Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 517: Balancing AI Productivity and Human Intelligence in Everyday Work
Episode Date: May 2, 2025You're outsourcing your brain to AI. Bad idea?AI can write your SQL queries. Build your dashboards. Even brainstorm your next big idea.It’s saving you hours. Maybe days.But here’s the catch�...�it's also stealing your critical thinking. Making you reliant.Maybe even... dumber.Sumit Gupta knows this first-hand. He’s built data strategies at Notion, Snowflake, and Dropbox. And, he’s here to break down how AI is both supercharging productivity and quietly eroding our problem-solving skills.Are we trading our brains for convenience? Let’s find out.Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Thoughts on this? Join the conversation and ask Jordan and Sumit questionsUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:Personal use of Generative AI and productivity vs. intelligence dichotomyIntroduction of Sameet Gupta as a guestRole and experience of Sameet Gupta at NotionThe impact of AI on productivity and critical thinkingExamples of AI tools used by Sameet GuptaChallenges of balancing AI use with retaining critical skillsPotential risks and costs of over-reliance on AIWhite coding and its implicationsRecommendations and personal strategies to maintain skills alongside AI useThe influence of AI on different age groups, particularly studentsDiscussion on cost implications of using AI improperlyNotion's capabilities in enhancing productivity and retentionThe future impact of AI on knowledge workers and the workforcePractical advice for business leaders on AI integration and maintaining productivityTimestamps:00:00 "Using AI to Stay Sharp"06:02 Streamlining Dashboards with AI8:48 "GPT for Quick Code Debugging"12:34 Guardrails Needed for Costly AI Mistakes15:27 AI for Repetitive Tasks18:35 Growing Business with AI Expertise21:20 AI's Impact on Younger Generation26:04 AI’s Impact on Future Workforce28:12 "Notion: Beyond Note-Taking"31:22 "Validate or Lose Job Security"32:25 Balancing Productivity and UniquenessKeywords:Generative AI, large language models, productivity, dumber, balance, knowledge work, NVIDIA conference, GTC, OpenAI, advanced AI models, Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
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I've been struggling with this one for years.
There's so many instances when I want to personally use generative AI in large language models to maybe help me complete a certain task faster, maybe to go into more depth.
But then I think, okay, yes, this is going to save me some time.
It's going to make me more productive.
But am I just going to get dumb over time, right?
the more I blindly hand off knowledge work to a large language model.
Right.
So it's something I'm excited to talk about today, kind of this dichotomy of, okay, how can we,
you know, still use the best technology that I think any of us have ever seen maybe
in our lifetime, yet still keep our brains sharp, right?
How can we find that balance of being productive, but not just getting dumber at the same time?
This is going to be a fun one.
I can't wait.
What's going on, y'all?
My name's Jordan Wilson and welcome to Everyday AI.
This is your daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter,
helping us all not just learn AI,
but how we can leverage it to grow our companies and our careers.
So it starts here with this very podcast.
I'm excited for our guest for today,
but it continues in our newsletter.
So if you haven't already,
please make sure to go to your EverydayAI.com.
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We're going to be recapping some of the most important points
and takeaways from this very conversation.
and laying it all out for you, right?
So you can actually take this info to grow your company and your career.
All right.
I'm excited for today's guests.
So please help me welcome to the show, bringing him on.
There we go.
We have Sumit Gupta, who is the lead, B.I.
Engineer at Notion.
Sumit, thank you so much for joining the Everyday AI show.
Yeah, no, thanks.
Thanks a lot, Jordan, for the welcoming morning.
All right.
I'm excited for this one.
Before we get into this topic, which I'm going to try it hard to shut up and let you talk a lot because I've got a lot of feelings on this one, Sumit.
But can you first tell us a little bit about what you do in your role at Notion?
I'm sure most people know Notion, but maybe just for those that don't as well, maybe if you could describe that as well.
Yeah, sounds good.
So I lead the BI Engineering at Notion.
I support sales and marketing team here.
If I've never heard of Notion, so Forbes like to call Notion as AI Everything app.
You can think of notion as a blank canvas and you can do pretty much everything.
You can do notes, you can do database automation, you can create your own GAN chart and project management.
Notion can pretty much do everything nowadays.
And I come from a place in India.
I was born in Bombay.
I've been in US for 10 years and have been using AI.
like in professional life for a couple of years now.
And I'm pretty excited to talk about the topic.
I'm actually like, as much as I'm excited,
I'm also like, it's a topic which is very close to me.
And I think it's the same with you also.
So let's get going.
All right.
Let's get to it.
Is using AI making us dumb?
Yes.
The short answer is yes, but allow me a couple of minutes to explain that part, right?
In my rule, right, at notion, I, day in day out,
my job is to write SQL query SQL query my job is to create dash puts in
reports and tablo and you know before AI like let's say if I if I wanted to create a
tablo report it would take me three to four weeks right generally there's a lot of
two or four involved with stakeholders and I would go and write a lot of
calculated fees that right I'll do a lot of join that I'll I'll I'll I'll iterate
over charts right but nowadays whenever I get a request from my
stakeholders I'm like okay I strategize of how the dashboard might look like what do I
need what calculate it feel I need and then I I feed that data into AI right I you
wouldn't believe I have premium subscription of pretty much anything every AI that you can
imagine GPT publicity cloud like you know all the AIs have their own strengths right
so in my case I would go to let's say Claude and be like you know what
create a calculated field for financial
financial year right and comparing financial year metrics and cloud will
split out a 200 old calculated fee right if I was to do that previously right if
I was to do that it would take me at least four to five hours to even you know
get it get it right with cloud I it doesn't even take four to five minutes it
probably takes like less than a minute right so it makes me productive 100% like
you know instead of spending two two days writing calculated field I'm
finalizing my calculated fields and you know my metrics in like two hours
But the counter side, counter of that is it's made me lazy.
Let's put it back away.
And when you're lazy, you're not thinking really hard.
I mean, when you're not thinking hard, you're dumb.
Right.
It's it's so true, right?
And you know, I'm curious, you know, see me through your personal experience because I, you know,
I remember the early days, you know, back in like 2020, right?
before chat GPT came out, there's all these, you know, essentially writing tools, right?
And I was a journalist. And so I was using this technology early on and I'm like, okay, this is good.
And then it started to get to a certain point for me, even before chat GPT came out that I'm like,
wait, I'm starting to turn off my brain in some instances, right? And, you know, you have to start
keeping that in check. You know, I'm curious, what was the point for you, right? When maybe the power of certain LLMs started to,
you know, really get really good.
and you're like, wait, do I have to like sit back and look at how I'm using these?
Like, did you have a certain point where you were like, whoa, I have to make sure I'm still using my brain?
Yeah, yeah.
I remember the time that you're talking about because I think before GPT came out,
there were like article relighter services, right?
Like copy AI and those kind of companies, award AI, et cetera.
And those were great.
But GPT came along and then you're like, wait a minute.
Is this real, right?
And as well as like a specific instance of when I felt this is like, you know, life changing, right?
When I was at Snowflake, I was tasked to build like a streamlet report and then I'm not a Python visit, right?
So I started using GPT to like debug my code part of my, part of my like trying to debug my code.
Because previously you would go on Stack workflow, you would research, you would spend a couple of hours, you know, and you'd try multiple different coding solutions.
to see if it's what's working.
And then with GPT,
I was able to do that in less than 30 minutes, right?
And this is like early to 2020, late 2022, right?
Where models were still not like great, right?
It was great at the time, but now when you think about it,
how Claude works, right, with the coding output, etc.
and with Coursary AI, etc.
In 2022, the fact that I did not need a mentor or a coding body to actually review my
code and get the code working, that was.
of mind-boggling moment for me.
So what's your advice?
You know, maybe for people who are struggling and, you know, I'll even say like one of my
personal examples, right?
I said, I'm a journalist.
You know, I do a lot of writing.
I write a daily newsletter, right?
And there's some instances where I use AI and then there's some instances where I don't.
Because at least I feel if I start handing off one of my, you know, most polished skills that
I've been getting paid for two decades to do, if I just keep handing that off, I'm going to
lose that that skill, right?
How can, how can, you know, business professionals out there,
Sumit, start to, how can they find that balance?
Yeah.
I think in my case, I'm not to a point where I'm handing my life off to AI yet.
And I don't think so I will ever do that because when you're in tech,
if you're not learning, if you're not critical thinking,
you'll be out of job and less than six months.
And I'm completely aware of that, right?
And to be honest, I only use AI for things that I am already great at or you know,
need some support.
I wouldn't go about and be like, oh, I'm an AI researcher, writer technique,
a writer research paper of 30 pages, right?
That's, that's BS.
That's not the best use of my time.
Even if I, even if AI could write it, that's not who I am.
That's not what I want to do.
So in short, I want to do.
I want AI to do the repetitive task that I generally used to do previously and in the area that I am already exported.
I'm an expert in Google search.
But nowadays, Cloud just launched web search, right?
Little to do that.
But before that, complexity, I would ask publicity to be like, you know what?
Like literally early last week, I've been looking to do a lot more speaking gigs this year.
I went to publicity.
I'm like, public complexity is a problem.
Go about and search like data conference.
or analytics conferences, which are still open for a speaker.
They have called for speakers, right?
And publicity gave me like 25 different links.
If I was to do that, right, it would take me a couple of hours, if not more, to even do that.
So things that I'm exported and which has a repetitive element to it, that's where AI shines.
Yeah, that's a great point.
Yeah, anything, yeah, with research, repetition, right, things that don't like, you know, yeah,
if I'm researching something manually and I have 30 tabs open.
And like I think maybe that process is making me dumber, right?
Not by skipping it is probably making me smarter, right?
Not getting stuck down all these rabbit holes.
But Samin, I'm wondering is, is there any downside, right?
Like specifically like cost, right?
Because sometimes, you know, as an example with vibe coding, right?
You know, because I think this is huge, right, when it comes to, you know, coding,
software development, everyone's just, you know, sometimes maybe turning off their brain too soon.
Is there a downside even to elements like that? Oh, I think, I think we lost your, your audio there,
there's to be there. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I think the white coding moment is here. I think a couple of
weeks back, YC, right, Y Combinator published a post where 90% of the YC back startups are,
you are white coding. Like, their apps completely based off AI coding, right?
I mean, that's great, but I think I have a couple of examples that I would want to talk about.
One of them is like I read a poster on X or Twitter as we used to call.
Someone wrote a code and you know they used AWS Access Key etc.
And then the backend wasn't very secure, right?
And then hackers were able to access back in and the founder saw like a million dollar bill.
Right.
Because when you're white coding you're not you're not thinking of back end.
You're like, oh yeah, the website looks.
pretty that website looks great you know I'm ready to go ready to get that funding
so that's one instance another instance is recently one of our non-technical
stakeholders your wipe code and you wrote a SQL query the SQL query with the
joins and everything else should have taken less than like a few dollars to
execute or execute on our platform like on Snowflake but it took over ten
thousand dollars because when you're querying like trillions of rows if you're not
careful if you're not efficient in writing a query the select star statement can cost you
thousands of dollars and that's what happened right so that's the downside of using AI without
really like when I think of AI I think of myself as a guardrail for AI right AI can do
what I ask them to do but it's my job to make sure there are garterles around it and make
sure that it's it's working but it's not costing me dollars right then then it should yeah
That's, yeah, that's a good point, right?
And so for those that aren't familiar, you know, vibe coding, you know, that's essentially
when either non-technical people or people who know how to code, right, instead of just going
in there and, you know, writing it by hand, they're just kind of passing it off to, you know,
maybe a tool like cursor or something like that.
But if you're using that an API, right, and you're paying the usage, yeah, those bills can skyrocket,
right?
You know, I'm curious, Sumit, is there anything that you're doing, you know,
actively, you know, to ensure that you're still staying sharp, right?
That you're not getting dumber, right?
I think this is something I'm asking you, right?
Because I need to find these things myself because I sometimes find myself over reliant
on large language models, right?
What are you doing in your day-to-day to make sure that you don't hand off too much
and, you know, finding that balance?
Yeah, I think my way of think, as I alluded to it, right,
my way of thinking of best use case of AI is a repetitive task.
Anything let's say and as I mentioned like especially in my case right when I'm
SQL querying or when I'm writing or building tabro dashboard the first
iteration is always mine right I'll go ahead and build the dashboards right
because I don't want to lose that touch but once that first iteration is done
generally you know after a point of time you need you are like
the way you have created writers block engineers and you know data visualizers like me
can have that block too so I'm like okay what do I do next what how can I improve that's
why AI comes in picture because think of AI what's LLM what's being
fed like with a million visualization right and they know like you know what to look
what's good what's great what's bad right so you can take this suggestion and
that's what I do I take this suggestion I'm like okay how do I improve this chart
right how do I improve this query can I make this query more efficient right
And that, that, I have that cutoff, right?
Without that cutoff, I would be even more dumber.
I mean, I know I keep using dumber as a, very loosely, but not that I'm dumb, like, I work for notion, right?
I mean, obviously we are all smart here.
But the fact that that cutoff is really important for me, I am hoping and hoping and playing that that cutoff does not get lower,
and lower as the day's fire and it should ideally get higher and higher.
And that is why I wanted to talk about this topic because it's an emotional topic for me itself.
It's an inflection point where I'm like, I don't want to get this cut off lower.
I want to keep a high bar of, you know, making sure that I stay on top of my feet.
I critically think and, you know, I'd be in the job.
The market is already rough.
You don't want to make it easy for folks to not hire you.
Yeah.
And, you know, now's a good time to point out, you know, live stream audience.
if you do have any questions for Sumit,
make sure to get them in now.
You know, there was a recent study.
We covered this one in our newsletter.
It was for Microsoft.
It was a great, great study.
It was called the impact of generative AI on critical thinking.
And it found that for knowledge recall,
72% of participants reported using much less effort or less effort
compared to not using Gen AI.
So, Samit, like, I think, right,
and, you know, maybe this isn't a stretch, right?
but I think of the brain as a muscle, right?
The more you use it, the smarter you get.
The less you use it, the more you turn it off, right?
The dumber you get.
And, you know, we, we hear constantly about how, you know, these LLMs and the benchmarks
and, you know, these pseudo IQ tests and, you know, like it's getting to the point
when, you know, as we quote unquote approach AGI or ASI or whatever you want to say, right,
that any large language model is going to know more than any human.
So like, how should we be addressing this, right?
Because part of me is like, okay, maybe it's good to just give more and more to these large language models because they're smarter and they know it and I don't, right?
Versus, okay, well, I'm not then developing new skills.
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Yeah.
So that's exactly where you should have your own.
own like you know cutoffs or you know where baseline of when you bring AI in your life
you cannot be bringing AI in your life for everything I mean you might be tempted to
right but it's like the way I think of it as like you're getting short-term results for
long-term losses right that's how that's how I view AI if I start using AI for everything in
my life let's say if you're a student right I think I saw a post like last week uh from a
Berkeley professor and he's been teaching like data
database for like 10 years.
And he noticed that people have stopped asking a lot of questions in the classes now,
like students.
But then he also realized that he's like, oh, maybe I'm, I've just become so great that
students don't have any questions.
But then during tests, midterms, the average score was the lowest it has been in last
10 years.
Because students actually without even trying to understand or learn, they're using AI to
you know right assignments you know but then when you are when you have a midterms right
in the class you don't have access to let's a gpd you are not going to recall what was thought
because you just weren't focusing or your you just did not you did not stretch your muscle enough
to like in your assignments to retain that or retain or recall that information so that's a very
good use case of where AI is actually impacting you know even younger generation because at
For us, like we come from place where we still have built that muscle, right?
Like you know, when we were growing up, right, we had to do it because GPT did not exist.
Like I wrote a book, right?
The Tablo Workshop, it took me a year and a half to write that book.
Nowadays, if I was to do the same thing again, it would take me less than three months because I know for a fact, a lot of things would be
GPT driven.
So the fact that, you know, having that guardrail, having that cut off for when to use AI and when not to use,
AI is going to be as critical as the fact that your prompts are supposed to be great.
Yeah.
I think you bring up a lot of good points there.
And I'm sure there's going to be, you know, many more of some of those types of stats, right?
They just show, hey, you know, scores across the board on certain standardized testing are probably
going to continue to go down, especially when you can't use AI, right?
Because I think that people are maybe leaning a little too heavily on it.
So even for myself, right, I think the productivity piece maybe has that downside, right?
Because I've never felt so productive in my life.
I've never felt that I've learned so much in my life, right, since AI came out.
You know, you mentioned, you know, being able to use something like a, you know, quick search tool, perplexity, deep research,
GROC, deep research, open AI, deep research.
So I feel I'm able to bring in all this knowledge.
But then I just feel I forget it.
Right?
Like, do you ever find yourself, yes, now I'm more productive and more knowledgeable,
but I'm still not retaining anything.
Like, do you ever feel that way?
Yeah, I can give a specific example.
I think one of the, everyone who's listening in will understand.
So when you type something in Google, let's say, right?
And if you make a mistake, right, and then Google says, did you mean, let's say, a word,
X, Y, Z, right?
And you don't you don't you don't even try to make correct it you just click on that like the correct spelling right of that word and you know you Google searches for you imagine like your ability to recall like you when you're typing you almost know that the spelling is going to be wrong but you hope that Google's going to correct you right that happens far too often right and then I would do your question again right so I have started noticing that when I used to write
SQL query myself, I would know how to write case when statement.
I would know how to write, let's say,
special function in SQL.
But now if I don't have GPD, I have to like, okay,
how do I write even case statement?
Because case statement can be complicated.
So when that infection point comes in, I'm like,
I don't think so this is working for me.
Yeah, AI is making product.
But then if the fact that I can't retain information anymore,
I am becoming more of an AI than a new one.
Yeah. That's a good point.
You know, as, as weird as this sounds, I, like, I find in, and this is for me why this topic really does hit home.
Like, I'm not exaggerating. I'll look up things on, you know, chat GPT search, perplexity, you know, Google search, whatever on a certain topic that I'm trying to learn.
And in so many cases, and I kid you not, in so many cases, a lot of the first sources are myself, right?
And that, and like in that for, you know, because I covered something six months ago or I had a guest on or I did a tutorial, right? And for me, that's that it, it almost hurts because I'm like, wait, I'm learning from myself and I forgot this. And this was three months ago, six months ago. How did I forget this? Right. Is, like, is that going to become, do you think more and more common just our ability to retain information for a longer period, right? Like I find myself struggling with this often. Yeah. That's.
going to happen if we if we don't see as I mentioned with our like you know pre let's
say 90s born folks right or pre 80s or 90s born at least in our case we grew up with that
critical thinking ability right we were supposed to do our own job right so that's why like we
both like we both are able to talk about AI and how it's making us number right talking about
cutoffs and guardrails for folks young
with then us, like if you have 15 or 16 right now, you have like the whole computer in your
palms, right? And you are like using AI for everything in your life, right? So the fact that you do not
go through that muscle-bending exercise for like a decade or two, right? You don't have that
retain, ability to recall or retain that much. Your muscles not built, your brain muscles just
not bent but I hope that as much as AI is a boom right it's it's helping folks it does not
turn into a course in five to 10 years where you know there's let's say now let's
there's 10% of world population who can get let's say job in IT because of you know their
critical thinking ability but in 10 years I hope there's not a that number still stays at
10 or above not goes down to let's say one or two percentage because the top
one or two percentage who know how to use AI in the job are going to be millionaires,
right, are going to be in the market, in the in the demand for like years to come.
But that top one to two persons are not going to run the world.
You need more people, you need critical thinking ability, you need people who can retain
and recall and you know, use AI to like as an assistant, not replace a real human with the
AI is your assistant, not like your personal full-fledged human who can do everything that you can imagine.
It should be complimentary.
It should be complimentary.
AI should always be complimentary to you, not the other way around.
Yeah.
So, you know, anyone that's listened to this show, like you all know, I hate when, you know,
people come on here and pitch their products.
But, you know, Michelle is asking, and like I feel to me, you have to take this one because, you know,
asking, tell us more about Notion.
Can it help with this retention?
Like I got to give you that one because it's a softball because it's great for that.
No, 100%.
So if you've never heard of Notion, I highly recommend you.
We have a free trial.
I don't like I'm not representing the representing notion here, right?
It's all personal opinion.
But go ahead, go to notion.com, sign up for a free trial.
You would be surprised with what notion can do for you, right?
Obviously, it's a note-taking app, but Notion now also has like Assistant AI,
which basically if you connect your let's say Slack,
you connect your other tools, right?
And if you ask question, it's like a knowledge AI now
where it will search through your post messages on Slack.
If you were to use motion in your professional setting,
it will search through your docs and give you like relevant information.
GPD works great, but it does not have access to your personal information,
right, or you know your company information or knowledge based on the company.
And that's where notion AI shines.
the fact that you can, I have had so many instances with notion A
where I'm like, hmm, did someone talk about,
let's say a metric, right?
Because I've been at notion for a year.
So there have been metrics that have been,
the company has been using for multiple years, right?
But okay, when was the first time someone mentioned,
let's say, month over month retention for product users?
So notion here actually goes to the whole slack history that we have
and gives me like exact,
link and connoissement context of okay this is when let's say director of demand gen was talking about this right
so the fact that notion AI does that for you is amazing right obviously that's one of the one of the features of notion here
there's the fact that you can create notes you can create automations you can I if you are new to notion
AI I would highly recommend you just Google notion templates people have the whole brain on notion there's
the whole concept, Jordan, you would know like there's a whole concept of like second brain on notion.
Just Google that term, second brain on notion, and you would be amazed with what people can create.
Yeah, yeah. I do agree. And I was like, hey, perfect, perfect chance there to answer a question super directly.
But, you know, this one might be controversial. So Sandra, thanks for this.
You know, she's asking, could, could this be the end of the knowledge worker, right?
You know, for decades, we've gotten jobs, we've gotten promoted, right?
Companies have grown into unicorns, trillion-dollar companies based on what it's people know.
Samit, could this, could we be not now, right, but could we be seeing the end of the knowledge worker anytime soon?
So I know folks talk about, talk a lot about, oh, is AI going to take my job or, you know, is AI going to replace me?
I think that's partially true for jobs which has a lot of repetitive aspect to it.
Right.
And I believe knowledge workers fall in that category.
But counter argument to that is, so if you're a knowledge worker and if it,
if it let's say you were doing, let's say 10 tasks a week, right?
With AI, if you upgrade yourself, if you know how to use AI to complement your job,
instead of doing 10 jobs, if you're doing 40 jobs now, because AI,
right yes yeah i can hallucinate we all know that right uh i is not perfect it like any any
any time i see an a i output for a metric or something i generally go about and you know verify that
myself right and as a knowledge worker if your job wouldn't be now to research a lot but to fact
but to validate what the research is saying so instead of doing 10 tasks if you upgrade yourself
to do let's say 30 tasks 40 tasks you're always going to be in the demand but if you are one of those
lazy workers where you know you're still stuck at 10 and you ask AI to do 90% of your job and you know let's say you you do a report for
c.O of your company and you know the cpio uses that number in in a board deck and that number is
absolutely weird and it does not make sense you're not going to be your job because your job is to validate
and verify and obviously get that info but if you don't validate and verify you're going to be out of job and that's that's not a good thing
I think that's a great, a great take there. Yeah, yeah. I'll have to save my, my hot takes on that one for another day.
But so we've covered a ton in today's episode, you know, from some of your personal examples and how, you know, sometimes using AI might just be more expensive. It might be better, right? It might be making us dumber in the end.
But, you know, as we wrap up, what's your one most important takeaway for business leaders out there grappling with that same thing?
you know, feeling yeah, I'm becoming more productive,
but I might becoming a little dumber.
What's your best takeaway for everyone?
Yeah, don't change the hype.
I think the hype right now is MCP and model context protocol
and white coding, right?
Don't chase it.
Think of your specific use cases, right?
Of how, think of all the repetitive tasks
that your company has or you are doing.
And think of can AI help me here?
Right. Don't go chasing. Oh, can AI create reels for me with one click? Yes, and it can, but is it going to add value to your audience? Probably not. Right. So think of repetitive tasks where you know, you can use AI as a compliment, but don't think of replacing AI as your, you know, full fledged assistant yet. And the way I like to believe is like, this is the worst AI will ever be. Right.
That's how I like to think.
In two years ago, Cloud, Cloud AI, the coding output wasn't like, great.
Now, Cloud AI can build your website in less than two minutes, right?
Like a full flat gaming, gaming thing with Unity, etc.
So to business leader, as I mentioned, think of all the repetitive tasks that you can automate.
Use natm, use make.com, right?
Automate your workflow.
But don't chase the cloud and don't chase those click bait titles.
You can go on YouTube and you can find people talking about how AI replaced my, how AI helped me structure my life.
That's great.
But those are just for recording purposes, you go talk to them.
That's not a real use case.
Love it.
I think some great takeaways and some wise words for those of us out there, you know, struggling to walk that tight rope between, you know, productivity, but still retain.
all of that knowledge that makes a special unique human.
So, Samit, thank you so much for sharing your time and talents with the Everyday AI show.
We really appreciate your time.
Yeah, thanks a lot, gentlemen.
Thanks.
Thank you.
All right, everyone.
There was a lot of great info there.
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