 Today we're diving into the transformative world of chat GPT and this could be a total game changer for your business if you're not already using it and it's a tool so powerful I think it's like having a full creative team working right at your fingertips. It's a real business ally to be honest and it's now certainly an integral part of all that I'm doing with my business at take one tech. And it can be used for creating planning strategizing and crafting everything from product details website content sales funnels marketing strategies launch plans email sequencing basically everything that you do in your business. So if you've not yet delved into the world of chat GPT then you're in for a treat and by the end of this stream you'll wonder how you ever manage without it. And if you're already using chat GPT in your business stick around because I'll be sharing some of the ways that I've adapted to using chat GPT over the months that go probably belong beyond the norm. So let's get into it. I've been using chat GPT for as I say months now so why is it taking me so long to create this stream because this is the first video on my channel that actually has a chat GPT in the title. I did actually do a stream back in February which was all about AI in general and it was came about because Kajabi were introducing some AI features into their platform and Kajabi is the platform that I use to create all of my my courses and it's basically all of the other side of my business to run on Kajabi as well. So that was what that live stream was about back then specifically about AI tools for content creators and I actually created a PDF that you can get as a download which is linked into the description. And this is using AI for course creation where I go through the whole course creation process and talk about how to leverage chat GPT for every step of that process. And incidentally I mentioned that Kajabi introduced the AI tools back in February and all platforms these days you'll see that more and more are just adding in some form of AI into just into apps into services into platforms for all kinds of different things but I still come back to chat GPT because of the conversational nature of it and we'll get back into that in a little while but to have it as a sort of conversational style is much better with chat GPT in my estimation but I'll talk about that a bit more later. The other thing that sort of spurred me to do this live stream today is that we just wrapped up the Kajabi accelerator course last week and chat GPT came up almost every day in that you know because it is such an integral part now of building a business whether that's a content creation business or any other type of business and the Kajabi accelerator was all about how to build a business around your courses but you know the business aspect of that features chat GPT heavily. Also this past week I have coaching calls with my coaching clients and there have been three this week that have been specifically requesting to chat about chat GPT. So I felt like today was the day I had to actually create a chat GPT dedicated live stream. And another reason that I've held off is I noticed that you know when it sort of all blew up into the mainstream media around sort of February March April time earlier on this year when it became a real mainstream thing on all the main news websites. I found that everybody was just diving into it selling a course on even how to use chat GPT and I didn't want to be jumping on that bandwagon. I wanted to make sure that you know I've had time to use this thing and understand how to use it to the best of my ability to begin with before sort of talking about it. So yeah I've technically missed the early boat but yeah just want to share what I've learned so far. So let's take a step back though what exactly is chat GPT. If you're completely new to it is like having a versatile assistant capable of understanding and generating human like text code tables and much more. So it isn't just about creating a copy. It can do some really complex stuff like coding. I've used it to create complex Excel formulas writing literal code as well creating tables of data. It's a lot more than that people think I believe. So it's imagine having like an extremely knowledgeable friend who can not only write like a real person but also help you with those more complex tasks. And you can ask this virtual friend or assistant to help you with anything from crafting an email to building a basic computer program. And it can provide you then with coherent and relevant and professional level content. And while it's powered by an intricate sort of machine learning model that's been trained on a whole range of text and code and data. You don't need to actually understand the technical details of how it's working for you to be able to use it. You just need to basically talk to it and ask it questions. So it's probably going to be a lot easier rather than telling you to just actually show you. So to get it you will need to just go to the link that you'll find in the description. Open AI dot com slash chat GPT. And this will take you through to this page here. So here you are at the sort of landing page for open AI which by the way they make chat GPT but they also make a an image AI program as well. And you can get the AI from here as sorry the API for the AI from here as well. So this is the the link and once you actually sign up and you'll come to a page that looks like the wrong one this one here. So this is a new account that I've just set up just before this stream with so it's just got nothing in it. This is the sort of first screen that you're going to see when you come into chat GPT. So it's really sort of basic. There's no sort of buttons to press to begin with that you know it's not like you don't have you don't have a lot to learn. You've literally all you really need to know is that you've got this this box here and you can essentially talk to talk to it and get a response back. And by the way if you're anything like me you will find that you start speaking to it with please and thank you. You may also get angry with it at times even though it's just a chat bot essentially. But you can ask it all kinds of things and here on this splash team you can see some examples. So this is just giving you some very initial prompts explain quantum computing in simple terms. Got any creative ideas for a 10 year old's birthday. How do I make an HTTP request in JavaScript so you can literally ask it anything. Now what I found was that there is still at the moment this whole concept of prompts and this is what you're calling it when you're asking a question you're giving a prompt. And so there's this quest this thing about you know crafting the perfect prompt and you'll see people saying I'll download my list of you know 20 prompts or things like that. Where as really the power of it is not in just putting in single prompts to get you know I mean sure if I click on one of these explain quantum computing in simple terms and let's just click on go. Then here we go it is now going to write that description so this just gives you a brief example of you know what it's doing you're asking a question and it is suddenly just pumping out a load of of information. I mean you could then continue this conversation and say OK put put this into short bullet points for example. So you're interacting with it and it's giving you an output so there we go we've got an even more refined example of exactly what quantum computing is. So you're asking it questions and then it is giving you these answers out but as I say there's been this thing of you know people talking about specific prompts and whilst you know the way that you interact with it is important. I find that still what a lot of people are doing is they're putting in their you know their individual prompt and then maybe they've got another question to ask so they go and put in a new prompt trying to get some some additional information. But the real power of chat GBT comes when you start actually having an entire conversation so that there over here on this left hand side that is that that chat that we've just had. Let's say I went to another one here and just I'll just take the one from the list save me crafting any at the moment we'll get onto that in a moment. But now it's going to answer that question and then if I come back out again. Let's just say we'll leave that one there come back out to a new chat and then come over to here. I'm just going to ask it these questions that it's put out there. You can see that we've got this list of chat and by the way this is quite a good one because it does show you that yet it can actually generate code for you. So as I say I have used it for coding it's it's often simpler and this is how I'm using chat GBT in general is for that kind of initial head start on things so you can get it to create like the initial stuff. But then you go in and refine it refine it. But in any case here you can see that we've now got these three different chats but they're all basically in complete isolation of each other. So chat GBT remembers everything that is in that thread and I can always go back to that quantum computing one for example and I could just pick up where we left off there and ask it another question. If later on in the day I'm back to my Java scripting I could go back to this one and pick up that. But the Java scripting one will have no understanding or knowledge of this conversation that we've had in here. So for me I think that it's better to always work with a particular thread for your particular use case. So for example with take one tech I've got one or two single threads that I'm then having these conversations in that I can always go back to because then it then understands the whole depth of that conversation. So in that sense what it's always better to do then is actually give it some initial prompting so that before you've even asked it a question it understands a little bit more about you and your company or about what it is you're trying to achieve. And also that you frame chat GBT so that it understands how it needs to be talking back. You can tell it the tone that you want it to speak in. You can tell it how to act as if you are something like that. So that's what we're going to get into in a moment. I will just say this is the sort of demo version that I'm using here. If you are on a paid plan then it looks the same. You can hide the sidebar so all I've done there is I've just hidden this sidebar. You can collapse that out of the way. So that's what I'm doing there. But what you'll see up at the top here is it says default chat GPT 3.5. So that is the particular model. If I go back into new chat then you have the option here to choose between chat GPT 3.5 or chat GPT 4. If you are on a free plan so it's free to sign up and use chat GPT 3.5. If you pay for it and it's only what $20 a month something like that then then you get access to GPT 4. That is a significant update to the basically the data set that it has been trained on. And you will get much better results with GPT 4. Definitely play around with it with 3.5. But once you see the value of it then you definitely want to be considering going back up to the GPT 4 just because of the difference that you'll get in the results. And we can do some sort of like for like test to see what those are like. But you're going to get a much better depth of knowledge. And in fact it sort of says here fastest model great for most everyday tasks. So the speed with which it actually puts the content out is going to be faster in 3.5. We'll see four in a moment. You saw how quickly it just kind of like spat out all of that text with four. It's slightly slower. But it is our most capable model great for tasks that require creativity and advanced reasoning. So that advanced reasoning is where it sort of really comes into its own. And then you also get priority access as a paid member even if you are using 3.5 as well. So if you're on a paid plan you get access to both of them. If you're on the free plan you just get 3.5. So the first step then that I would do before doing anything if I'm going to use it for a business use case would be to give it an initial prompt. I mentioned that I do have sort of like one single thread that I use. And now wait a minute where is that going there? Oh it's all right. I thought it was some wrong screen there. There we go. Yeah I mentioned that I do use the single sort of thread method. So I just have a single conversation for all of Take One Tech. It's not strictly true. Sometimes I'll be going off on a tangent about something. But I do always have that initial prompt though. So what I've done is I've created an initial prompt that I can always use then. So it's kind of like my initial way to start things off with it. And I'll just put this in and I won't read it all to you but I'll show you roughly what is in there. And by the way there is a character limit 60,000 I think. Is it character limit or 30,000? So you may find when you pop a message in that sometimes it is going to take, it's going to say that it's too long. You have to sort of truncate it and post it in two halves. So I'll just paste in my initial prompt. And this is going to show you like how much text I'm actually putting in here. So I'm telling it my name first. My name is Alec Johnson and my business is Take One Tech. Take One Tech offers online training, consultancy and events, empowering business owners and professionals and all this sort of stuff. So it's talking about my business. I'm talking there about all the courses that I offer. I'm talking about the training events and so on. So I'm literally putting in absolutely everything about the company. And by the way, this is all essentially, I'm taking it off my website. So if you want a quick way to sort of let it know about you and your existing business, a quick way to do that is to tell it what you tell your clients about you and your existing business. So if you've got content on your website that you've already got like an about page and all of that sort of stuff, then just taking all of that and dropping it in, it then is going to have all of that knowledge because what you want it to be is completely in line with your current messaging. So if you've got all of this stuff already, then definitely put that in. Now I needed to split this up into two sections because that's already quite a lot of text in there. So I've said here, you don't have to repeat that all back, but have you understood all that I've written so far. So it's always a good thing to just check that it's still following with you. And if I just click on this, then it's going to hopefully just give me a bit of an outline and get say, yes, this is going to show me that it has understood where I'm up to. And so it's not repeating everything back, but it's just given me like a summary. So I can read that and say, yep, it's actually got that. So then I'm going to give it a little bit more information about actually, in fact, some of the events that I'm doing. So here I can just drop this in. So if you ever do want to give it more information, then do that thing of saying, you know, you don't have to give me any answer yet, but I want to give you some more information first, and then you can just drop that in. So this is now me having just dropped in. Actually, this is for an upcoming event I've got in October, the digital stage revolution event. And so this is now telling me, giving me a little prompt. What I should have done there was said, don't continue with everything. I've got a question. I didn't put that on the end. So what you can always do is if it started to just spit out some things there, then you can always go back to this little edit button and you can click on the edit. And I could say, please confirm you have understood this. And then I'll provide further information or further instruction. I can't type and stream at the same time. In fact, I can't type these days. I do find that I seem to be typing faster with this. And by the way, using this with Siri is much better. Got my headset here so I can just sit here having my conversation with my teammate, chat GPT. So once you've edited, though, if you click save and submit, what you'll notice there is you've got this little thing has appeared here and it's actually saying that this is now, because I've been in an edited that message, this is now the second version of that message. So two of two, I could go in and edit it again and that would become three of three, but you can always revert to the previous messages and I'll come back to that in a moment. So that has now just said, yes, I've understood the event. So now what we want to do is let's say that we've got a new product or a new event that we want to we want to start to promote or we want to do something in our company with, then how do we go about doing that? So what I'm going to do is I've just come up with a sort of dummy event, if you like. And here we go. I'm going to just say I'm running an event for take one tech that I'm referring to as the digital stage mastery retreat. It will take people on a journey to master the tech and become more confident on camera and will focus not just on the tech, but on overcoming the psychological hurdles to deliver seamless live performances on stage, be it a real or digital stage. It's like a public speaking bootcamp and content business growth summit rolled into one. So that is my hypothetical event unless people are interested in it. Let's see what chat GBT can help us. How chat GBT can help us craft that. But hopefully, as we go through this, you should see that no matter I mean, I'm talking about an event with for a training company. But this could equally be your engineering business, your architectural firm or whatever. We're just talking about a product here or a service. And then we're going to see how chat GBT can help us craft something of use out of that. So what I've done here, though, is I've asked it to please give me a description of the event and what people will learn. So often rather than going in meticulous detail and me being the one that is describing all of this stuff to chat GBT first before I ask any questions, often to make sure that it's on the same page, I'll ask it to give me the description back. And so it will do the sort of expansion of it of the product, whatever. But that will tell me whether or not it has understood it. So if I just click the return key now, it's going to give me an output. And this is chat GBT for by the way. So when I said that it's it's not as fast as chat GBT 3.5, I think you'll agree. It's still pretty quick. It's not like you have to wait for an hour to get a response. So there is another limitation of GPT for though, which is that you get what is it 25 messages every three hours. So there is a cap on how much content it can generate in that respect. So I always find though, if I if I hit that limit, then it's probably time for a coffee anyway. So given that initial prompt there, then where all I said was I am, you know, this is an outline of the event. Please give me a description. This is what it has now returned with. So it's given me kind of like an actual description as if it might be on a landing page almost embark on an extraordinary journey to master the digital stage with digital stage mastery retreat. This unique and transformative four day experience is designed to empower individuals professionals content creators inspiring public speakers to transcend the barriers of technology and psychological hurdles. It's a powerful amalgamation of a public speaking bootcamp and content business growth summit that resonates with the needs of the modern era. So I mean that's a lot more poetic than my initial description there, but kind of still captures the same thing doesn't it. What you will learn audio and video proficiency content creation skills, content conquering the psychological hurdles on camera confidence, effective public speaking business growth and monetization, marketing mastery monetization strategies, personal growth and networking and so on. So why attend the digital stage mastery retreat, the retreat offers a hands on learning experience. And this is all just, you know, it is just it's just generated this. It's not taken this from existing content as such. The the actual, the actual, like I say, you don't have to understand the technicalities of how to use it in a very, very, very basic form. It's a bit like predictive text. This is the example that people often use. It's so not like that, but it's kind of like that. It's almost just taking this natural language understanding of natural language to almost predict what the next word would be. So all of these things, it's just sort of basically predicting what the next word would be based on its understanding of language kind of in very, very layman's terms. So we won't go down the rabbit hole of exactly how it's doing everything because it's just kind of mind boggling. But you see the point, though, is that from that initial prompt, it is now created all of this content. And the thing about it being natural language is that you can really have a conversation with it. Like let's say, for example, this first section mastering the technical aspects, audio and video proficiency content creation skills. The other thing is because it knows my content because I've prompted it at the beginning, check this out. Learn the ins and out of optimizing your audio and video setup from pristine communication, leveraging tools like Ecamm Live, Apple Keynote and Zoom. I mean, hello, those are like the tools that I'm always talking about and recommend everybody using to level up their online presence. And I didn't mention that in here, saying that, you know, this is going to be part of the event. That's just because of this massive prompt at the top where I told it all about my business. I told it all about the courses that I've got, you know, the topics that I cover on my YouTube channel and all of that kind of stuff. So that is, again, coming back to this benefit of having all of this in a single thread of a conversation rather than just thinking, oh, I'm just going to master this idea of the perfect prompt each time. Really just have a conversation with it and know that it is coming all the way back down to the bottom. Just know that it is, you know, it is an expert in many fields or can access expert knowledge or let me rephrase that. It can be, it can portray itself as an expert in many fields. You can get some really great stuff out of it. Now, a lot of the people, a lot of people have said, you know, the people with the scarcity and do mongering mindset have said, oh, AI is like the end of people's jobs. It's really not because all it is is a tool to enhance whatever it is that you are doing. So if somebody were to just come and do this and put this out, if they didn't have the ability to actually deliver on this event, then it'd be pretty useless doing all of this, wouldn't it? In the same way that, you know, some of this is not going to necessarily be correct. If we get into the real weeds of it, into like technical details, then you'll find that it falls short, you know, in so many ways. Let's just say then this mastering the technical aspects, audio and proficiency. I mean, you could go into a lot more detail on each of these aspects. So you could say, give me the outline for the session on audio and video proficiency. So let's say we're going to have a session at this retreat about audio and video proficiency. So now it's given me that. The objective, what we're going to try and do, equip participants with the knowledge and skills required to optimize audio and video for crystal clear communication. Okay, introduction, 15 minutes, welcome and overview. Part two, fundamentals, basics of video composition and framing, exploring lighting techniques, camera types, comparison, live demonstrations, understanding microphones, soundproofing, all of these kind of things, hands-on workshop, practical experience. So they've got all these different things in there. And then you could even go as far as saying, I want to give the, you know, even the slide deck. Let's say, you know, create a slide deck for that. But what you're going to find then is, yeah, okay, you've got all of this outline. I mean, you could even ask it to write you a script. So let me say, okay, here we go. We'll write a script for part three. And this is the other thing is it knows the conversation. So you don't have to say, write a script for this. You could just say, write a script for part three. So it knows, obviously, that part three is audio fundamentals. And so here it is going to write the script. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the audio fundamentals part of our session. In the next hour, we'll be diving into the world of sound, exploring how to make your voice and audio as clear and impactful as your visuals. Shall we begin? There we go. Participants, general agreement. You have to make sure they've read the script then as well. Instead of them saying boo, no, no. So this is like the outline of the whole script of the thing. So again, you could have it do all this, but the trouble is, if somebody is going to just be heavily reliant on this, then it's not going to be in your words. It's not going to know your knowledge. It's not going to be imparting your knowledge. It's going to be imparting whatever it's given back. That is the massive caveat with this. Even on the first page of chat GPT, make sure you are aware of limitations. May occasionally generate inaccurate information. So everything that you're going to take out of it should be fact-checked to a point. I mean, the outlines that we're creating there is an outline. But if you're doing anything with actual facts, this should not be your source for facts. It's a great starting point for research though, as we'll come on to in a moment. May occasionally produce harmful instructions or biased content. So that's something to be aware of. Limited knowledge of world and events after 2021. So actually the data set that it has been trained on is up until 2021. So new information that's come out or new details or things like that, then it's not natively. There are ways around this, but it's not just built in going to have access to that. So if I was to ask it about some major world event, it knows about the pandemic, but it might know about, well, it wouldn't know about anything like major world news or news events that have happened or developments in science and technology after that 21 cutoff date. So, wrong scene, back to this one. So that is the thing. It can generate all of this different content here, literally right down to the actual script for the day. But let's say that I felt that this was maybe too basic. Let's say I want to go deeper with this. How about I want to go into more technical detail in this session? So again, it is understanding what I mean by that. Let's hope. And now it's going into more detail. So instead of just the microphone types, now we're going into dynamic microphones, polar patterns, frequency response and applications, condenser microphones, powering options, sensitivity and studio uses, ribbon microphones, lavalier microphones. So it is then done exactly what I talked about. Maybe we want to have signal path and mixing. Maybe I could say I don't want to cover signal paths. Let's see. So it will just go now and readjust that to remove that particular section. So you can really have a conversation with it. And this is where rather than just thinking, oh, I'm going to use it to generate everything for me, using it as this starting point, though, and then you to then put your spin on it to shape things to give you a better outline. I never use it myself for scripts for these kind of things because that needs to come from me. So personally, I don't use it for that. But certainly getting that initial outline is something that I have used it for heavily with all kinds of things, from course creation to website outlines and all of that kind of thing. Let's say we don't want to go down this rabbit hole, although of getting into all of these different things for every day. Let me just come back up here to where we asked it that question about the script. So I'm just going to back up from that a little bit. We will just come back up to here where I said write a script. I'm just going to edit this particular one. We've now got then from at that point, we've now got this session outline, which is telling us what is going to be in the, what was it, this one? I beg your pardon, it was this one I want to edit. So this is where we've got the outline of the event and what's going to be covered. So let's say that here, rather than that, I want to say that the event is going to be in, let's say, February next year. The event will be in February 2024. I have not yet done any planning for the event. Give me a launch plan. So let's see what it gives us for this. Let's even submit. There we go. So phase one, pre-planning, August to September. Identify your target audience, determine your budget, choose the venue, create content outline, secure speakers and partners. Phase two, pre-launch, develop branding and messaging, build landing page, create marketing collateral, start social media testing, set up early bird registration and so on. So it's given me the launch plan. So if you are taking on something that maybe is something that you're familiar with the content, but you're not really sure how to go about doing something, it does give you really good outlines and I use it a lot for other things like landing pages and sales funnels and so on. So those are things that I'm really well versed with anyway. But still, it's a great way to get that first draft and maybe you're launching events all the time yourself as well. But using this just to create that initial draft of that launch and as I say, I'm using an event as an example here, but this could be your new product that you're going to launch. You want to talk about a social media campaign. In fact, let's do that. So let's say that we want to start a social media campaign to advertise the event. I want to start promoting the event on social media. So tell it what platforms you're on. I'm currently on Twitter, LinkedIn and Instagram. Let's say that we want to create a schedule of posts. Create a table with a posting schedule for the next month for all platforms. And then let's say, please include, look at that. Please and thank you for coming in again. It's a bot everybody, but I can't help it. Please include the content for the post and description of any images to include or any media, I guess, any media to include. Right, so now this is showing. So whoops, only one message at a time. It's not liking that for some reason. Let me try that again. This might need a reboot. Why is it not letting me do that? Sometimes it gets a little bit funny. Let me just quit this for a second. Was I right? I just got a word in my ear, Jeff. I got a message up on the chat saying that YouTube was paused for a second, but it should be back now. Let me try that again. Let me try that again. Okay, we should come back here. Okay, so it did actually do that, but for some reason, it's just the, I think, my internet had a little bit of an issue. So here what it's done is this is where we asked it to create the content schedule. So now it's saying certainly below. Here is a posting schedule for the next month across Twitter, LinkedIn and Instagram. And so it's got the August the 7th, the 10th. Here's the platform, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram. Get ready to master the digital stage. Stay tuned for, and it's even created a hashtag for us. Teaser image of event logo is the media description. So this is what I asked for. The platform, the content and the media description. LinkedIn. Exciting news coming soon. Mastering the tech of the digital stage. Stay tuned. A short teaser video. And it's created this plan for us, essentially. So I mean, you could literally take that and drop it into your schedule if you wanted. And obviously going through and checking all the details first to make sure that everything's right. And adding that in there. And this is the same with everything. Always checking the details are right. I mean, like one of them, this example came up just yesterday. In fact, let's say you're creating a landing page for the event. And there is a, you want to create like a frequency, a frequently asked questions page. So let's think about this. I'm creating a landing page and want to add an FAQ. And obviously if this is creating them, they're not frequently asked, but guess what? Spoiler alert. Often the FAQ pages on websites are just what they want you to understand. So let me say I'm creating a landing page and want to add an FAQ section. Give me the FAQs and answers because they're going to be like the same types of questions. That's the point. So here we go. Obviously if people are frequently asking questions about this as yet unannounced event, then definitely add those in as well. But it's going to be things like this. What is the digital stage mastery retreat? When and where will it take place? So this is always an interesting one. The event will take place in February at a four-star hotel in Dallas. Well, we haven't actually specified where it is. It's just actually pulling out the fact that I've got another event which is going on this October, which just happens to be in Dallas. Who should attend the event? What will I learn at the retreat? Our meals and accommodation included in the ticket price. Can I buy a ticket for just one? So yeah, I mean, these are, you obviously would then want to go through and just not copy and paste every one of these onto your thing, but go through and read each one individually and make sure it is applicable. But that goes for everything on chat GBT. Always go through and check the content that it's putting out. But you can see there that we created that social media posting schedule. And we've also got this entire launch plan. So I mean, you might want to drill down into more details for that. Let's have a look at some of these things. And we'll go into a bit more detail. So identify your target audience, choose the venue, create content outline, secure speakers and partners. Let's see some of these that if there's any of these that are like not going to be obvious to you, then you can ask for feedback on that. I mean, you can ask for feedback on pricing on anything and it will give you some ideas. Let's try that then, shall we? You will obviously also have your own ideas about this, of course, but how should I price this event and what discount would be recommended for the early bird discount? And by the way, I just I seem to put typos in all the time with these. And yeah, it seems to cope with them. So you don't need to go and correct everything. Standard ticket price, VIP tickets, group discounts, early bird strategy. So this is interesting that when you ask it questions, it doesn't just give you a direct answer. It will give you some thoughts around that. So additional considerations, refund policy, sponsorships and partnerships, content and experience value, be transparent about what attendees will gain from the retreat, emphasizing the unique value that justifies the ticket price, market research. And so, you know, we've gone through there and it's giving us that extra that extra bit of information. It doesn't give you just exactly what you're asking. We usually have this final thing here that will give remember your pricing should align with the value and your experience you're providing. And the thing about copying and pasting from here, sorry, I've just got to say hello to a few folks in the chat. Hey, Rich, great to see you here. I know started on the dot today. Thanks, Mike. Great to see you here. Outstanding topic, how to use chat E.P.T. for business. Great to great to see you here. Mike, one of our Academy members. So we're talking about AI all the time. Hey, Jamie, great to see you here too. Minimalist, Carnivore. Hello, I've been using it now to help with making vids and cleaning up my poor grammar. Yeah, me too. As you can see, it's doing that for me as we speak. Looking forward to what you bring. Thank you very much. Glad you're looking forward to it. I hope I deliver. If you've got any specific questions, feel free to reach out. I'll drop a message in the chat. Hey, Liz, great to see you here too. Malachi. Great. I don't know. I did. I did know, did not know to introduce myself to chat GBG first and then keep the thread going and to periodically check to see if it's still tracking with me. Yeah. And by the way, I say that chat GBT is like an expert in many fields. It's a is a polymath with a great depth of knowledge in a wide range of fields. But that also suffers for from Abnesia and speaks with conviction about everything it says. So one thing you will find is when the threads get really long, that does become a point where it's almost like gets confused with stuff because it's not got a physical memory. It's weird. It's you get lulled into this sense of, you know, that you're speaking almost to a person, but it's obviously not. It is just a just an AI model. And so it does get confused sometimes, especially if you're talking about, you know, a really, really long conversation, then it may be that it gets, you know, some details wrong. And so you do have to sometimes like do course corrections for it and and pick it up and make sure that you're not just assuming that it does know absolutely everything. But yeah, it's, it's, it is fantastic. But yeah, it does have this. It's the fact that it speaks about everything with conviction. So if you ask it something and this came for me when I was using chat GBT 3.5, which had a much shorter memory span, it seemed. But, you know, I'd be talking about my take one tech Academy where I've got three different pricing tiers. And then I would ask it to create something which referenced these tiers and then it'd get one of the names wrong, for example. And I think, well, that isn't, you know, we've talked about this chat GBT, go back, read the notes, do it again. But the fact is it won't. You just have to just have to know to sort of keep it in check. And so I know that although what you're talking about there is checking that it's understood right at the beginning, but also make sure that as you're going through, if it's, you know, if it's slipped up or got something wrong, sometimes just reframing that particular part that maybe it's misunderstood or reminding it about something at a relevant point is also useful. Hey, Dina, great to see you as well. Always be polite. We know how Battlestar Galactica went. Hey, Paul, great to see you here as well. And this is why I suddenly started looking down at chat because this just came up as I was talking about copying and pasting. And yeah, there are. There are lots of landing pages and you see people's content that are, you know, as an AI language model or maybe even the other one is, you know, you might say something like, you know, write me a post about something. And so the thing that you get back as the first draft would be certainly here is your post for whatever platform it is. And so I've seen posts on different platforms that have that at the beginning of it. So obviously they've just not even bothered reading what it's given. They've just like copy pasted it straight onto wherever it is linked in or whatever. So, yeah. And oh, Minneapolis is great too. It's great to see you here. It does need redirecting its attention certainly. So I digress slightly. Why did it get onto that? It was because I was looking at it. I was getting distracted by the chat and saying, yeah, don't just copy and paste it. And that goes to the sort of technical details as well. And it's like, as I say, it's great for sort of framing all of this stuff, but not necessarily just taking everything as read. And you'll want to certainly put your own sort of spin on things. So if we come back though, here now we've got a, you know, some guidance on pricing. Then we could say, because it mentioned about specifically the venue there, didn't it? So I could say I haven't fixed the venue yet. You could also say that you're not even sure what to consider. Maybe it's the first time putting it on an event. I haven't fixed the venue yet. And I'm not sure what to look for in a potential venue. And again, all these are relevant to, you know, an event, but it's just to show that you can literally ask at anything. And it's not so much, you don't necessarily have to even know how to frame the thing first. It can help you with these kind of things like considerations. And, you know, it's not, you know, these are all relevant. You only need to look through them to see that, oh, yeah, that's something that maybe I hadn't thought about. You know, you can just get that sort of stuff for it as well. So there's often things that you are doing where you might not necessarily know how to, you know, do some particular thing. And you just want this initial information. And yet you could go and search on this for Google and go and find a whole different series of opinions on these kind of things if it's, you know, something like this, for example. But here you can actually get a good, at least a good starting point on it. And again, I won't read all of this, but you can see the kind of things that it's talking about. Reference and review. So checking what other people have said about it. Environmental considerations and so on. Contract and cancellation policy. Read carefully. I mean, you could even say what would, I'm expecting, let's say I'm expecting, I don't know, 30 people, 30 people to attend. And the event will be held in, where, Florida, for one of a better location. What? Let's be more specific. Let's say Miami. Miami. What would I expect to pay in venue costs? Bearing in mind that the cutoff date is 2021, so it's already going to be out of date, but it might give you an idea. And it's going to say, it is going to vary, but here's a breakdown. And it's giving you an approximate cost, dedicated conference meeting space, co-working space. So the different types of venue that it might be, additional cost to consider, catering, AV equipment, insurance, parking, and so on. So you can just ask it questions as you're going along like that. But let's say that we have got the event sort of pretty nailed down, and we want to move on to something else. So we might want to create a landing page or maybe sales funnels. So rather than a landing page, let's say we want to create a sales funnel. And let's ask it to help us with that. We, I want to create a sales funnel for this event. Well, I want to create sales funnels because there are multiple different funnels for each product. I want to create sales funnels for this event. Give me the structure of five sales funnels. Again, spelling all over the place there. So a content marketing funnel, awareness stage, interest stage. So it's talking about the blog offering a free e-book, send a series of emails. And so the blog posts are leading into the book. The book would be on a landing page, the PDF or whatever, a lead magnet, then going into a series of emails that go to the actual event itself. The social media engagement funnel, so regularly posting on Twitter, post a live Q&A, share behind the scenes and then offer social media discounts. The partnership collaboration funnel. So it's got all these different types of funnel. So the retargeted ad funnel. I'll come back to ads in a minute actually, but let's say that we want to create a landing page then. So we could just literally say create a, create the landing page, landing page content for the event with a call to action. Don't know why that's in caps, call to action to sign up. So this is going to give us a landing page. So it's got the header, the title, digital stage mastery retreat, elevate your online presence, the banner image, section one. Are you ready to overcome the fear of the stage, whether physical or digital? So again, first draft is okay, but you will end up going in and editing all of this. I would say that everything that I've done in Take One Tech for the past six months has kind of started in chat GPT just because it creates this initial thing. But then there's nothing that's been sort of taken from chat GPT and just put straight into it because there's this constant refinement going on because it's obviously not in your words. It's not in your, you know, it's not going to cover everything that you want to say, but to give you all of the actual outline in terms of, you know, the sections even and then these titles, but you'll often want to go and sort of adjust these. And there we go, the FAQ. So it's referenced the FAQs that we talked about earlier. Testimonials that you'd need to add in obviously and then the call to action. So you could say it's got there, it hasn't got any video on the page. So maybe you want to say, I want to include a video on the landing page. How long should it be? About three minutes. Should it be? I reckon. And please give me the script. So to be honest, although all my videos on my channel are unscripted, the one thing that I do think about the scripts for is sales videos, because obviously you want to make sure that you're hitting certain bullet points. So whilst I'm not necessarily reading them off a script, I do think about that because you've got to get, you know, me. I tend to waffle. So a sales video on a landing page wouldn't be great with my usual style because I'd just be going off on tangents all the time. So I do tend to script those as in, you know, have some clear bullet points and think about the terminology and the key points that I want to pull out from, you know, it's essentially you're pulling out stuff that would be on the sales page anyway, but pulling those out into the video to encourage people to either sign up directly from just clicking the button underneath the video or to go on and read further on. But it has given us a thing here. So a concise video of around one to two minutes should be effective. It's long enough to confer essential information, but short enough to retain viewer attention. And so they've got the video script there. And it does actually go into things like here, you know, they'll talk about, you know, B-roll and stuff like that. So here it's talking about the visuals, the visual clips, the voiceover, what's happening there at all of these different things. And you can see the clear steps there. So an intro, what you'll learn at the event, why they need to attend, talking about the logistics, the date, the venue and date, and then a call to action. And then the outro. So that is an overview of, you know, what is in the video. One type of sales funnel that you get though is where you've got a very short video to begin with that people click through to go to a second longer form video, where it's something that is like a very high ticket value where you want to, you really need to convey all of the value. Then you can actually do a longer form, almost more like a sales webinar, but an on page one. And so that would be another option here, but you could ask it to help with that creation. So there we've got our landing page. And as I say, you can come into this and let's see what they've actually said here and see if they've missed anything out. How to captivate your audience, both online and so what you'll learn. So let's say that in the what you'll learn section, we want to put more emphasis on the tech, let's say, just for sake of argument. So I could say in the what you'll learn section, I want to put more emphasis on the tech. So now it's going to give me an updated section with with that. And again, it's gone into more detail about, yeah, again, leveraging platforms like Apple Keynote, Ecom Live and Zoom. So there you go. So that's the point you can have this sort of back and forth. Another element where you may want to use this is, let's say you're going to do some email marketing. So you might want to say, let's say I've created a lead magnet. I've created a PDF lead magnet related to the to the retreat about let's say it's about overcoming the psychological hurdles of public speaking. So let's say that I've got a lead magnet that is that give me an email sequence to lead into the event lending page. So once somebody's actually downloaded that PDF and it's a lead magnet for this particular event, then we want to have an email sequence that goes out that then ultimately leads into the event itself. So that's what I've just asked for. We want an email sequence that leads into the event. Certainly here's an email sequence designed to generate interest in your digital stage mastery retreat using the lead magnet about overcoming the psychological hurdles of public speaking as a starting point. This sequence consists of five emails that gradually lead to the events landing page. So here it is unlock confidence, your guide to overcoming public speaking anxiety. Thank you for downloading our guide on overcoming the psychological hurdles of public speaking. So this is like the first email that would actually deliver the guide. So there you've got the attachment is the PDF. Teaser two ready to master the digital stage. Now that you've begun your journey to conquer public speaking fears. Are you ready to take it to the next level? And so it's about, you know, sort of building that interest introducing the event and so on. And then talking about that early bird offer. And then the reminder and again, once again, just just sort of pointing out that this is because we've got this all in one single conversation thread. If I was doing this just, you know, create me a five step email sequence for something without all of that prior context. It wouldn't even know that we had, you know, an early bird offer. So that is that. But what it hasn't given us there is timings. I could have actually asked for that in this initial prompt. So I could have gone there and said, give me, you know, include the timings. But since I didn't do that, I could just come in here and say, give me the timings for these emails. And so then it will tell me how long to leave, leave apart for it. Email one timing immediately. Email two timing one day after or two days after email one, five days after email two, two days after email three, two days before the early bird offer expires. So there we've got the timings of those emails. So you could just be going in and dropping those into your email marketing machine, your sequencer or whatever, and just dropping all of those, those in. So I mean, again, you know, going through and crafting those is something. Let's say you want to do something in the style of somebody though, because we haven't actually talked about that. I'm just getting basically this thing out, you know, just as it comes. But you could say that I want to write something in the style of someone. So let's say we want to write a sales letter. So a sales letter is typically something that you might think when you first look at it seems unreasonably long, or necessarily long, where it's, you know, basically just covering everything that everybody needs to know, getting past any potential limiting factors that people might have in their mind about why they want to do something. And that's the point of a sales letter is to go through all of these different things. A great guy who's the master at creating these would be Frank Kern. So let's say that I want to write, I want to write a sales letter landing page as well. Please provide, oops, please provide the content in the style of Frank Kern. So let's see how Frank would have said this. And by the way, if you've not heard of Frank Kern, go and check him out. Certainly Frank Kern is known for his conversational style direct approach and a touch of humor. Here's a sales letter landing page inspired by that style. So it's going to spit something out in a minute. Hey there, ever stared at the screen, your palm sweaty, heart pounding and thought, I can't possibly do this with, do I can't possibly go live with this camera? Or have you ever hit the mute button in a virtual meeting only to realize no one heard your groundbreaking ideas while you forgot to unmute yourself? Yeah, me too. It's not just about getting the tech right, it's about having the confidence, the strategy and the know-how to put yourself out there on the digital stage. It's about speaking like a pro, even when your dog's barking in the background. That's where I come in. Introducing the digital stage master, you retreat a power packed event cooked up to take you from what's this button do to watch me wow him. So you can see that that is a very different conversational style than it has been given us so far specifically told him what I want it to sound like. And here's, as you can see, this is the sales letter going sort of on and on, and you could even say that's great, make it longer. That's great, make it longer. Also add a skip to the end section. So often what you'll have in sales letters is that basically you have the really long sales letter, but at some point as people are scrolling through it, they're like, yeah, yeah, just tell me what the information is and they'll go right down to the bottom and at the bottom you'll have like a summary with like, here's what I've got basically. Skip to the end section with a, here's what I've got section for you. Here's what I've got for you section. So now it's going to give me a longer version of that again in that same style though. And you can see it started the same as before. It's just basically expanding on this. But the actual formatting of it, if you've seen, you know, if you've followed Frank Kernels, you've seen any of his other things, you'll know that this is all kind of like exactly in his style, even down to the language. And then it's just going on and on. And at some point let's see what it puts at the end. When it's finished. And I mean there I'm talking about a specific person and obviously the person knows, the person has to be, you know, a known person. You can't just say, write it in the style of my mate Steve. But if it's like, you know, somebody's got a body of work out there, you can sort of train it to be like that. And so here it's just put a final thing at the bottom. Here's what I've got for you with a, just the details of it. And then click here to go through to the actual landing page. You could say, what other ways could I promote this event? Well, we've kind of done it with the launch plan. How about I'm going to run some Facebook ads to link through to the sales letter page. Give me the ads. Certainly here are some Facebook ads. Overcome the tech terror, a person looking confused in front of a setup of cameras, microphones and lights. Headline master the tech of the digital stage, tired of wrestling with cameras, mics and software. Join our four day retreat in Miami and become a master of the digital stage. So there we go, call to action, learn more. So it's just given me the Facebook ads content. Obviously you need to probably know a little bit about how to run Facebook ads. That is that. But to have this initial start, it's just a real way to speed things up. So you could say as well, let's say you're considering running stuff on LinkedIn. And here's where rather than just asking it to create the content, I'm trying to decide between running ads on LinkedIn and Facebook. What are the pros and cons of each? Again, everything needs to be fact checked, but it gives a pretty good first stab at an answer. So if you are considering this, you might want to ask it something like that. Facebook pros, vast audience reach, advanced targeting options, cost effective, engaging ad formats, integration with Instagram, cons, less professional audience, potential ad overload, data privacy concerns. I'm glad it's got that one in there. LinkedIn pros, professional targeting, high quality leads, less competition, sponsored content and in-mail. So that's where you send direct mails. Higher cost, smaller audience reach, less casual engagement. Conclusion, choose Facebook if you want a broader reach, more engagement, and have a limited budget. Particularly beneficial if your target audience includes a wide range of demographics. Choose LinkedIn if you want. If your event targets professionals and so on. So we're talking about events, but like I say, if you've got a product or service and you're thinking about other ways to market it, or maybe you've got some marketing that you're doing already, telling it what you're doing already and saying how could this be improved is a great way to do that. I'm just thinking of how I can relate this to this particular chat. But let's say you were running those ads already for your business. You could copy those ads into there and then you could say, you know, how could I improve on these ads? Or this is my demographic. These are the ads. How could I improve on that? What you can also do is ask for suggestions. So you could say is, and by the way, this is a great thing to do right at the beginning as well. Is there anything you would like to know from me about the event to help make our results better? And again, there's probably better ways of saying that. And this is where people talk about the perfect prompt, but yeah, it's just to have a conversation and then if it's not right, correct it. But here, certainly having a comprehensive understanding of your event and your marketing goals will help tailor your strategies. This, by the way, which should have been the first step, I completely overlooked this, but at the same place as where you're asking it, let's go right up to the top here, at the same stage as where you're asking it, where you're prompting it about your business down here. And you're going to say something like, please confirm you've understood all this and then I'll provide further instruction. Actually, what I'll normally do after that is say, is there anything else you would like to know about me or my business before we proceed? I completely overlooked that because I've actually gone through that step in order to craft this one here. So what you'll find is when you do it for the first time, you tell it everything you think it might want to know about you and your business. But then once you've understood all that you've told it, then you would say, is there anything else you'd like to know from me first before we proceed? And once you've done that, then you can feed that into your stock prompt that you do every time. So down at the bottom here, it's asking me these questions, specifically about the event in this case, the target audience, so who are the ideal attendees, the marketing goals, what are the goals for the campaign in terms of, brand awareness, lead generation and so on, budget constraints, unique selling propositions and so on. So always ask it to give you that feedback as well. Or sorry, ask it to ask you questions again to help sort of feed into the overall process. Let me just check in here if I've missed something. Jamie, let me see. Oops. I asked it to create HTML code for a simple calculator. I had to get it fixed about 20 times. Might be my poor square. I had to get it to fix about 20 times. Yeah, that's the thing. I mean, it's not perfect. And especially when you come into code, I found that as well with code. I've been doing stuff with Python and then also PineScript, which is something that's used on a particular trading platform. Then, yeah, having it create those things, there will always be sort of corrections that need to be made with it. Let me just pull up this for a second though, because I just want to mention it. I mentioned it earlier, but it's probably worth just showing you this. And I should have had it open in advance. Let me just come back out of here a second. It is over here. And this one is PDF. I just want to mention this again, because it's a free download, and it's one of my most popular downloads, actually, on the website. So takeonetech.io slash AI. And it is this AI-powered course creation, a step-by-step guide. What I've gone through today is I've probably gone into more depth. I have gone into more depth on using chatGPT specifically. But this was around the course creation process. So, you know, the 12 steps to course creation. Often, the barrier that people face when they're thinking about creating an online course is the content might not be the problem. It's all of the other steps that are involved in actually creating a course, going all the way back to identifying the niche, but then figuring out how to drill down into a specific topic, and then all the other steps, such as outlining your course, creating the course content, setting up the course on your online platform, and, you know, descriptions for lessons and all that kind of stuff, pricing the course, creating a launch plan. We've kind of talked about some of that today. Creating lead magnet, creating sales page, creating the promotional video, maybe, and then launching your course. So there's actually, you know, there's technically more steps. I could have broken it down into fewer steps as well, or made it longer. But these are the 12 steps. And then what I've done is in each of those steps, I've talked about chatGPT and going through and giving it those, and giving you some ideas for different prompts that you can use to help with all of those steps. So it's quite a thorough document, and as I say, it goes into those different steps, and each stage gives you some prompts that you can use. So you can get that. It's a free download at takeonetech.io.ai. Link is in the description. And, yeah, I hope that helps with everything. As we go back to here, there's one thing there that just actually stood out to me. That lead magnet. Now, that's an interesting one. If you come back to, if I come back to here, what we might say is we want to create a lead magnet. I want to create a lead magnet for the event. Give me some ideas. So if you want to create, give something as a free download that you can use to build your email list to lead into somebody attending this event or whatever it is, or it could be for your products, your services. Here we go. So an e-book guide, Mastering the Digital Stage, a comprehensive guide, free webinar, unlock your digital presence, a live demonstration, exclusive video series, tech talks, navigating the digital landscape, and you can drill down into more detail on each of that. So let's say exclusive video series. Let's say I like that one. Give me an outline. Give me an outline for three. Now, will it understand that I meant number three as opposed to three of them? It did. Lead magnet option number three, exclusive video series, tech talks, navigating the digital landscape. So here it is. Exclusive video series outline. Introduction, video one, mastering your virtual presence. Video two, audio excellence, video three. And then, of course, we can go down into more detail, asking for those scripts and everything like that for each video. I mean, really, the point of today and just going through this one example is showing how this can basically come into every single aspect of your planning for your business, for your events, for your services, your products. You can use it for every single step of the way. I mean, let's say somebody signs up when someone signs up to the event. What should the onboarding sequence look like? I'll just ignore the spelling mistakes because it always figures them out anyway. The typos. Immediate welcome email. Access to exclusive pre-event content. Sent one to two days after registration. Event logistics email. Pre-event engagement. So it's creating all of that. And once again, you can drill down into all of that. You could also say, I don't like this part. I like that part. Please change this. Please change that. All of that kind of thing. You could also ask for, now, this is one where, definitely, you don't want to take this at face value, but you might want to say, what sort of things should I take into consideration with terms and conditions for the event? What sort of things should I take into for terms and conditions? And again, anything financial, legal, technical data where it's fact-based, it all needs to be checked. But when you just want a quick answer for something, then it can be great for that. One example was, I've been working on my book and I wanted to understand the difference between, should I go down the Kindle Direct Publishing route, or should I go down getting it published with a publisher? And so it's a case of just asking for, what are the different components to that? Which one is going to be best for, what the pros and cons, essentially, of each one? And then I got a whole load of information out about some of the pros and cons of each, and obviously one of the cons of going down the direct publishing route is that then you don't have a publishing house that is there to promote the book and all of that. So then it was a case of, right, well, how do I actually go about, what are the most effective ways to promote a book if I was self-promoting? And then it was talking about, we'll do a book blog tour, get it in the hands of reviewers, obviously. Okay, so who are the reviewers then? So who are the top 10 book reviewers for nonfiction books in the US, Australia, Canada, UK, all these different places? And it gave me a list of the people, the actual reviewers to be contacted. Okay, so I've never actually pitched a book before to reviewers, how would you go out writing a cover letter to that? I mean, you could say this, let's use it for this one. I want to promote the event in the US on, you know, traditional, whoops, I'm not even writing in there, might help if I was writing in the correct place. I want to promote the event in the US on TV, let's just say. How would I go about doing that? Speaking as someone not from the UK, not from the US, how would I go about even getting it on the TV? TV commercial, I'm not going to be going down that. Choose the right channels and time slots. Yeah, this is more about advertising. Contact media buying agencies, contact local advertisers. This is all about advertising. Okay, so I don't want to pay for advertising. How else might... Nobody wants to pay for stuff, do they? How else might I get coverage on TV? Press release. Write a compelling press release about your event and send it to local TV stations. Highlight what is unique or newsworthy about the event, such as prominent speakers, innovative content. Media pitch exclusive offers. Okay, so I like the idea of a press release. I like the idea of a press release. Write it. Let's just be simple. Write it. Then tell me who to send it to. I mean, this is just getting ridiculous, isn't it? But you really can ask it anything. It will probably say, I don't know who to send it to, but there you go. Immediate release, press release, contact, phone, email. I mean, even if you're just not even familiar with the format of a press release, you've kind of got it there. And so this is the actual press release. Let's just see who it says. Does it actually come back with, you know, this is literally the people to get it on TV? It did work, as I say, it did work for book reviewers, where I was specifically looking for, I want, you know, tech-related non-fiction book reviewers in these different countries, and it did actually come back with the organizations and then the people specifically to send them to as well. So let's just do this one and see what it says. It's still thinking, it's still blinking. We've got the press release. It's obviously thinking. It's still writing to schedule an interview. Local news TV stations. Right, well, OK, then let's say that the event is in Miami. What are the local TV stations? There we go. So without just continuing, because one thing that you'll find with chat GPT is it is a complete and total rabbit hole that you can go through, go down. My approach to using it though is I've just sort of given you an example. That is how I would go about, you know, starting and we've kind of jumped around a bit because obviously I'm just showing you different things that you can do with it. But all the things that I'm showing you is what you'll notice hopefully is that apart from the overarching thing of make sure you give it that initial prompt to begin with and then also, you know, tell it this style that you want to be speaking in, you know, give it the framework so that it understands, you know, who it is and what it's doing. You're basically just having a conversation with it. Don't get too bogged down in this idea of having to craft the perfect prompt. And there's this whole thing about, you know, the job title that's now emerged, which is prompt engineer, somebody that can craft this perfect prompt. It's just really a conversation and keeping that thread going that's the thing. But do always bear in mind that once again that the information that it provides is not necessarily accurate. But you can judge for yourself whether, you know, something looks good or not from an outline point of view. So therefore, use it as a starting point to create, you know, whatever it is you're doing in your business, whether it's a letter, an email, a table, a code or whatever, use it as a starting point and understand that it's a starting point. Anything that's got facts in it, are you going to need to want to fact check that to make sure that, you know, it is correct. Always be putting your own spin on things, not just taking stuff as written. You want to make sure that it always just come from you and from your vocabulary as well. If you want to train on your vocabulary, by the way, if you have got a whole body of work, either from a book, either from a series of blog posts or anything like that, then definitely drop those in and say, I want to give you an example of some of my writings so that you can understand my writing style. It will totally then copy that writing style. So if you have, as I say, already written a lot of stuff, then put that in there to help to train it with that. Also, that thing of it having, you know, potential amnesia sometimes and forgetting things that have happened in the thread of the conversation, just be conscious of that because that means that even if you think you've fully prompted it, that it's going to know what it's going to come out, it still might sometimes get some of those details wrong. And some of them are going to jump out at you, like when it gets your name wrong, for example, further down in the conversation. But then other ones are a lot more subtle and so you may not notice them. So again, just coming back to this is not a copy and paste thing. One thing I will just go back to though, because this is a kind of important one, is first of all, you can go and edit anything as we've already seen by clicking the little edit button. But also you can copy the response as well. If I click that, it's just copied this entire response here. So if you did want to paste it into something else, so for example, I will take, you know, once I've got something that has gone through the process of refining it, I'll take that and I'll copy that into my, I use Ulysses, which is where I keep all my sort of text stuff for Take One Tech. So I'll copy and paste it into that and then I'll go through and do the final editing and move things around and, you know, add my spin to it before then putting it into something else. But so I am capturing stuff out of here because as you can see, if I was to just say, right, well, I've gone through and done all this work of, you know, helping me craft some of this stuff. But now I've got to go through this long list here and figure out, you know, which was the original, which was the best version, which wasn't. So I'm copying and pasting stuff, copying stuff from here and pasting it into another platform for me to then go and do the editing after and the refinement after the fact. But one thing I just want to show you is that thing of, if I go right up to the beginning, there was one here near the top, not quite at the top, where we created a second one here. So if you remember this one, this is where I had that sort of two of two. So I showed you that thing there where if you go in and edit this, it will give you a sort of second one here. Let me see where there was another one where I did that. This one here, so this was where we had the event. If I click the back arrow, though, it's going to go to that previous one, which was giving me an outline for the session. If you remember, we went down that rabbit hole on the outline for the session, and there we've got that post one of two. This is where we got those outlines. That now is still preserved, that particular branch of the chat. So whereas here, we came back and said, okay, then I actually just want to go down this different fork. And so now we've been on that different fork here. We're going to go back to that one. We're switching back to that branch. One thing to note, though, is that if we go down this rabbit hole and then come back and then go down on a different branch, they're not going to remember or know all that stuff from that other fork that we went off on. So where we had gone into this fork here, and we said, okay, give me an outline for the audio fundamental section. And it gave us a script for that part. And then I said, if you recall, way back, I want to go into more technical detail in this session. So then it gave us that more technical detail about the polar patterns and all of that kind of stuff for those microphones. That will not be remembered when I go back to that other fork up here. But you do have access to all of those things. So that means that sometimes I'll go off on a tangent to something. I gave the example there of when I was thinking about the Kindle Direct publishing versus going with the publishing house. And that was kind of like a tangent I just suddenly thought of in my day while I was going through my other stuff with Take One Tech. And it just sort of came to me. So I kind of went off on that rabbit hole. And now that I understand it, I don't need to necessarily retain that. So I went back to the top of that tree. And then now I'm back in that flow again. So just know that nothing is ever lost in that. You can go back to it. Now you can actually share a thread in chat GPT. So and I wonder if that might be just that's actually only in the paid version. But in the sidebar, you'll see that there's a little thing to share it. And so you can share it with anyone else who's on chat GPT. That, though, will only give that thread. So if you've got any tangents going off, you won't see any of these like next thread and previous or next chat and previous chat here. It will just give the one that you're in at the time that you've saved. But you will always as the originator have access to that. If there are any other questions about chat GPT that you're coming as you are watching on the replay maybe, then definitely go and check out the Discord. So that you can find at takeonetech.io slash family. There is an automation section in there. So you can feel free to drop in and ask any questions. Definitely check out that free guide as well. And if you're not already using chat GPT, quick hello to David. Hello, great to see you here. Thanks for stopping by. But yeah, if you're not using chat GPT yet, then definitely dive in. If you are using it on an individual prompt basis, then I would say it really just does power it up when you start having these single conversations. Treat it as if it is an expert in all of these different fields, but know that it has these limitations and it will speak with real conviction about something. It does also become a little bit of a yes man, yes woman, yes person, yes bot, whatever. So if it says something and then you just go back with, I'm thinking about doing this instead, I found that it often starts with, that's a great idea. Now, it may be, let's face it, it may be that all my ideas are great. So there is that potential. But I think that's probably doubtful. So one thing that I always do is if I've got like some other idea about something where it's given me a response and I would say, I'm thinking about maybe doing this instead. Asking it for pros and cons or saying, tell me the positive points or the negative points about doing this because otherwise you might just get somebody saying, you're great. That's fantastic. Yes, let's do that. And so that's a great way of just forcing it into telling you both sides of the thing, being objective about it and telling you the pros and cons. But yeah, you'll find that ChatGBT can become a very close friend that you talk with a lot. I've probably talked with ChatGBT more than anybody else. And so yeah, it certainly helped with everything that I'm doing. If you've got any other ideas or suggestions, then definitely go into the Discord and drop them in there of other ways to use ChatGBT. There are loads more. I didn't go down into the whole coding rabbit hole nor the creating Excel codes as well. Excel formulas. You can also use it to craft prompts. There's just one more I'll leave you with because this is kind of good. What we're talking about is that initial prompt that you're giving to help you do something. So there is one more prompt I'll just leave you with because this one is kind of handy. If I go back in and create a completely new chat, just one second, this will take a minute, but it's kind of a nice little hack. So I'm going to go into a new chat. I'm in ChatGBT 3.5 just at the moment, but it doesn't matter. This is a great little prompt which is you're going to ask it to become your prompt engineer for you. So the prompt is, I create separate conversation threads for each expert persona of GPT. You are prompt GPT. You are a prompt engineer expert for large language models. So I'm telling it that it is now a prompt engineer. You know exactly what to write in the most efficient wording possible to achieve the desired responses from ChatGBT. I will tell you what my goal is for a thread is, and you will write an optimized initial prompt in the most efficient format possible that will serve as the initial prompt when creating a new conversation thread with a GPT model. You will define the expert persona, the parameters or rules of the responses and the tone of the voice within the prompt you provide. Your prompts should also provide any other information that a GPT thread may need to understand exactly what it needs to do to give me the most accurate answers depending on my goal and that particular thread. So I created my own prompt engineer in ChatGBT. So now it says, I understand your request. Please provide me with your goal of a thread. So now you could say, let's say, now you could say, right, well, here's what I want to do and it is going to create the persona for me. So I'm going to say I'm planning a month-long business trip to the U.S. I want to create a travel GPT that will help me in planning my trip. So what it is going to do is it is now going to give me the rules and the response. Hang on a second. Wait a minute. Let me just come back to this a second. That is actually failed. I'm wondering if this is GPT-4. Hang on, wait, wait, wait, wait. Let me try this again because I shall show you exactly what it does. You see, that didn't work quite as it has been. Isn't that always the way I say, I've got one great thing to leave you with a demo and then it falls flat on its face. Right, let me try that again in GPT-4. Maybe it's a GPT-4 thing. Right, that is funny. It's so the case. It's like last week my whole live stream was on audio. Okay, maybe this is a GPT-4 thing. Right, here I am on GPT-4. I've just put in the exact same prompt. I use separate conversation threads, da-da-da, so on. So it said chat GPT is ready for your prompt. So then I've said I'm planning a month-long business trip to the US. I want to create a travel GPT that will help me in planning my trip. And then it says certainly here is an optimized initial prompt for travel GPT that is specifically tailored to assist you with planning your thing. So basically what this is, that is the prompt that I would need to then put in to create that new thread. So I have one thread in my chat GPT that is this, that is my prompt engineer generator. And if ever I'm doing anything which is not like necessarily take one tech related, where I've already got my existing prompt and existing thread, but let's say there's something where I just want to do something like, I mean this is a real example, planning a trip to the US, then now that is the prompt to then create that second new thread, if that makes sense. And I don't know what happened with GPT-3 there, because you can see we've got a completely different answer where it was giving me coding and stuff like that. So yeah, chat GPT thought for all the way, but that has given me exactly what I need to put in. So that is how I would then go in and create a new, I'd copy that out, I'd create a new thread, a new conversation, and I would start with that. And then I could go in and give it my actual prompt, which is this. And it's telling me things that I could ask about as well. So it's not just giving me the prompt for creating the chat GPT, conditioning it, but it's then also giving me the follow on prompt, which is the questions that I might want to ask as well. So yeah, using it to tell you how to interact with itself is another little hack as well. Thank you very much. I'm glad you found this useful. Your topics are always only about step one ahead of what I'm currently on. So that's great. I'm glad to hear that they're helpful. And thanks again for stopping by, David. Well, well, on that almost tech failure on the last one or demo failure, I will leave it there before I do any more. Thanks for stopping by. Don't forget to check out that download in the link in the description. Thanks to all of my take one tech members and of course, to all of my Academy members as well, who I need to update this list actually know that I just look at it. Have a great week. Have a great day. See you all next time.