I love this question! @emaynez To be 100% honest, I haven’t used in for work. Here is my hesitation: When I read some ChatGPT replies and posts for things, I feel like the phrasing sounds a bit empty. Yes, it is the correct answer, but it’s misses some of the things I like about humans writing things - such as nuance and humor. I do think it’s an excellent starting point, though - and then you can add your own flavor to the message! (I haven’t done that yet, though)
@dthaw what do you think?
I love this question! @emaynez To be 100% honest, I haven’t used in for work. Here is my hesitation: When I read some ChatGPT replies and posts for things, I feel like the phrasing sounds a bit empty. Yes, it is the correct answer, but it’s misses some of the things I like about humans writing things - such as nuance and humor. I do think it’s an excellent starting point, though - and then you can add your own flavor to the message! (I haven’t done that yet, though)
@dthaw what do you think?
ChatGPT definitelyyy misses the human touch! I sometimes use it to generate copy and get rid of the “blank page.” An AI quote I saw recently: “You won’t be replaced by AI, you’ll be replaced by a person using AI.”
I like ChatGPT for like webinar headline titles I have seen its been helpful. Not the full description for posts or emails but a good headliner it has given me some good alternatives than what I could think of.
We’ve used it to help our team soften their messaging and make it more appropriate. I agree with others above that it needs to be edited for a more human touch. We’re also looking at it to see how it can manage files and adjust them for consumption (with normalized data rather than true client data).
It’s here!!!! Thank you @ryanngill @dthaw @dana_slapfive @rondeaul for your insights!
@MickeyPowell I’d love your take on this haha