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AI tools and how to use them

To help you jump straight into experimenting, here is the curated list of tools with their direct access links.


1. Text & Brainstorming Tools

ChatGPT (OpenAI) & Claude (Anthropic)

  • What they are best for: Drafting content, coding, translating complex data, brainstorming, and acting as a conversational partner.
  • How to use them:
    • Assign a Persona: Never just ask a question. Start by telling the AI who it is (e.g., “Act as a veteran startup consultant…”).
    • Give Constraints: Specify length, tone, and what not to include (e.g., “Explain quantum computing in 100 words for a 10-year-old. Do not use the word ‘complicated’.”).
    • Iterate in a Chain: If the first response isn’t perfect, treat it like an ongoing conversation. Say, “Keep that exact layout, but make the intro sound more urgent.”

Notion AI

  • What it is best for: Summarizing meetings, organizing chaotic notes, and generating project templates directly inside your workspace.
  • How to use it: Highlight a messy block of text or a rough transcript from a meeting, press space to trigger the AI, and select “Extract Action Items” or “Summarize.” It transforms scattered thoughts into a clean, bulleted roadmap for your team.

2. Business & Workflow Automation Tools

Zapier Central

  • What it is best for: Creating autonomous AI bots that link your daily apps (Gmail, Slack, Excel, Trello) together without writing a single line of code.
  • How to use it:
    • Instead of building complex, rigid automations, talk to Zapier Central in plain English.
    • Tell it: “When a new lead fills out the form on our website, read their message. If they are asking about pricing, draft a reply in Gmail using our pricing FAQ doc, and send a notification to the sales channel on Slack.” The AI agent handles the logic and cross-app communication on its own.

Microsoft 365 Copilot & Google Workspace Gemini

  • What they are best for: Eliminating the tedious “busywork” of corporate life—creating spreadsheets, drafting slide decks, and catching up on missed meetings.
  • How to use them:
    • In Excel/Sheets: Highlight raw data and type: “Analyze this sales data and highlight the top three underperforming regions this quarter.”
    • In Teams/Meet: If you join a meeting 15 minutes late, open the Copilot panel and type: “Summarize what has been discussed so far and list any decisions that were made.”

3. Visual & Image Generation Tools

Midjourney

  • What it is best for: Generating breathtaking, hyper-realistic, or highly artistic conceptual imagery.
  • How to use it:
    • Access Midjourney via their web alpha or Discord interface.
    • Use Cinematic Language: Instead of using empty buzzwords like “photorealistic,” describe camera settings, lighting, and textures.
    • Example Prompt: /imagine a portrait of an old sailor, weathered skin, harsh overhead midday sun, shot on a 50mm lens, gritty texture, high contrast black and white photography.

Recraft

  • What it is best for: Graphic designers, marketers, and web designers who need clean, editable vector graphics, icons, and brand-consistent illustrations.
  • How to use it:
    • Select the exact style you need from the interface (e.g., “Flat Vector,” “3D Outline,” or “Line Art”).
    • Upload your brand’s specific color palette to the tool.
    • Type your prompt (e.g., “An icon of a rocket launching”), and Recraft will generate an asset that perfectly matches your company’s existing branding guidelines, ready to export as an SVG file.