5 ways AI tools can support your day to day work
Generative AI tools have taken the world by storm in the past year: Nowadays, getting a 1,000-word essay on the history of different types of pasta or a picture of a cat dressed as a samurai is as easy as typing a prompt into ChatGPT or DALL-E.
While the debate rages on about whether AI will lead to mass unemployment, another phenomenon may take root much earlier: a person who can effectively use AI tools in his or her daily work will easily outperform someone who can’t.
So while it may be fun to use AI tools to generate pictures of cats dressed as samurais or an essay on the history of different types of pasta, why not learn how to use tools like ChatGPT or DALL-E to automate some tasks that – without generative AI – would have taken hours or at least some special skills to do?
How AI tools can help:
- Create slides with AI tools like Gamma
- Taking meeting minutes
- Quick scenario sketching with AI tools like DALL-E
- Write and debug code with chatbots
- Chatbots as Devil’s advocates
1. Create slides with AI tools like Gamma
Few companies have gone the way of Amazon to ban PowerPoint, so slides are still very much a reality of work meetings.
If you dread creating slide decks for town halls, weekly syncs, client pitches, and all other forms of presentations, AI tools like Gamma can come to your rescue.
With a free account, you can generate a presentation that includes a coherent colour scheme, images, and charts. All you need to do is enter a prompt such as:
“Announcing new organisational structure. We are introducing the new role of Head of Product and consolidating the design and research teams under this individual, who will report to the Chief Operating Officer. We are also appointing five new section heads and will hire 20 new staff across different teams over the next three months.”
Once the deck is generated, you will need to edit the text and add photos that are relevant to your company. Still, you now have a framework to work on instead of starting from scratch.
2. Taking meeting minutes
Still on the theme of meetings (because they’re such a big part of work-life) – another unavoidable aspect that can be automated is the meeting summary or meeting minutes.
Since we’re in 2023, the meeting likely had a video conference aspect, with at least some participants dialling in. And the video conference tool you used was likely an enterprise version of the tool, meaning AI-recorded meeting transcripts are probably available.
For example, you can turn on the transcription feature for Google Meet and a Google Doc link with the transcript will be emailed to the meeting host.
You can then input this transcript into an AI chatbot like ChatGPT and prompt it to produce a summary in the format of a minutes memo.
Be sure to read the summary thoroughly to ensure that the key points are captured accurately as chatbots have a tendency to “hallucinate” and make up false information.
GovTech also has its own transcription product, check it out here.
3. Quick scenario sketching with AI tools like DALL-E
Many of us use images in presentations, pitches, and general communication to convey what we want to say.
However, finding the right image is not easy and few of us have the talent to draw, paint or otherwise create the picture with our own hands.
Well, AI tools like DALL-E are making a passable artist out of everyone. Simply describe the picture as you see it in your mind, and AI will generate something along the lines of what you typed. You can even specify the art style (pixel art, manga, thin pencil, watercolours) to get a result that’s closer to what you imagined.
If you’re in advertising and suddenly have a brilliant idea for a video ad. You could describe it to your boss, or you could get DALL-E to sketch a series of storyboards that convey the overall plot of your video, after all, a picture paints a thousand words!
4. Write and debug code with chatbots
Chatbots are also good at writing and debugging computer code, so anyone – from programming veterans to novices – can benefit from using chatbots to speed up their work.
If you’re an intern tasked with extracting all the names and email addresses from a PDF that’s not handily formatted for easy copy and pasting, ChatGPT can probably write a Python script that can carry out the task for you.
Or maybe you’re a data analyst who’s seeing stars because the data you need is nested in endless layers of arrays. Provide a sample of the data to a chatbot, and it will produce the expression you need. (A word of caution: it’s a good idea to mask some details of the data so you don’t inadvertently divulge confidential information.)
Even if the solutions don’t work perfectly, they often point you in the right direction and give you a good sense of how to tackle the problem.
5. Chatbots as Devil’s advocates
It’s always useful to have a colleague to bounce your ideas off. But if you’re not ready to discuss your work with others just yet, a chatbot could play that role too.
Say you’ve written a report on the state of AI today and the possible uses at your company. Now you’re asking yourself if you’ve covered all the major developments in the field, if you’ve missed any perspectives, or if there are any flaws in your arguments.
Well, why not ask the chatbot instead? Plonk your report in (after redacting confidential information, of course), and ask the AI tool to play devil’s advocate to strengthen your piece. The chatbot will, at the very least, produce a summary of your work highlighting the points you made and might just surface new angles that you haven’t considered.
Public and civil servants should also try out Pair for their work!
Harness the potential, but with care
As you can see, there is great potential in speeding up and improving the quality of your work with AI tools. But a running theme throughout the different possible uses is that careful attention must be paid to double-check the work of AI tools, as the technology is still prone to making stuff up and you don’t want to end up known as the ChatGPT lawyer.
So don’t completely rely on and trust these AI tools. Instead, use them as you would a diligent assistant who’s not an expert in your field – they tirelessly produce what you ask them to do, but you’re still the professional with the discerning eye to sort the wheat from the chaff.
That way, you automate the boring stuff, saving you time and energy to work on the finer details and exercise judgement on quality. But before you go forth to multiply your productivtiy in AI wonderland, make sure you check out our other article on AI, where we identified the potential pitfalls of using AI tools at work.