1 00:00:00,840 --> 00:00:02,920 Speaker 1: If you've ever looked at your to do list and 2 00:00:03,000 --> 00:00:06,720 Speaker 1: thought everything feels urgent and I don't even know where 3 00:00:06,760 --> 00:00:11,000 Speaker 1: to start, then this episode will be really helpful for you. 4 00:00:11,760 --> 00:00:15,240 Speaker 1: That feeling of overwhelm that I'm sure we're all familiar 5 00:00:15,280 --> 00:00:18,400 Speaker 1: with comes from having too much to do all at once, 6 00:00:18,720 --> 00:00:22,160 Speaker 1: with no clear way to decide what actually matters today. 7 00:00:23,079 --> 00:00:26,480 Speaker 1: And the problem isn't that you're bad at prioritizing. It's 8 00:00:26,520 --> 00:00:31,720 Speaker 1: that modern work throws meetings, emails, projects, and personal commitments 9 00:00:31,760 --> 00:00:35,600 Speaker 1: at you simultaneously, and your brain isn't built to hold 10 00:00:35,680 --> 00:00:38,200 Speaker 1: all of that in a calm and chilled out manner. 11 00:00:38,840 --> 00:00:40,680 Speaker 1: So in this episode, Neil and I are going to 12 00:00:40,680 --> 00:00:43,720 Speaker 1: talk through practical ways to use AI to help you 13 00:00:43,840 --> 00:00:48,480 Speaker 1: prioritize when you're weak is feeling out of control. We 14 00:00:48,560 --> 00:00:51,120 Speaker 1: are going to cover how to get AI to help 15 00:00:51,159 --> 00:00:57,480 Speaker 1: separate urgent from important, break big heavy work into manageable chunks, 16 00:00:57,960 --> 00:01:00,920 Speaker 1: and learn how to safely connect AI to your email 17 00:01:00,960 --> 00:01:04,800 Speaker 1: and calendar so that it can identify priorities, draft replies, 18 00:01:04,800 --> 00:01:07,640 Speaker 1: and help you plan your week. By the end, you 19 00:01:07,720 --> 00:01:10,640 Speaker 1: are going to have a much more effective way to 20 00:01:10,720 --> 00:01:20,600 Speaker 1: decide what deserves your energy and what can wait. Welcome 21 00:01:20,640 --> 00:01:25,039 Speaker 1: to how IAI with me Doctor Amantha Imba, and Neo Applin, 22 00:01:25,240 --> 00:01:29,440 Speaker 1: head of Inventium AI. Each episode we share one practical 23 00:01:29,480 --> 00:01:32,640 Speaker 1: way to use AI better at work and in life. 24 00:01:33,080 --> 00:01:36,160 Speaker 1: No fluff, no dech jargon, just things you can use 25 00:01:36,160 --> 00:01:39,920 Speaker 1: straight away. So today we're talking about how to help 26 00:01:40,000 --> 00:01:45,600 Speaker 1: AI to get you to prioritize when everything feels urgent 27 00:01:45,840 --> 00:01:49,120 Speaker 1: and nia. I know you and I have weeks where 28 00:01:49,680 --> 00:01:52,560 Speaker 1: they can just be quite overwhelming with the amount of 29 00:01:52,640 --> 00:01:56,360 Speaker 1: work that we've got on, particularly in the AI space. Now, 30 00:01:56,400 --> 00:01:59,960 Speaker 1: I'm going to share a couple of my workflows because 31 00:02:00,160 --> 00:02:02,680 Speaker 1: I am not a copilot user, which means that my 32 00:02:02,760 --> 00:02:08,960 Speaker 1: AI is not automatically connected into my calendar. But I 33 00:02:09,000 --> 00:02:11,000 Speaker 1: know that you've got some different methods because you're more 34 00:02:11,040 --> 00:02:14,280 Speaker 1: copilot than me. So should we get into it. Yep. 35 00:02:14,400 --> 00:02:16,760 Speaker 2: But also, if you're not in copilot, you can use 36 00:02:16,880 --> 00:02:19,880 Speaker 2: other applications like Claude and Gemini and whatever, so you're 37 00:02:19,880 --> 00:02:22,120 Speaker 2: not left out if you're not copilot, So go for it. 38 00:02:23,000 --> 00:02:25,000 Speaker 1: Okay. So here's what I typically do at the start 39 00:02:25,000 --> 00:02:28,360 Speaker 1: of the week and I realize, oh, I'm feeling overwhelmed. 40 00:02:28,440 --> 00:02:31,160 Speaker 1: What am I going to do? Is I will work 41 00:02:31,200 --> 00:02:34,919 Speaker 1: with my AI, and I will do a brain dump 42 00:02:34,960 --> 00:02:38,799 Speaker 1: of everything that is on my mind, like every single task, 43 00:02:38,880 --> 00:02:43,960 Speaker 1: whether it be big, deep work chunks or smaller shallow 44 00:02:44,000 --> 00:02:49,720 Speaker 1: work chunks. Then I will ask the AI to well 45 00:02:49,760 --> 00:02:52,200 Speaker 1: some of the context that will know because it knows 46 00:02:52,240 --> 00:02:54,600 Speaker 1: me quite well. But I will still prompt it to 47 00:02:55,160 --> 00:03:01,080 Speaker 1: interview me to try to break apart what is urgent important, 48 00:03:01,720 --> 00:03:05,200 Speaker 1: what is important not urgent and urgent and not you know, 49 00:03:05,280 --> 00:03:09,520 Speaker 1: but yeah, so kind of working in those those you know, 50 00:03:09,600 --> 00:03:16,800 Speaker 1: typical time management task management quadrants. Then I will get 51 00:03:16,960 --> 00:03:18,400 Speaker 1: a bit of a list, so a bit of a 52 00:03:18,400 --> 00:03:22,080 Speaker 1: priority list from AI. Sometimes I will ask it to 53 00:03:22,760 --> 00:03:25,720 Speaker 1: ask me questions to break down how long I think 54 00:03:25,800 --> 00:03:29,440 Speaker 1: each task will take, because then that's important for time boxing, 55 00:03:29,480 --> 00:03:32,560 Speaker 1: because sometimes you know, everything can feel overwhelming because you 56 00:03:32,680 --> 00:03:35,960 Speaker 1: just in your mind overestimate how much time everything is 57 00:03:36,000 --> 00:03:39,720 Speaker 1: going to take. And then another thing that I'll do 58 00:03:40,160 --> 00:03:44,800 Speaker 1: is I will ask it to ask me questions to 59 00:03:44,880 --> 00:03:49,040 Speaker 1: identify which task is causing me the most stress, because 60 00:03:49,040 --> 00:03:51,680 Speaker 1: you know how sometimes you've just got a shopping list 61 00:03:51,720 --> 00:03:54,120 Speaker 1: of things that need to get done during the week, 62 00:03:54,560 --> 00:03:57,120 Speaker 1: but often there's just one that's causing a lot of stress. 63 00:03:57,120 --> 00:03:59,120 Speaker 1: Have you had that experience before? Yeah? 64 00:03:59,160 --> 00:04:02,120 Speaker 2: Absolutely, And sometimes you can't put your finger on it. 65 00:04:02,160 --> 00:04:04,080 Speaker 2: You just know I feel stressed, but you don't know 66 00:04:04,080 --> 00:04:04,680 Speaker 2: which one. 67 00:04:05,000 --> 00:04:07,560 Speaker 1: Yeah. So I find that AI is quite helpful in 68 00:04:07,640 --> 00:04:10,840 Speaker 1: asking me questions to just unpack that, and often I 69 00:04:10,880 --> 00:04:14,440 Speaker 1: will prioritize for Monday the task that is causing me 70 00:04:14,480 --> 00:04:17,680 Speaker 1: the most stressed, because once I get that done, then 71 00:04:18,080 --> 00:04:23,520 Speaker 1: my stress levels automatically decline. I sometimes then get more 72 00:04:23,560 --> 00:04:27,240 Speaker 1: micro and I'll get it to break the list up 73 00:04:27,360 --> 00:04:30,160 Speaker 1: into a task list or a to do list, if 74 00:04:30,200 --> 00:04:32,599 Speaker 1: you like, splitting it up into deep versus shallow work 75 00:04:32,680 --> 00:04:36,080 Speaker 1: tasks for every day of the week Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. 76 00:04:36,600 --> 00:04:38,960 Speaker 1: At Inventium, we do Gift of the Fifth, so a 77 00:04:38,960 --> 00:04:40,840 Speaker 1: lot of us don't work on Friday if we've got 78 00:04:40,839 --> 00:04:44,800 Speaker 1: all our work done. So it's often a four day list. 79 00:04:45,080 --> 00:04:50,920 Speaker 1: And that I find that little process, which takes all 80 00:04:50,960 --> 00:04:55,080 Speaker 1: of five minutes chatting with the AI is I find 81 00:04:55,200 --> 00:04:58,920 Speaker 1: a really good flow to get the AI to help 82 00:04:58,960 --> 00:05:02,960 Speaker 1: me prioritize. Do you do anything similar to that? Because 83 00:05:02,960 --> 00:05:05,320 Speaker 1: I do have one other flow that I want to share, 84 00:05:05,360 --> 00:05:07,480 Speaker 1: But first you have you done anything like that? Neo? 85 00:05:08,040 --> 00:05:10,599 Speaker 2: I have I think that my days are a little 86 00:05:10,600 --> 00:05:14,000 Speaker 2: bit different to yours. Often I've got larger chunks of time, 87 00:05:14,120 --> 00:05:18,000 Speaker 2: whereas you're If you ever seen Amantha's calendar, everyone, it 88 00:05:18,120 --> 00:05:21,920 Speaker 2: is a thing to behold. It's like someone sprinkled hundreds 89 00:05:21,960 --> 00:05:24,200 Speaker 2: and thousands on the calendar because they are all different colors, 90 00:05:24,480 --> 00:05:28,240 Speaker 2: and there are no gaps, because everything is scheduled within 91 00:05:28,279 --> 00:05:30,960 Speaker 2: an inch of its life. So Amantha needs this kind 92 00:05:30,960 --> 00:05:33,680 Speaker 2: of productivity, whereas for me, often I've got blocks of 93 00:05:33,720 --> 00:05:37,440 Speaker 2: half a day, or some a day delivery, or a 94 00:05:37,480 --> 00:05:40,080 Speaker 2: few hours here and there, so my day is not 95 00:05:40,200 --> 00:05:44,200 Speaker 2: as tightly scheduled as Amantha's. However, I can help anyone 96 00:05:44,560 --> 00:05:47,440 Speaker 2: whether their diary looks more like mine or more like yours. 97 00:05:48,520 --> 00:05:50,160 Speaker 2: But in order for it to be useful, it really 98 00:05:50,200 --> 00:05:52,320 Speaker 2: needs to know about you. It needs to know about 99 00:05:52,480 --> 00:05:54,359 Speaker 2: the task you're working on, the projects you're working on, 100 00:05:54,400 --> 00:05:58,080 Speaker 2: and things like that. So the first step is how 101 00:05:58,120 --> 00:06:01,120 Speaker 2: do you help give that context to your AI. Now 102 00:06:01,160 --> 00:06:02,760 Speaker 2: I know that one of the things you do is 103 00:06:02,800 --> 00:06:05,839 Speaker 2: you work with Claude, and you work with projects a lot, 104 00:06:06,040 --> 00:06:09,080 Speaker 2: and so with projects for those of you who aren't 105 00:06:09,120 --> 00:06:11,720 Speaker 2: in Claude, it's a bit like a GPT it's a 106 00:06:11,720 --> 00:06:14,919 Speaker 2: little bit like a notebook if you're in copilot land, 107 00:06:15,720 --> 00:06:18,599 Speaker 2: where it's got your documents, your background, your knowledge, and 108 00:06:18,640 --> 00:06:20,280 Speaker 2: so every time you up and up a new chat thread, 109 00:06:20,360 --> 00:06:22,960 Speaker 2: it already knows all those things. And so having that 110 00:06:23,000 --> 00:06:25,400 Speaker 2: background is great because you can say, here's my week 111 00:06:25,440 --> 00:06:27,279 Speaker 2: that I'm really worried about, or here's these projects and 112 00:06:27,440 --> 00:06:29,760 Speaker 2: I'm worried about. It knows loosely. We try to achieve 113 00:06:29,760 --> 00:06:32,560 Speaker 2: it knows loosely about these projects and things like that. Heck, 114 00:06:32,640 --> 00:06:34,839 Speaker 2: I used to be a project manager, so this have 115 00:06:34,920 --> 00:06:38,840 Speaker 2: a project in claude, or have a notebook in copilot 116 00:06:39,040 --> 00:06:42,120 Speaker 2: for each of the projects you're working on. That way 117 00:06:42,160 --> 00:06:44,159 Speaker 2: you don't have to say it everything about all your job. 118 00:06:44,279 --> 00:06:46,800 Speaker 2: It's just about that project you're working on. So there 119 00:06:46,839 --> 00:06:50,520 Speaker 2: we go. Background is really important. The next is for 120 00:06:50,560 --> 00:06:53,720 Speaker 2: me at least, sometimes I have this massive boulder and 121 00:06:53,760 --> 00:06:55,880 Speaker 2: I don't really know how I'm going to chunk this 122 00:06:55,960 --> 00:06:59,920 Speaker 2: boulder down. So this is where you're questioning. Idea is brilliant. 123 00:07:00,040 --> 00:07:02,400 Speaker 2: So you say, I've got this thing maybe stressing me. 124 00:07:03,240 --> 00:07:05,839 Speaker 2: How do I make this something that I can actually do? 125 00:07:06,320 --> 00:07:08,240 Speaker 2: And AI is great at being able to break it 126 00:07:08,279 --> 00:07:11,120 Speaker 2: down into smaller chunks that you can actually understand what 127 00:07:11,120 --> 00:07:12,920 Speaker 2: you're trying to achieve, who you need to pull in, 128 00:07:12,960 --> 00:07:15,720 Speaker 2: and things like that. So another massive tip which is 129 00:07:15,920 --> 00:07:18,480 Speaker 2: get AI to help you to make sense of these 130 00:07:18,520 --> 00:07:20,960 Speaker 2: things so you can then schedule it in calendar and 131 00:07:21,000 --> 00:07:22,360 Speaker 2: all of those kind of things. 132 00:07:23,360 --> 00:07:28,280 Speaker 1: One thing that I've had success with is, and again 133 00:07:28,320 --> 00:07:30,320 Speaker 1: this is good if your AI is not talking to 134 00:07:30,360 --> 00:07:34,400 Speaker 1: your calendar, is pasting in a screenshot of your calendar 135 00:07:34,600 --> 00:07:40,280 Speaker 1: for the week and asking your AI to help you 136 00:07:40,360 --> 00:07:43,560 Speaker 1: prioritize or potentially to give you insight into how you're 137 00:07:43,680 --> 00:07:47,920 Speaker 1: organizing my diary. So I've occasionally done this, and I 138 00:07:47,960 --> 00:07:50,600 Speaker 1: actually did this before we started recording because I was 139 00:07:50,720 --> 00:07:54,640 Speaker 1: curious as to what would come out, and my AI 140 00:07:54,760 --> 00:07:57,720 Speaker 1: knows me, but it's not connected into my calendar. So 141 00:07:58,280 --> 00:08:01,920 Speaker 1: it was actually pretty good at recognizing what was non negotiable, 142 00:08:01,960 --> 00:08:05,920 Speaker 1: like some of my external meetings, sales meetings, and also 143 00:08:06,000 --> 00:08:12,360 Speaker 1: anything to do with Frankie a daughter, and it was 144 00:08:12,920 --> 00:08:15,320 Speaker 1: it was good at identifying where all my deep work 145 00:08:15,480 --> 00:08:19,640 Speaker 1: was time boxed, but it was interesting and it said 146 00:08:19,640 --> 00:08:23,360 Speaker 1: that I had too much context switching with my deep work. 147 00:08:23,400 --> 00:08:26,200 Speaker 1: I had too many deep work tasks scheduled, and some 148 00:08:26,240 --> 00:08:28,680 Speaker 1: of them I'd only given half an hour or two, 149 00:08:28,840 --> 00:08:34,599 Speaker 1: so it had, you know, I think pretty cleverly suggested 150 00:08:34,720 --> 00:08:37,680 Speaker 1: that I extend those deep work blocks out and try 151 00:08:37,720 --> 00:08:39,480 Speaker 1: to be a bit more single minded with what I 152 00:08:39,520 --> 00:08:42,120 Speaker 1: was achieving each day. So that is a fun little 153 00:08:42,120 --> 00:08:45,800 Speaker 1: exercise to do with your AI if you're wanting to 154 00:08:45,800 --> 00:08:50,800 Speaker 1: get maybe some coaching around how you're currently organizing your diary. 155 00:08:51,760 --> 00:08:55,800 Speaker 1: But tell me, neo, how can people who have set 156 00:08:55,880 --> 00:09:00,360 Speaker 1: up connections either within the Microsoft environment using cope pilot 157 00:09:00,360 --> 00:09:04,080 Speaker 1: an outlook to play together, or they've connected in chat, 158 00:09:04,120 --> 00:09:07,720 Speaker 1: GPT or claude, or they're in the Google ecosystem where 159 00:09:07,960 --> 00:09:11,840 Speaker 1: everything can see everything else, what is the best way 160 00:09:11,880 --> 00:09:14,679 Speaker 1: that we can use our AI to help us prioritize 161 00:09:14,679 --> 00:09:15,200 Speaker 1: for the week. 162 00:09:15,960 --> 00:09:18,880 Speaker 2: You use AI as your productivity assistant, so you're using 163 00:09:18,920 --> 00:09:22,000 Speaker 2: it like you would if you had a project admin 164 00:09:22,760 --> 00:09:24,840 Speaker 2: to be able to help you with those projects. So 165 00:09:25,120 --> 00:09:29,240 Speaker 2: are we connecting two things? If you can email and calendar, 166 00:09:29,600 --> 00:09:32,040 Speaker 2: and these are really important things to connect in because 167 00:09:32,080 --> 00:09:35,520 Speaker 2: often we have tasks that relate to many, many, many 168 00:09:35,600 --> 00:09:38,760 Speaker 2: emails that we've been given. So connect the two of them. Now, 169 00:09:38,760 --> 00:09:41,160 Speaker 2: how do you connect them Each of the different tools 170 00:09:41,160 --> 00:09:43,960 Speaker 2: have their own different ways to connect in Now, Microsoft, 171 00:09:44,040 --> 00:09:47,680 Speaker 2: within the Copilot and ecosystem, if you're in Microsoft Office three, six, five, 172 00:09:47,800 --> 00:09:51,120 Speaker 2: or then you can get Copilot to do the connection 173 00:09:51,200 --> 00:09:53,880 Speaker 2: into your mail and calendar just natively by clicking on 174 00:09:53,920 --> 00:09:56,440 Speaker 2: the wet work tab. So that's great. You can do 175 00:09:56,440 --> 00:09:58,720 Speaker 2: those kind of things. Google, same kind of thing. Within 176 00:09:58,720 --> 00:10:01,160 Speaker 2: the Google workspace. You can be plugged in with those 177 00:10:01,160 --> 00:10:05,080 Speaker 2: things with CHURCHBT and Claude. There are things called connectors, 178 00:10:05,440 --> 00:10:08,280 Speaker 2: and so you need to go to often there's a 179 00:10:08,280 --> 00:10:11,040 Speaker 2: plus button or in the settings there's connectors, and then 180 00:10:11,080 --> 00:10:16,400 Speaker 2: you can add connectors for say Gmail or for your 181 00:10:17,080 --> 00:10:20,000 Speaker 2: Google Calendar and things like that. So these are the 182 00:10:20,040 --> 00:10:21,880 Speaker 2: things to be able to plug in. We'll just talking 183 00:10:21,920 --> 00:10:25,280 Speaker 2: a moment about your calendar, so you can bring these 184 00:10:25,400 --> 00:10:28,040 Speaker 2: calendars your emails in and then you can have a 185 00:10:28,040 --> 00:10:31,480 Speaker 2: conversation about your day, your diary. So instead of it 186 00:10:31,600 --> 00:10:33,680 Speaker 2: having a look at a picture like Amantha is given 187 00:10:33,720 --> 00:10:36,840 Speaker 2: it and maybe color coded slices whatnot, if you just 188 00:10:36,880 --> 00:10:39,880 Speaker 2: give the same kind of feedback Thatamantha had, but it's 189 00:10:39,920 --> 00:10:42,600 Speaker 2: giving it on effective facts rather than reading a picture 190 00:10:43,520 --> 00:10:45,680 Speaker 2: and things like that. The other thing is bring in 191 00:10:45,679 --> 00:10:48,480 Speaker 2: your email. So I've got a meeting on Thursday? How 192 00:10:48,520 --> 00:10:51,240 Speaker 2: do I prepare for this? Is there other things I 193 00:10:51,280 --> 00:10:54,040 Speaker 2: need to do for this? I've got a deep work 194 00:10:54,080 --> 00:10:56,480 Speaker 2: session in here? How do I best prioritize the deep 195 00:10:56,480 --> 00:10:58,240 Speaker 2: work session? And be able to read the agenda or 196 00:10:58,280 --> 00:11:00,920 Speaker 2: the tasks or the notes in your deep agenda and 197 00:11:01,000 --> 00:11:02,880 Speaker 2: be able to say check emails and things like that, 198 00:11:02,880 --> 00:11:06,480 Speaker 2: so it'll help you along the way. So really important 199 00:11:06,480 --> 00:11:08,640 Speaker 2: to be able to get your email and your calendar 200 00:11:08,880 --> 00:11:11,240 Speaker 2: with AI and then work as work with it as 201 00:11:11,280 --> 00:11:14,679 Speaker 2: that assistant. As I said, there's also another superpower that 202 00:11:14,720 --> 00:11:18,960 Speaker 2: particularly chatpt and Claude have, which is if you're in 203 00:11:19,120 --> 00:11:22,120 Speaker 2: a system like say Monday dot Com or a SANA 204 00:11:22,280 --> 00:11:25,800 Speaker 2: or things like that, and you're using these web applications 205 00:11:25,920 --> 00:11:29,200 Speaker 2: for managing your tasks, you can bring those in as well, 206 00:11:29,559 --> 00:11:33,199 Speaker 2: because sometimes it's not just about calendar management. Sometimes it's 207 00:11:33,240 --> 00:11:36,400 Speaker 2: about my to do list or how I need to 208 00:11:36,440 --> 00:11:39,760 Speaker 2: contribute to other people's tasks and things like that, So 209 00:11:39,880 --> 00:11:43,079 Speaker 2: you can bring those into your AI and then get 210 00:11:43,080 --> 00:11:45,319 Speaker 2: your AI to tell you about your tasks or what's 211 00:11:45,400 --> 00:11:47,680 Speaker 2: do when they're due? And do I have a task 212 00:11:47,920 --> 00:11:50,280 Speaker 2: that maybe I don't have scheduled in my calendar, so 213 00:11:50,320 --> 00:11:54,320 Speaker 2: it's a way to cross reference against those two. So again, 214 00:11:54,679 --> 00:11:57,480 Speaker 2: productivity assistant to be able to review all the things 215 00:11:57,559 --> 00:12:00,320 Speaker 2: on your plate, help you chunk them down and be 216 00:12:00,360 --> 00:12:01,800 Speaker 2: able to plan them accordingly. 217 00:12:03,200 --> 00:12:05,520 Speaker 1: Awesome. So hopefully, if you have been listening, and maybe 218 00:12:05,520 --> 00:12:08,040 Speaker 1: you started off feeling really overwhelmed at the start of 219 00:12:08,080 --> 00:12:12,280 Speaker 1: this episode, you've now got some practical ways that you 220 00:12:12,280 --> 00:12:16,240 Speaker 1: can use AI to help lessen your stress and get 221 00:12:16,240 --> 00:12:20,160 Speaker 1: yourself organized for the week. And remember, if you've got 222 00:12:20,160 --> 00:12:23,920 Speaker 1: a question for Neo or I, there is an email 223 00:12:23,960 --> 00:12:27,480 Speaker 1: address in the show notes. We love hearing from you, 224 00:12:27,840 --> 00:12:30,720 Speaker 1: and thank you for all the emails and feedback that 225 00:12:30,800 --> 00:12:33,880 Speaker 1: you have been sending us so far. We will see 226 00:12:33,920 --> 00:12:38,200 Speaker 1: you next Monday. If you found this useful, please help 227 00:12:38,280 --> 00:12:40,880 Speaker 1: us spread the AI love and share it with someone 228 00:12:40,880 --> 00:12:43,880 Speaker 1: who you think would benefit from knowing what you now know. 229 00:12:44,600 --> 00:12:47,800 Speaker 1: And if you're ready to really start mastering AI, check 230 00:12:47,840 --> 00:12:52,680 Speaker 1: out inventium dot ai. We help individuals, teams, and organizations 231 00:12:52,960 --> 00:12:57,680 Speaker 1: turn Jenai into a real work superpower, saving ten plus 232 00:12:57,760 --> 00:13:00,560 Speaker 1: hours a week and staying future ready without the jargon 233 00:13:00,800 --> 00:13:03,600 Speaker 1: or overwhelmed. Thanks so much for listening, and we'll see 234 00:13:03,600 --> 00:13:07,600 Speaker 1: you next time on how i AI. How I AI 235 00:13:07,880 --> 00:13:10,920 Speaker 1: was hosted by me Amantha Imber and Neo Applan. A 236 00:13:11,040 --> 00:13:13,680 Speaker 1: big thank you to Martin Imber who does our sound editing, 237 00:13:13,840 --> 00:13:17,120 Speaker 1: and Jim Rubio for production support, and thank you to 238 00:13:17,240 --> 00:13:19,520 Speaker 1: John Kilby who composed the theme music