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AI For Faster Writing w/ Henrik de Gyor My AI Fluency

Afraid AI will replace you? The real risk is being outpaced by people who use it.

Today, I’m joined by Henrik de Gyor, Chief Digital Officer of My AI Fluency and a no-nonsense digital transformation leader. He’s an expert in how to streamline content operations, integrate AI responsibly, and scale workflows without chaos. Expect practical lessons on metadata, change management, and building repeatable systems that deliver measurable results.

In this series we break down practical workflows for meetings, writing, health, and career growth. Listen now and tell us: where will you start?

Remote work creates a special kind of writing pressure: you’re answering messages, switching projects, and trying to sound clear while your attention is split. That’s why AI writing tools are showing up everywhere, and why an MIT study finding roughly 40% faster completion on workplace writing tasks gets people’s attention. 

The real promise is not “AI replaces writers”, but “AI supports remote workers” by adding structure, speeding up drafts, and helping you move from messy thoughts to usable words. For anyone writing emails, memos, LinkedIn posts, blog posts, or podcast scripts, the productivity gain comes from reducing blank-page time and getting to a solid first draft sooner.

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Welcome And MIT Writing Stats

Alex Wilson-Campbell
0:00

Hello,
everybody.
It's
Alex
and
Henrik
once
again
from
the
Remote
Work
Live
podcast.
Thank
you
for
joining
us.
And
today,
I
just
want
to
start
with
a
statistic
before
I
before
I
we
we
talk
about
ourselves
first.
So,
an
MIT
study
with
453
professionals
doing
realistic
workplace
writing
tasks.
So,
emails,
posts,
memos,
analysis,
found
that
access
to
AI
reduced
time
to
complete
tasks
by
about
40%
on
average,
while
quality
scores
rose
by
18%.
So
I
thought
that
was
a
pretty
sort
of
stark
sort
of
figure,
a
stark
sort
of
analysis
of
how
writing
with
AI
can
really
help.
And
I
really
wanted
to
have
Henrik
today,
Henrik
DeGure
of
My
AI
Fluency,
to
be
with
me
on
the
podcast
because
AI,
Henrik
and
I,
as
much
as
we're
friends,
we're
also
we're
also
podcasters
as
well.
We've
met
each
other
in
the
podcasting
world.
But
we're
desk
workers,
we're
sitting
down
a
lot
doing
a
lot
of
work,
but
we're
always
trying
to
find
ways
of
improving
those
efficiencies
as
far
as
we
can.
And
Henrik
of,
as
I
said,
my
AI
fluency,
I
thought
would
be
really,
really
good
to
hear
your
take
as
well,
Henrik,
on
how
writing
and
how
AI
is
affecting
your
productivity
with
writing.
So
as
I
said,
the
problem
I've
highlighted
already
is
the
well,
not
it's
not
just
the
writing
itself.
I'm
I'm
not
somebody
who
enjoys
writing
really
that
much.
I'm
I'm
not
too
bad
at
writing,
I'm
pretty
good.
It
feels
slow
sometimes
to
me.
There's
this
seems
like
there's
no
structure.
Sometimes,
again,
when
you're
working
especially
remotely,
you
know,
you're
thinking
about
10
different
things
at
once.
So
the
ideas
sometimes
are
a
bit
constrained.
So
the
aim
of
this
episode
is
to
show
how
we
use
AI
to
turn
conversations
into
scripts,
posts,
you
know,
emails
and
other
content,
and
how
you
can
actually
hopefully
use
some
of
the
things
that
we've
that
we
use
and
sort
of
apply
it
to
how
you
work.
And
as
I
said,
it's
we're
not
focusing
on
the
tools,
we're
not
preaching
to
you,
we're
not
experts
in
terms
of
certain
AI
tools,
as
it
were.
Although
Henrik
has
expertise
in
the
in
the
arena
of
AI,
we're
not
coming
up
from
the
standpoint
of
being
a
guru
in
a
certain
tool
or
a
certain
thing,
as
you
probably
see
quite
a
lot
on
on
YouTube.
We
want
to
we
want
to
share
our
workflows
with
you
to
kind
of
show
you
how
you
can
then
apply
AI.
It
doesn't
really
matter
which
tool
you
apply,
but
as
long
as
it
does
the
job,
apply
AI
to
improve
your
workflow.
So,
yep.
So
I
myself,
as
I
said,
I
do
a
lot
of
writing,
Henrik.
I
I
do
I
write
LinkedIn
posts,
I
write
emails,
I
write
blogs,
scripts
as
well.
I
found
myself
actually,
especially
with
the
podcasting,
because
we
as
you
and
I
are
both
podcasters.
So
I
found
myself
in
a
way
burning
out
when
I
was
doing
manual
script
writing,
or
I
was
trying
to
come
up
with
ideas
from
the
top
of
my
head
or
even
on
the
internet.
And
you
know,
when
I
was
doing
LinkedIn
posts,
it
it
same
thing,
it's
just
just
the
ideation,
the
the
process
of
writing,
all
these
things,
Henry,
that
really
sort
of
stopped
me
in
my
tracks,
I
think,
eventually.
And
I
wanted
to
find
another
solution.
And
a
lot
of
the
solutions
that
I
use
now,
you've
referred
to
me.
So
even
things
like
otter,
chat
GPTs,
the
some
of
the
certain
things
that
you
use
that
I
now
apply
in
my
in
my
work.
So,
Henry,
I
thought
we
could
share

AI As Writing Partner

Alex Wilson-Campbell
3:50

a
couple
of
our
workflows.
I
I'll
start
with
one
of
mine.
Or
let's
see,
there's
how
are
you
using
what
sort
of
things
are
you
writing?
And
I
suppose
you
can
talk
about
your
workflows
as
we
go
through.

Henrik de Gyor
4:00

Sure.
Yeah.
So
so
I've
written
nine
books,
and
AI
is
is
not
writing
books
yet,
realistically
speaking,
and
not
quality
ones,
the
least,
but
they
they
are
definitely
helping
in
ideation
and
in
cleanup.
Whether
I'm
writing
a
book,
an
email,
a
LinkedIn
post,
a
script,
it's
definitely
helping
for
ideation,
meaning
the
creation
of
the
ideas.
Instead
of
racking
your
brain
about
stuff,
you
can
just
plug
in
a
few
ideas
into
AI
and
it'll
give
you
thousands
of
ideas,
and
then
you
can
throw
away
999
of
them,
and
then
that
one
kernel
that
it
gives
you,
you
can
continue
on
that.
So
it
doesn't
replace
you,
it
augments
you
and
it
augments
our
work,
which
is
super
helpful.
So
it
accelerates
it
instead
of
like
pondering
way
too
long
on
things
and
drafting
and
redrafting
and
cleaning
up.
And
uh
eventually,
as
writers,
where
if
you
write
enough,
you're
blind
to
your
own
edits,
right?
So,
so
you
know,
word
or
or
whatever
tool
you're
happening
to
use
it
is
helpful
to
a
degree
for
spelling
and
grammar,
all
the
fun
things,
but
not
in
the
net
in
the
sense
of
telling
a
story
or
or
anything
like
that.
It
it
it
if
you're
if
you're
down
a
rabbit
hole
and
you
don't
realize
it,
there's
very
little
you
can
do
about
it
aside
from
take
time
away
from
it
or
have
editors.
And
one
of
the
editors
can
be
AI,
right?
To
do
that,
so
I
I
have
them
looking
at
everything
I
write
on
a
regular
basis.
And
I
I
I
use
one
tool
called
Grammarly,
and
it
it's
it's
correct,
it
gives
me
stats
every
week
of
of
how
I
did.
Is
so
far
in
the
past
10
years,
it
evaluated
12
million
words.
Yeah,
12
million
words.
And
and
it
does
it
it
also
tells
me
like
the
confidence
rating,
the
the
the
mood,
the
the
all
the
different
attributes
about
the
writing
that
I
have
been
doing
that
week,
of
whether
it's
increasing,
decreasing
by
X
percent,
interestingly
enough,
what
the
common
errors
that
I'm
show
seeing,
or
what
the
AI
is
seeing.
And
so
so
if
I
had
to
focus
on
punctuation
or
whatever,
or
or
you
know,
whatever
the
issue
is,
it
it'll
say,
oh,
you
you've
had
a
lot
of
errors
around
this.
This
is
something
I
need
to
focus
on.
Now
I'm
more
conscious
about
it.
And
and
I
can
focus
on
on
bettering
that
if
necessary.
Super
helpful
in
ideation,
in
correction,
in
redrafting
or
or
drafting
the
first
draft,
not
necessarily
the
final
draft,
because
you
know
that
there's
there's
a
variety
of
things
that
you
want
to
correct
in
AI
and
check,
right?
So
it's
still
hallucinating
on
occasion
for
a
variety
of
different
reasons
where
you
you
you
you
don't
take
something
straight
out
of
AI
and
plug
it
in.
That's
that's
the
lazy
way
to
do
it,
and
and
it
it's
it's
really
helpful
when
you
use
it
right.

Alex Wilson-Campbell
6:54

On
your
point
about
Grammarly,
and
I
think
there
are
there's
a
certain
group
of
people
whose
perception
of
AI
is
that
it
makes
you
lazy
or
makes
you
kind
of
rely
upon
it
heavily
to
the
point
that
you
almost
become
numb
to
but
that
point
about
Grammarly
that
you
just
made,
I
think
the
Grammarly
has
actually
helped
me
to
improve
my
punctuation,
it's
helped
me
to
improve
you
know
how
I
construct
sentences
because
it
gives
you
those
pointers
that
you
mentioned
and
it
gives
you
the
sort
of
steer
that
I
guess
uh
if
you
had
an
English
teacher
next
to
you
would
would
would
do
sort
of
thing.
Yeah,
I
like
that
example.

Five-Step Transcript To Script Workflow

Alex Wilson-Campbell
7:30

I
use
Grammarly
actually
quite
quite
a
lot.
And
the
the
first
actual
workflow
I
want
to
share
with
you
is
is
related
to
writing
podcast
episodes.
So
from
transcripts,
and
you
and
I,
Henry,
we
we
transcribe
quite
a
few
of
our
conversations.
We
start
off
with
a
I'll
just
talk
you
through
the
I
guess
the
the
steps,
the
workflow
that
I
use
in
order
to
produce
even
something
like
this
episode,
for
example.
So
we
we've
started
this
with
a
conversation.
So
we
we
planned
it,
we
record
you
know
uh
calls,
we
have
discussions
ahead
of
time
about
what
the
episode
will
be
about.
We
we
do
our
research
in
the
background
as
well.
We
always
make
sure
there
is
a
transcript,
we
always
make
sure.
I
think
one
of
the
things
that
we
do,
because
obviously
we
are
consenting
to
having
this,
you
know,
the
ideation
or
at
least
the
the
capture
of
the
information,
we're
consenting
to
that.
So
whoever,
if
you
are
doing
it
yourself,
you
make
sure
you
you
know
you
get
the
obviously
the
consent
of
the
people
who
are
part
of
the
process,
and
we
aim
to
stop
relying
on
on
memory
and
just
scattered
notes
because
again,
when
when
you're
capturing
a
real
conversation
with
something
like
otter,
for
example,
I've
noticed
the
quality
of
otter
has
improved
in
terms
of
how
it
recognizes
words,
and
the
more
and
more
you
use
it,
I
think
it
it
actually
begins
to
understand
even
the
dialects
and
the
different
accents,
and
it
makes
it
a
lot
clearer
what
what
it
is,
you
know,
you're
what's
what's
been
spoken
about.
So
you
and
I,
Henry,
we've
aimed
to
stop
relying
on
memory
and
notes
here
and
there.
I
spoke
to
you
about
the
the
the
I
was
looking
in
my
cupboard
just
the
other
day,
and
uh
I
had
like
uh
reams
and
reams
of
paper
that
I'd
used
to
take
notes
previously
on
some
of
the
meetings
that
you
and
I
had.
So
Otter
was
a
sort
of
a
real
game
changer
for
me.
So
that's
step
one
for
me.
Step
two
is
really
dropping
the
transcript.
You
know,
you
normally
after
after
we
finish
a
meeting,
you'd
send
me
that
transcript,
we'd
share
the
transcript
that
we'd
you
know,
we'd
collaborate
on
that
transcript,
paste
that
transcript
into
chat
GPT.
And
what
I'm
tending
to
do
now
is
I'm
I'm
gathering
all
of
the
transcripts
into
one
into
one
document
as
opposed
to
having
different
documents,
or
some
people
could
could
even
put
the
transcript
into
the
instructions.
Uh
there's
an
instructions
area
of
chat
GPT,
because
that
then
becomes
like
a
knowledge
bank
of
all
the
conversations
that
you've
had
that
relate,
for
example,
to
you
and
I
doing
the
podcasting.
So
in
this
instance,
I
asked
chat,
we
had
a
fairly
structured
conversation
on
the
themes
that
we
wanted
to
talk
about
with
these
particular
episodes.
And
that
meant
I
was
able
to
ask
AI
to
pull
out
the
main
themes
and
the
main
topics
and
categorize
each
topic.
And
the
aim
is
to
see
the
shape
of
the
episode
without
really
reading
everything.
And
then
step
three
for
me
was
asking
for
a
simple
episode
outline.
So
for
this
one
on
writing
and
previous
ones
that
we've
had
about
meetings,
for
example,
the
the
the
uh
the
AI,
I
prompted
the
AI
to
put
together
a
15
to
20
minute
episode
outline
based
on
the
transcript.
And
you
can
tweak
that.
It
can
be
an
hour
if
you
want,
it
can
be
a
20-minute
episode.
So
you
can
use
the
AI
to
prompt
in
that
way
and
ask
it
to
make
clear
sections
of
the
conversation.
So
an
introduction,
the
pain
points,
stories
behind
it,
your
story,
Henrik,
my
story,
the
workflows,
the
takeaways,
and
the
structures
as
well.
And
step
four
for
me
was
turn
the
outline
into
bulleted
points.
So
again,
the
introduction,
all
these
different
sections
of
the
podcast,
with
the
aim
of
having
something
to
talk
about,
which
gave
us
a
bit
of
structure
for
this
conversation
and
other
conversations.
And
then
step
five,
edit
it.
Because
as
you
were
saying,
Henrik,
AI
is
by
no
means
perfect.
It
can
hallucinate,
it
can
make
mistakes,
it
needs
training.
It's
not,
it's
not,
it's
not
just
you
could
that
you
can
just
shove
it
it
shove
the
uh
the
transcript
into
AI
and
just
say,
go
off
and
write
a
transcript,
go
off
and
write
a
sort
of
a
script
outline.
You
have
to
train
it
as
you're
going
along.
So
yeah,
editing
is
important,
asking
it
to
simplify
the
language
in
a
way
that's
in
line
with
how
how
we
talk,
Henrik,
and
all
that
sort
of
thing.
And
the
aim
is
to
make
it
do
all
the
heavy
lifting,
really.
And
that's
that's
really
my
process,
the
the
five-step
process
that
I
go
through
when
it
comes
to
just
writing
a
script
as
we
are
today.

Henrik de Gyor
12:08

And
yeah,
that's
awesome.
Yeah,
yeah.

Alex Wilson-Campbell
12:11

And
you
know,
it's
something
that
we're
still
refining
it,
aren't
we,
Henry?
We're
still
refining
this.
Well,
I
I
am
anyway,
in
terms
of
refining
the
process
of
writing
even
this
podcast
podcasting
script,
because
I
myself,
I'm
used
to
solo
podcasting,
so
it's
so
podcasting
with
somebody
else
is
something
quite
new.
So
even
it
when
you
were
asking
the
when
I
was
asking
the
AI,
I
was
saying,
you
know,
pull
out
pieces
of
the
conversation
that
relate
to,
for
example,
writing
that
I
spoke
about,
or
put
out
elements
of
the
conversation
that
on
writing
that
Henrik

Prompt Specificity And Tool Choice

Alex Wilson-Campbell
12:45

spoke
about.
So
yeah,
Henrik,
it
was
all
about
me
trying
to
get
the
get
a
balance.
I
think
we're
getting
there,
aren't
we?
I
think.

Henrik de Gyor
12:52

Yeah,
totally.
Yeah.
And
I
I
I
would
only
add
to
the
training
when
you're
trading
an
AI
around
what
you're
wanting
to
output
on
it
on
a
consistent
basis,
like
from
transcripts
of
discussions
to
your
point,
all
the
way
to
talking
points
for
for
conversation
like
this,
for
podcast
notes,
for
example,
of
what
we're
going
to
talk
about.
Make
sure
you
add
the
specificity
of
what
you're
looking
for
and
the
context,
right?
Because
it
unless
you
create
a
project
or
you
create
a
GPT
in
in
Chat
GPT
or
pick
your
favorite
tool
in
question,
you
it
needs
the
context
repeatedly,
especially
if
you
change
agents
from
from
one
tool
to
another,
because
it
you
can
use
there's
thousands
of
AI
tools,
right?
Whether
it's
for
writing
or
or
or
or
ideation
or
image
creation
or
video
creation
or
of
audio
editing,
video
editing,
you
name
it,
whatever
it
you
want
it
to
do,
each
one
needs
context
to
one
degree
or
another,
and
and
slightly
vary
in
context
of
what's
applicable
to
what
you're
trying
to
output,
right?
So
it's
not
creating
it
in
a
vacuum
because
it'll
create
you
something
in
a
vacuum
and
it
won't
be
what
you
want.
So
if
you
if
you
give
the
specificity,
if
you
give
the
the
specifics
of
what
you're
asking
for,
and
you
give
it
the
context,
and
then
you
you
explain
what
you
want
in
that
content,
then
it
helps
you
a
lot.
I've
noticed
that
ChatGPT
has
strengths
and
weaknesses
to
your
point.
And
then
there's
there's
a
number
of
other
tools
where
there's
perplexity,
there's
Claude,
there's
uh
there's
Gemini,
there,
there's
Copilot,
of
course.
It's
so
it's
really
pick
the
tool
that's
you're
comfortable
with,
but
make
sure
you
add
that
specificity
in
the
context
for
that
content
that
you're
desiring.
And
the
more
specific
you
are,
and
sometimes
it
it
it
it
will
vary
based
on
the
output
that
you
want,
it'll
help,
particularly
for
writing,
since
that's
what
we're
covering
today.
For
for
writing,
because
it's
it
it
has
all
the
rules
of
pick
your
language,
English,
right?
In
this
case,
instead
of
referencing
a
dictionary
or
thesaurus,
which
you
know,
the
English
majors
of
of
the
world,
they
they
do
that
and
they
they're
like
religious,
like,
oh,
I
have
my
you
know,
fill
in
the
blank
branded
dictionary
and
thesaurus
right
here,
and
I
reference
it
all
the
time.
It's
like
mm-hmm,
that's
great.
And
and
we
know
how
slow
that
is.
Yep,
of
course.
To
your
point.
So
back
to
the
MIT
study
is
like
if
you
want
to
be
more
efficient
and
faster
in
what
you're
doing,
it's
it's
is
it
gonna
give
you
more
options?
Yeah.
Can
you
filter
through
those
options
faster?
So
it's
a
choice
to
use
AI,

Creative Uses And Book Ideas

Henrik de Gyor
15:30

and
it's
a
choice
to
use
it
efficiently.

Alex Wilson-Campbell
15:33

And
it's
I
mean,
I
was
skeptical
at
the
beginning,
but
I
think
yeah,
it's
like
you
said,
it's
a
choice,
but
I
think
it's
a
it's
something
that
it's
becoming
a
prerequisite
in
many
areas,
I
think.
And
you
really
have
to
think
about
how
you
can
take
advantage
of
tools
that
are
available
to
make
you
more
efficient,
make
you
know,
make
you
stand
out
in
some
way.
So
it's
becoming
very
quickly
a
prerequisite
to
use
AI
in
some
form
or
another.
And
I
I
think
the
way
you
use
AI,
Henrik,
really
I
mean,
writing
a
book
for
me
is
is
is
like
a
an
undertaking
that
I've
always
thought
of
thought
of.
I've
started
to
make
notes,
I've
started
to
put
outlines
for
books
together,
and
this
was
pre
pre-AI,
and
I
kind
of
just
got
so
inundated
and
so
so
consumed
that
I
kind
of
the
ideas
ran
out,
and
then
the
the
it
just
didn't
work
for
me.
But
you're
using
AI
for
writing
books
as
well.

Henrik de Gyor
16:39

So
my
last
few
books
I
did
use
the
early
versions
of
pre
pre-Chat
GPT
for
ideation
and
for
outlines
only.
They
were
not
powerful
enough
to
write
chapters
nowadays.
If
you
want
to
create
a
sci-fi
book,
you
could
probably
write
it
with
Chat
GPT.
The
one
example
uh
that
I
heard
recently
was
grandparents,
instead
of
reading
the
same
bedtime
story
for
the
billionth
time
to
your
you
know
under
10-year-old,
you
pull
out
Chat
GPT
on
your
tablet
phone,
whatever,
and
you
have
their
imagination
of
that
young
boy
or
girl
create
the
story,
and
then
you
have
it
type
typed
out
for
them,
or
you
speak
to
it,
and
then
it'll
generate
that
story
for
you.
And
then
you
monitor
it
as
the
adults,
right,
in
the
in
the
room,
because
you
know
it's
it's
still
an
AI,
and
and
you
can
filter
it
to
whatever
you
desire,
right?
And
and
of
course
you're
writing
for
that
said
aged
child,
right?
But
then
it's
it
there
is
no
end
to
that
story,
right?
So
it's
very
imaginative,
it's
extremely
creative
on
some
of
the
professional
versions
of
of
the
tools.
You
have
a
slider
of
how
much
you
want
it
to
hallucinate
on
purpose,
right?
So
so
that
it's
like
I
think
it
was
Amazon.
There,
there's
a
slider
where
you
can
go
to
like
0.01%
as
hallucination
or
100%.
So
if
you
want
full
sci-fi,
full
bore,
you
can
do
that
and
and
it'll
go
hog
wild
on
you
on
whatever
you
can
imagine.

Alex Wilson-Campbell
18:16

On
that
point
of
hallucinations,
uh,
there
may
be
some
people
out
there

Spotting AI Hallucinations

Alex Wilson-Campbell
18:20

who
don't
necessarily
know
what
that
is,
hallucinations
of
AI.
What
is
there
an
example
of
what
to
look
out
for
in
terms
of
well
detecting
that
your
AI
is
hallucinating?

Henrik de Gyor
18:32

Well,
if
you
know
something
that's
factual
and
then
it
start
adding
non-facts
in
there,
like
one
example
is
is
I
was
I
was
looking
up
for
various
events,
I
was
looking
up
locations
with
coffee
shops,
for
example,
like
a
list
of
coffee
shops
in
my
area,
and
and
it
created
some,
a
list
of
them.
And
I
was
like,
I
I
the
last
few
they
were
didn't
exist.
There
were
places
that
didn't
exist.
And
I
I
went
to
Google
Maps
and
uh
checked
it.
It's
like,
no,
these
places
don't
exist.
It's
like
there's
no
address.
That's
the
first
clue.
But
it
it'll
create
things
that
don't
exist,
it'll
create
papers
that
don't
exist,
it'll
create
new
papers,
so
research
papers
and
things
like
that.
And
granted,
you
know,
the
the
reason
why
AI
is
is
increasing
so
fast
is
because
there
are
so
many
research
papers
coming
out.
It
if
you
look
at
the
exponential,
it's
like
literally
a
curve
that's
that
just
skyrockets
because
there
are
so
many
research
papers
written
about
AI.
It
used
to
be
like,
you
know,
dozens
that
you
know,
only
PhDs
and
and
developers.
We're
neither
neither
of
us
are
or
that.
But
anyways,
uh,
and
neither
of
us
are
writing
papers
about
that.
But
but
but
it's
it's
like
thousands
per
month
are
being
written.
So
so
that's
why
we're
seeing
an
exponential
growth
in
the
past
hand
handful
of
years.
Less
than
literally
like
it
was
2023.
Um
that
when
it
it
started
exploding,
and
it
exploded
in
popularity
faster
than
any
other
social
media
tool
or
any
other
form
of
media
ever
in
the
number
of
people
using
it.
So
there's
over
100
million
people
at
the
last
time
I
checked,
using
it
regularly.

Alex Wilson-Campbell
20:16

And
I
guess
going
back
to
the
the
hallucinations
bit
would
it's
quite
useful
if
you're
writing
a
fiction
book,
I
guess.
But
totally.
But
for
you,
what
what
is
it
do
you
have
like
a
set
process
when
it
comes
to
writing
your
your
books
or
whatever
it
is
that
you're
writing
using

Drafting Emails And Slides Safely

Alex Wilson-Campbell
20:35

AI
as
a
sort
of
like
a
process
that
you
have
in
your
mind?

Henrik de Gyor
20:39

Well,
so
not
necessarily
for
books
because
books
are
I
I've
parked
most
of
the
books
temporarily.
I've
already
written
nine,
so
so
until
until
something
really,
really
sparks
my
my
interest
and
and
piques
my
curiosity,
I'm
I'm
gonna
park
it
for
now.
But
as
far
as
writing
to
your
point
and
and
using
AI,
um
a
lot
of
emails,
a
lot
of
drafts
are
started
via
ChatGPT
or
or
or
or
a
variety
of
different
tools.
I'll
it
depends
on
what
I'm
trying
to
write.
Like
sometimes
it's
it's
a
it's
a
playbook,
sometimes
it's
a
a
slide
deck.
So
if
I'm
trying
to
do
a
slide
deck,
I'll
go
to
Manus.
And
uh,
Manaus
is
pretty
amazing.
I
can
output
it
to
anything
I
want.
There's
several
other
tools
that'll
do
that.
Gamma
will
do
that
as
well.
And
it
it
it
really
depends.
So
it
it'll
it'll
generate
me
one
that's
branded
if
it
needs
to
be
branded
for
a
client.
It'll
generate
me
one
that's
branded
for
me.
It'll
generate
one
that's
not
branded,
just
straight
out
of
the
box,
as
long
as
you
supply
that
branding,
right?
That
starting
point.
And
then
it's
also
like,
well,
how
many,
how
many
slides
do
you
want?
Or
what
what
what
do
you
want
in
each
slide?
And
and
then
you
can
curtail
the
text
first,
the
text
content
of
of
this
of
each
slide,
slide
one
through,
fill
in
the
blank.
And
then
what
graphics
do
you
want
in
there?
Do
you
want
charts?
Do
you
want
imagery?
Do
you
want
icon
iconography,
iconography?
Whatever
that
looks
like.
So
I've
been
doing
a
lot
of
that
recently.
And
then
there's
also
email,
email
drafts,
like,
oh,
I
need
to
email
draft
something.
Like,
let
me
check
it.
Like
here,
here's
the
here's
the
the
original
email.
I
might
even
remove
the
person's
name
and
email
address.
So
I'm
not
sharing
the
PII.
So
no
personal
identifiable
information
is
being
put
into
the
AI.
So
so
there's
no
connection
to
that,
to
that
individual
or
that
company.
And
I
might
be
putting
the
first
name
in
there,
right?
I'll
put
that
in
there
if
that
matters,
if
that's
part
of
the
context.
And
have
you
have
a
draft
a
response
that's
you
know
positive
about
whatever
response
in
that
sense.
And
then
based
on
that,
I'll
copy
it
and
put
it
into
my
an
email
and
draft
it,
fix
the
few
nuances
there,
unless
it's
it's
terrible.
And
then
I
just
have
to
add
more
context
or
more
specificity
in
into
the
AI.
And
then
I
literally
I
just
copy
it
and
put
it
into
the
email
or
into
a
PowerPoint
or
whatever
the
output
is,
right?
Whether
it's
writing
an
email,
writing
a
uh
a
message
of
some
sort,
writing
a
uh
a
playbook,
all
the
different
things
that
you
can
write,
right?
Sometimes
I'll
write
reports,
and
yes,
uh
the
reports
will
be
pumped
into
there
and
they'll
be
checked
regularly
because
you
know
there's
gonna
be
X
number
of
versions
of
that
that
reports,
right,
until
you
you
finalize
that
report
for
a
variety
of
reasons.
And
you
can
check
it
and
make
sure
that
it's
it's
doing
what
it's
supposed
to
be
doing.
And
it's
uh
obviously
you
have
to
check
it
that
there's
that's
that's
you're
still
the
human
in
the
loop.
And
you
should
be
worried
if
there's
no
human
in
the
loop.
That's
our
purpose
is
to
be
the
human
in
the
loop.
It's
the
re
you're
the
requester
as
the
human
in
the
loop,
and
you're
the
receiver
of
that
output.
And
if
you're
not
the
human
in
the
loop,
checking
to
make
sure
A,
it's
still
working,
B,
it's
it's
outputting
what
you're
supposed
to
be
doing,
why
are
you
there?

Alex Wilson-Campbell
24:03

Yeah,
and
I
think
that's
that's
a
key
thing,
isn't

Repurposing Transcripts Into Many Formats

Alex Wilson-Campbell
24:05

it,
with
the
operators
that
there's
this
term
going
around
AI
operator.
Uh
and
I
think
that's
that's
how
I'm
trying
to
to
see
myself
now
as
somebody
who
is
operating
the
AI
for
the
for
whatever
end
it
may
be,
for
a
positive
outcome
for
myself.
Using
it,
you
know,
I'm
not
I'm
by
no
means
am
I
using
it
perfectly,
but
I'm
I'm
using
it
because
I
want
to
try
to
to
improve,
to,
to,
to
stay
relevant,
to
to
stay
up
to
date.
And
it
things
are
changing
so
quickly.
It's
not
it's
not
possible
to
to
completely
be
on
the
bleeding
edge,
is
it?
Because
things
are
things
are
changing
so
so
rapidly,
but
at
least
the
very
least,
just
trying
to
immerse
myself
in
as
much
as
possible
without
going
down
rabbit
holes
and
without
without
drowning
is
the
key,
just
a
bit,
bit
by
bit
each
day,
you
know.

Henrik de Gyor
24:57

Really?

Alex Wilson-Campbell
24:57

But
for
me,
I
think
what
what
I've
decided
is
that
as
a
somebody
who
creates
content
quite
a
lot,
I
think
there's
something
you
said
on
the
last
show
about
capturation,
it
you
know,
capturing
your
IP,
capturing
the
you
know,
the
ideas
of
other
people
with
their
consent,
always
taking
sort
of
electronic
notes
so
that
can
be
used
and
then
sort
of
repurposed
into
other
content.
So
repurposing,
you
can
repurpose
anything,
can't
you?
You
can
repurpose
even
images.
You
can
not
that
we're
gonna
talk
about
that
today,
but
repurposing
transcripts
is
a
big
thing
for
me.
Even
conversations
that
I've
had
on
the
remote
work-life
podcast
from
from
years
ago,
transcribing
them,
you
know,
because
YouTube
itself,
if
you
upload
to
YouTube,
it
will
transcribe.
I
mean,
it's
YouTube
is
not
the
best
when
it
comes
to
transcriptions,
but
it
makes
it
possible
to
transcribe
conversations,
it
makes
it
possible
to
transcribe
monologues,
and
you
shouldn't
waste
that
information
because
you
can
change
it
into
transform
it
into
multiple
pieces
of
content
as
I
do.
So
I
I
would
choose
after
doing
I've
done
about
250
podcasts.
Henry,
you've
probably
done
a
lot
more
than
that.
That's
like
a
mammoth
amount
of
data.
It
is
a
mammoth
amount
of
information.
It
shouldn't
be
wasted
in
terms
of
turning
that
into
something
else.
You
could
use
the
AI,
ask
the
AI
to
pull
out
the
main
ideas,
two
or
three
clear
ideas,
let
AI
label
the
ideas
in
a
simple
plain
language.
And
then
another
step
would
be
to
draft
specific
content
types.
I've
repurposed
podcasts
into
LinkedIn
posts,
into
articles
or
newsletter
articles
or
blog
posts,
show
notes,
so
many
different
things.
But
again,
as
you
said,
it's
important
to
edit
and
make
sure
that
it
remains
as
factual
as
possible
and
relevant,
as
as
little
hallucination
as
possible.
So,
yeah,
transcripts
and
repurposing
is
something
that's
been
really,
really,
really
big.
And
I
think
that's
all
I
want
to
share
today
in
terms
of
how
we're
using
it
to
write.
But
what
I'd
say
is
just,
you
know,
as
as
Henrik
and
I
have
said
it
in
pre
in
a
previous
episode,
is
to
capture
capture
your
notes,
even
if
you're
you
know
setting
yourself
a
session
where
you're
just
doing
a
brainstorm
on
a
certain
activity
or
a
certain
idea,
whether
you're
trying
to
write
a
blog
or
a
LinkedIn
post
or
an
email,
you
know,
you
can
capture
some
of
your
ideas
about
what
you
want
in
that
email,
in
that
blog
post,
by
using
something
like
Otta
or
the
thousands
of
other
sort
of
transcription
software
that
are
out
there.
So
pick
and
pick
one,
one
of
those
recordings,
get
the
transcript
and
use

Always Be Capturing And Farewell

Alex Wilson-Campbell
27:45

AI
to
ask
it
for
a
simple
outline
of
a
I
don't
know,
a
LinkedIn
post.
Ask
it
to
do
that,
but
give
it
as
Henrik
was
saying,
give
it
context
and
then
turn
it
into
a
LinkedIn
post.
If
you
if
you're
trying
to
do
LinkedIn,
and
it
can
turn
it
into
different
versions,
it
can
turn
it,
turn
it
into
like
a
list
style
LinkedIn
post
or
a
contrarian
take
or
or
you
know
an
informational
post.
So
it
there's
so
many
different
things
that
it
can
do.
It
can
duplicate
the
the
you
know
your
your
thoughts,
uh,
it
can
really
help
with
with
with
content
production
at
scale.
So
that's
what
I'd
suggest
doing.
But
uh
Henrik,
I
just
really
wanted
to
say
thank
you
for
joining
me
today
for
this
episode.
Of
course,
always
be
capturing.
That's
the
that's
the
phrase.

Henrik de Gyor
28:32

Always
be
capturing.

Alex Wilson-Campbell
28:33

That's
on
my
that's
something
I
learned
from
you
this
this
this
year,
so
I'll
be
doing
that
as
well.
But
I
think
we
have
been
doing
that,
but
it's
a
matter
of
just
sort
of
going
through
with
it
and
and
using
everything
at
your
disposal
to
to
create
content
for
our
from
our
perspective.
Thanks
again
for
everybody
listening.
That
was
another
episode
of
the
Remote
World
Live
podcast,
and
we'll
see
you
on
the
on
the
next
one.

Henrik de Gyor
28:52

Thank
you.