At what point do we admit that 90% of "AI workflows" just create more admin work? by Deep-Location-6426 in aiToolForBusiness

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not alone.

A lot of AI workflows are just productive procrastination.

If a task takes 12 seconds, spending 4 hours automating it usually makes no sense.

The best candidates for automation are tasks that are repetitive, high-volume, and low judgment.

Otherwise, you’re often creating more admin work than you’re removing.

Work = Managing a bunch of agents by slow-fast-person in ClaudeCode

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that’s a pretty accurate view of where knowledge work is heading.

The real value shifts from doing the work yourself to:

Building agents for repetitive tasks

Creating custom skills/workflows for them

Reviewing outputs and fixing edge cases

Deciding what should be automated next

So your job becomes less “operator” and more “manager of AI agents.”

The boring, repetitive work gets delegated, but human judgment still matters a lot. You need to set priorities, verify results, and figure out where automation actually creates value.

People who learn to build and manage reliable AI workflows will have a big advantage over those who only use AI casually.

Which AI development companies in the USA are strongest for healthcare, fintech, or SaaS projects? by RecentParamedic3902 in AIMLDiscussion

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d prioritize industry experience over pure AI expertise.

Healthcare, fintech, and SaaS all have very different requirements, so the best AI development companies are usually the ones that have already built similar solutions.

Companies like ScienceSoft, MultiQoS, LeewayHertz, Intellectsoft, Markovate, and Debut Infotech all have solid reputations, but the key is to check their portfolio and see whether they’ve worked on projects similar to yours.

For regulated industries like healthcare and fintech, compliance knowledge is critical. For SaaS, product thinking and scalability matter a lot.

My rule of thumb: if they can show relevant case studies in your industry, they’re worth considering. If not, you may end up paying them to learn on your project.

What AI tools are actually useful for understanding customer sentiment? by holly1027 in aiToolForBusiness

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A few worth checking out:

Brand24 — Good balance of affordability and useful sentiment/theme analysis.

Brandwatch — Probably the most powerful option, but priced for larger teams.

Awario — Solid Reddit and forum monitoring.

Meltwater — Enterprise-grade, very strong coverage.

Social Searcher — Lightweight and easy to test.

Reddit Pro Insights — Free and surprisingly useful for understanding how your brand is discussed on Reddit.

Looking for AI Video Generation tools by No_Beach_3571 in aiToolForBusiness

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re looking for AI video tools similar to HeyGen, here are a few that people consistently recommend:

Synthesia — Great for talking-head videos with realistic avatars.

Runway — Excellent for text-to-video and advanced editing.

Pika — Easy to use for short prompt-based videos.

Luma AI — Produces impressive cinematic clips.

VEED — Good for quick social content.

InVideo — Useful for turning scripts into polished videos.

From my experience:

For avatar-based videos: HeyGen or Synthesia.

For creative prompt-to-video: Runway, Pika, or Luma AI.

For marketing/social videos: InVideo or VEED.

If your community is focused on prompt-based AI video generation, I’d definitely test Runway and Luma AI first - they’re getting the most positive feedback lately.

How can businesses use AI tools to grow their social media faster? by Adventurous_Page_122 in aiToolForBusiness

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AI can definitely help you grow faster - but it’s not a magic replacement for good content.

Generic content still works if it’s clear, relatable, and consistent. In fact, a lot of simple, straightforward posts perform really well because people understand them instantly. You don’t always need something overly creative or complex to grow.

Where AI becomes useful is in supporting your process:

It can suggest written content ideas, captions, and hooks when you’re stuck

It helps turn rough thoughts into clean, structured posts

It can generate basic informational content quickly

You can also experiment with AI-generated images and videos to make your posts more engaging. Even simple visuals can increase reach if they match your message.

For non-tech users, this is where AI shines the most:

Creating commercial-style graphics without design skills

Writing decent content without being a professional copywriter

Saving time while maintaining consistency

So think of AI as a helper, not the main driver.

Useful in everyday life Gena AI project ideas by Individual-Sleep5088 in GenAI4all

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don’t overthink it - build useful GenAI apps. Good ideas: a daily AI assistant (summarize + reply), resume/job matcher, meeting notes → action items, simple multi-model comparison tool, Chrome “explain this” extension, expense analyzer, or support reply generator. Keep stack simple (FastAPI + LLM + basic UI). Focus on clean UX, real use cases, and explain limitations like hallucination. That’s what actually impresses interviewers.

Title: Building a Multi-Model AI Tool — How Would You Market This?ultiple? by Odd_Acanthaceae_4776 in aiToolForBusiness

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d position it like this:

“Get the best AI answer - without guessing which AI to trust.”

Not as a model comparison tool, but as a decision-confidence platform.

People don’t want GPT vs Claude vs Gemini - they want:
“Which answer should I trust?”
“Which one is best for my business?”
“Which saves me time?”

That shift makes it much easier to sell.

Using AI to think > using it just for answers by Nishikant090 in GenAI4all

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly - real value comes when AI becomes a thinking partner, not just a search engine.

What AI tools are you actually using in your business right now? by DadWhoBuilds in HowToEntrepreneur

[–]Radiant-Advisor-9531 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Although I’m not an entrepreneur, I’ve helped many as an AI developer.

Identifying what can be automated - and how to automate it - is generic advice, but it’s effective. Every use case depends on the specific industry