For two decades, Google occupied the vast middle of the productivity spectrum, from initial information discovery through research, synthesis, and task execution.
More precisely, a properly written prompt is not the same as a Google search. Unfortunately, many people still write prompts the way they would type a search in Google—even after training. Perhaps in an article (maybe you’ve already done this) you could share some of your own secrets for effective prompting.
You're correct, and I suppose it also has to do with demographic adoption, remembering that even when Google emerged, the behavior of searching by keywords instead of natural language was not immediate. You might like this one https://businessengineer.ai/p/ai-personality-tuning
A new day, another great article. My key insight is that, while many say the real business use of AI starts with processes (cost optimization, CJM, and CX), it actually begins with understanding that AI is crucial for disrupting existing business models and creating new ones—enabling small companies to achieve even bigger breakthroughs than we’ve seen so far, as with Netflix, Dollar Shave Club, and others. In short, AI enables disruption on steroids.
More precisely, a properly written prompt is not the same as a Google search. Unfortunately, many people still write prompts the way they would type a search in Google—even after training. Perhaps in an article (maybe you’ve already done this) you could share some of your own secrets for effective prompting.
You're correct, and I suppose it also has to do with demographic adoption, remembering that even when Google emerged, the behavior of searching by keywords instead of natural language was not immediate. You might like this one https://businessengineer.ai/p/ai-personality-tuning
A new day, another great article. My key insight is that, while many say the real business use of AI starts with processes (cost optimization, CJM, and CX), it actually begins with understanding that AI is crucial for disrupting existing business models and creating new ones—enabling small companies to achieve even bigger breakthroughs than we’ve seen so far, as with Netflix, Dollar Shave Club, and others. In short, AI enables disruption on steroids.