Want to hear a story about how AI saved me a big chunk of time and effort? > Likes and Comments

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message 1: by Hank (new)

Hank Quense I recently wrote a book on using AI as a writing assistant. I uploaded it to my AI app (Perplexity) and asked if and how the book could be converted into a video class. The AI replied positively and gave me an outline for eight videos including what topics went into each video.

Next I told it to make a slide deck for video one and write a script for each slide. It did so and impressed me with the output. I then told the AI to make slide decks for each of the other videos and write scripts for each. (i did this one at time). When the AI was done, I created slide decks in my presentation app and edited the scripts, sometimes quiet heavily because the AI tends to be wordy.

I've created a number of video courses for Udemy and I estimate it would taken have me four weeks to produce eight slide decks and scripts without AI. With AI it took me three days!

All I had to do now was record the videos. You can find the course here: https://brilliant-hank.gr8.page/cours...

Do you have examples of AI reducing your workload?. Paste them here.


message 2: by Emily (new)

Emily C. I came across this through a post shared by Sandra Timber, a book expert, and ended up buying it, and I’m glad I did.

It actually addresses the big question well: can AI support a writer’s voice without making storytelling feel formula-driven? The approach here leans toward balance, showing how AI can be used to spark ideas, structure work, and support marketing while still leaving space for the writer’s originality to lead. It’s practical, grounded, and makes the whole AI conversation feel less intimidating and more usable for real writing work.


message 3: by Hank (new)

Hank Quense Thanks for the plug, Emily


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