When it comes to generative AI, mastering the art of crafting a basic prompt that will return a solid response is a great first step. But it’s a bit like buying a sports car just to drive it to the grocery store. It may get the job done, but there’s so much more it can do.
Once you’re past the stage of asking an AI to draft an email or explain a concept to you like you’re five, it’s time to put the tech to actual work.
Here are five intermediate ways to weave AI into your daily workflow.
Reverse engineer yourself
Most people spend hours writing complex prompts to get an AI to sound human. It’s much easier to let the AI figure out how you sound.
Instead of guessing, feed three or four of your best articles, emails, or reports into the system. Ask it to analyze the cadence, tone, sentence structure, and vocabulary choices, and then have it build a permanent style profile.
The next time you ask it to write something, you won’t have to plead for it to “sound natural.” Just tell it to apply your specific blueprint.
Play devil’s advocate
Echo chambers are comfortable, but they make for weak strategy. Before you launch a new product feature, submit a pitch, or publish an opinion piece, run it by a custom-built critic.
Tell the AI: “You’re a deeply skeptical [job title] who hates fluff. Read this and tear it apart.” It’ll ruthlessly point out the logical gaps, weak arguments, and unearned assumptions you’re too close to see.
Organize and format data
Copy-pasting a messy pile of unformatted text into a spreadsheet is a miserable way to spend an afternoon. If you have unorganized data like customer feedback threads, chaotic meeting notes, or random competitive research, let the AI do the heavy lifting.
Instead of just asking for a summary, tell the AI to sort the mess into a clean markdown table with specific columns, like “Date,” “Issue,” and “Priority Level.” You can then copy and paste that clean table straight into Excel or Google Sheets, turning hours of manual sorting into a 10-second job.
Build simple automation tools
You don’t need a computer science degree to start automating the boring parts of your workday. If you find yourself doing the same repetitive digital task over and over, you can use AI to build a simple script to handle it for you.
Describe your exact problem in plain English. For example, tell the AI: “I have a folder of 100 images that all need to be resized to 800 pixels wide. Write a simple Python script to do this, and give me step-by-step instructions on how to run it on my Mac.”
The AI will generate the code and tell you exactly where to paste it, allowing you to build your own custom productivity tools without needing to write a single line of code yourself.
Do quick persona testing
User testing is expensive and time-consuming. AI can’t fully replace real human feedback, but you can get a solid baseline by creating synthetic user personas.
Define a highly specific target demographic like a time-strapped IT director who hates marketing jargon. Feed the AI your landing page copy and ask how that specific persona would react. It’ll give you a quick, remarkably accurate preview of what’s going to resonate and what’s going to get ignored.
