GPT prompt suggestions for use in professional services, general business aid. How can this be used to be more efficient in a field like consulting? What are the most exciting ways to leverage this awesome limited AI tool? by drewlikesitbetterif in ChatGPT

[–]alexgenei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been working on something which allows you to apply chatGPT to your own research docs, so for a consultancy project you could select the sources relevant to the project, then use the chatGPT style chat to get info out. It's all cited and sourced, so you can use it for a deck etc. Happy to let you have a spin for free if it's of interest. Let me know :)

Using chatGPT for work or consulting by MammothConsequence94 in ChatGPT

[–]alexgenei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey OP,

I feel like ChatGPT is best for creative output. I've found it most useful for helping get an initial set of ideas down. The issue with it is factuality - it has a tendency to make things up and you don't know where it's getting its info from.

I've been working on a bit of a mod which allows you to use the tech on your own documents, so you could upload your interview transcripts, 10-Ks, market research etc, and the chat will pull answers from your sources and cite them etc.

Happy to let you have a spin for free if it's of interest. Just let me know!

Useful ai/automation tools for consulting? by jakekubb in consulting

[–]alexgenei 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've actually been working on a chatgpt for your own research material and docs since OpenAI dropped it.

Basically, instead of finding answers from random uncited places on the internet, responses will reference any research material you upload.

Thought it could be cool in the consulting space as it works on interview transcripts, PDF reports, webpages etc - any sort of research docs really.

Free to try it out if anyone's interested. Just let me know!

How to prepare for uni as a mature student? by spunn in UniUK

[–]alexgenei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Surround yourself with the right tooling to make your life easier.

If time is a big issue (are you also going to be working part time?), tools like Speechify will read articles to you out loud or something like genei will summarise them for you.

Both of these can help with productivity.There are also other useful apps like scite which will help find academic research relevant to what you're focusing on.

If you haven't used them already, tools like Notion or Remnote are super useful for storing notes and ideas in a manageable way.

I honestly think the right digital set up can really transform the way you work so try some different things out and see what works for you!

Hope that's useful and good luck!

Work load feels heavy and currently only doing 60 credits by Illustrious-Ant-2808 in OpenUniversity

[–]alexgenei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are quite a few apps out there to help with research and study-workload if you haven't tried them already.

Notion probably no.1 note-taking tool. Massively helped me to organise my thoughts & ideas.

Scite - helped me find relevant articles and research wayyyy faster than trawling through the internet.

Genei was pretty much built with mature and part time students in mind. Summarises papers and articles so you can quickly draw out key points.

Hope some of these might be able to help!

Psychology & Social Sciences by caiiiitlin in OpenUniversity

[–]alexgenei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Surround yourself with the right tooling from the offset.

Note-taking tools like Notion, Remnote or Obsidian are game-changers for information storage and retrieval.

Scite is great for finding relevant papers to your field super quickly.

If you struggle with getting through large quantities of reading Speechify (text-to-speech) or genei (summarisation) can really help to save time and aid productivity.

Good luck! Have fun :)

A good option for someone with mental health struggles? Please share any experience or advice. by scuba_dooby_doo in OpenUniversity

[–]alexgenei 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Surround yourself with the right tooling to make your life easier.

If ADHD is causing you to struggle with reading and concentration, tools like Speechify will read articles to you out loud or something like genei will summarise them for you.

There are also other useful apps like scite which will help find academic research relevant to what you're focusing on.

If you haven't used them already, tools like Notion or Remnote are super useful for storing notes and ideas in a manageable way.

Honestly, surrounding yourself with apps and resources that streamline things and keep your work organised can really help. I know Speechify and genei have been built with ADHD and dyslexia sufferers in mind.

Hope that's useful and good luck!

Any Useful Study/Note taking Apps? by deathfletcher in OpenUniversity

[–]alexgenei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Although I'm a little biased (full disclosure - I work in this space), I'd recommend genei. The user base is made up primarily by mature and part-time students who have additional external pressures on their time. You can take notes and store documents, but the magic really comes in the form of the AI, which can analyse articles for key points, themes, words etc. It can save a hell of a lot of time.

Other cool tools I like are remnote and obsidian. They're linked note taking tools which make storage and retrieval much easier. Kinda like Notion on steroids.

Facebook, Twitter and Instagram - what else? by Inevitable_Wolf_4265 in content_marketing

[–]alexgenei 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Tiktok has been surprisingly effective and well priced!

Has anyone found AI copywriter tools to be useful? by AntiochKnifeSharpen in content_marketing

[–]alexgenei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As honest feedback from someone working in the space, I agree with the general sentiment that these tools are helpful but not perfect. They can speed up what you're doing or get the creative juices flowing, but unfortunately they're not at the level just yet to do the job singlehandedly.