grow to be, with customers getting generative instruments to provide you with extra posts, messages, profile summaries, and all the things else in between over time.
Ultimately, that would see a whole lot of LinkedIn interactions changing into bots speaking to different bots, whereas the true people behind every account stay distant. Which might see extra engagement taking place within the app – and would definitely make for some attention-grabbing IRL meet-up eventualities because of this. But it surely does additionally look like LinkedIn may, perhaps, be overdoing it, relying on how all of those instruments are built-in.
We’ll discover out. There’s no timeline on a possible launch for the brand new AI chatbot device as but.