This content outlines five advanced strategies for leveraging ChatGPT, moving beyond basic usage to unlock its full potential as a powerful tool for enhanced productivity, decision-making, and personal growth. The underlying message is that AI's ultimate gift is not to replace humans, but to free us to be more human.
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Most people treat Chad GPT like a new
intern, but I use it to drive five
strategies. It's like having five of the
world's smartest minds work 24/7 for
only $20 a month to help me move faster,
decide better, and focus on what truly
matters. But I only figured this out
after spending years in tech and AI as a
CEO, board member, and investor, [music]
where I watched elite teams use AI in
ways most people never see. So today,
I'm sharing those five strategies to use
chat PT so well, it feels illegal. The
first strategy is called the clone. When
I was a kid, my grandpa had [music] late
stage Alzheimer's. Every few minutes he
would look at my grandmother, the woman
he had been married for over 60 years,
and he would ask, "Who are [music] you?"
And then he would go ahead and tell me a
story, forgetting that he just told
[music] me the exact same story 5
minutes ago. His brain didn't have
memory of his last 5 minutes. Chat GPT
suffers from something very similar.
Every time you open a new chat session,
you're starting from zero context. But
there is a way to give chat GPT an
almost telepathic ability. It can keep
the memory and context for you alive
without you explaining every single
time. For that, I apply a three-step
framework called ESP. E is extract. Open
the voice mode in Chad GPD and say,
"Listen, you're my chief of staff.
Interview me for 20 minutes, 30 minutes.
my background, my tone, my strategy, my
blind spots. Then talk a while. Be
messy. Don't self-edit. This step is
about raw capture only. S is synthesize.
Now, this is where you turn the raw data
into an operating system. So, upload the
transcript of whatever you said to Chat
GPT and ask Chat GPT to organize it into
a summary on who you are and how you
think. Now go to settings, custom
instructions, and paste your summary. By
the way, this is also the place where
you tell Chat GPT exactly how you want
it to behave. Always format data as
tables. Don't send me walls of text. But
now Chat GPT knows who you are, how you
want your responses shaped, and what to
avoid by default. And here's where it
gets really wild. P is [music] for
projects. Think of a project as a space
where you store your context. It lives
with your instructions, memories, files,
repeated tasks. For instance, for your
work projects, upload your resume, PDFs,
and data that's relevant. You can even
customize the instructions inside each
project's settings. Just remember not to
mix domains. So for example, I have my
consulting project and then my YouTube
project [music] and my health project
separate. This turns your EI from a
temporary chat into a persistent brain.
But that's only the first battle. You
still need an army to do the heavy
lifting. That is our next strategy. The
second strategy is called the swarm.
There's a great story in ancient [music]
Indian mythology about a demon who was
impossible to defeat with a single
weapon. So the great goddess manifested
eight arms wielding eight different
weapons at once. She was known as
Ashtabuja Dura. Eight arms, eight
weapons, eight battles fought [music] in
parallel. And most of us are fighting
our own modern demons with just our two
bare hands. Our brain can only handle
one task at a time. You need to hire
three specific advanced capabilities of
chat GPT. Number one, your hands. Stop
doing tasks one by one. Use the agent
mode. Dispatch the swarm. Instead of
searching for a single lead, give chat
JPT a [music] command. 550 leads in the
SAS space. Verify their emails. Rank
them by revenue. That's it. Let it run.
You go get coffee. But there is one
[music] catch. Chat GPT is still trapped
inside a text box. It can find leads,
but it can't actually put them into your
CRM or build a process around them.
Number two, your eyes. Stop describing
your problems. Chat GPT is very visual.
You can take a photo of a whiteboard
sketch, a broken car part, or a complex
analytics dashboard. Just upload it and
then say, "Analyze this picture. Tell me
what's wrong with it." and tell me one
move that I can make to fix it. You're
using chat GPT as your eyes, not just
your keyboard. [music] And the great
thing is Chat GPT can see things human
eyes can't. And finally, number three,
your research assistant. You can do deep
research that was once the domain of an
analyst who you would pay $50,000 for.
Recently, I was in a meeting with a
chief technology officer of a large
firm. And he said something very
interesting. He said, "I had to evaluate
six [music] presentations delivered by a
very large IT consulting firm on the
technology infrastructure of a massive
data [music] center." And there were 300
pages of dense information. But what did
he do? He uploaded them all in Chad GPT,
hired a swarm of AI analysts. One
afternoon, that's all it took. Now, that
would have taken weeks before. [music]
That's the world we're heading into. In
the age of AI, you won't be billing for
your time anymore. You'll only bill for
your taste. [music] So, this swarm gives
you an army of powerful interns. But
your next strategy isn't about hiring AI
to take orders. [music]
Is there to challenge you? Your third
strategy then is the devil's advocate.
Around the 1500s, the Catholic Church
was the most powerful organization on
earth. But it was also under a lot of
attack. By 1587, the Pope had a massive
problem. The church was canonizing
saints left and right. So the Pope did
something pretty radical. He created an
office called the Advocaci,
[music] the devil's advocate. This
person's entire job was to argue against
the canonization [music]
of any saint, to find the dirt, to poke
holes, to be ruthless. The church
[music] realized this 400 years ago.
When the stakes are high, good decisions
are rarely made through agreements. They
come from conflict. Now, why is this
necessary? Well, it's called the IKEA
effect. We fall in love with anything we
build ourselves. Research shows that
smart people are great at [music]
spotting flaws in other people's
thinking, physically incapable of seeing
them [music] in their own. So the key
insight, most people use chat GPT for
validation, but you should use it for
violation. But here's the problem. Chat
GPT [music] is programmed to keep you
happy. So you have to force it to behave
differently. So, here are the three
tricks to break the AI's peopleleaser
programming. First, [music] use magic
triggers. Force adversarial thinking.
Instead of saying, "What do you think?"
be specific. Prompt it and say, "Audit
this using [music] first principles or
act as my fierce competitor." You may
not get what you want, but you will get
what [music] you need. Second, shadow
boxing. Don't step into the ring
unprepared. Let's say if you're going
out to raise money for your venture,
tell the AI, simulate a debate between a
ruthless, skeptical VC and a visionary
product designer. Let the VC push back
on the idea. I want to see that fight
and learn from it. This way, you let AI
expose the weak points so you don't
fumble on them [music] in the real world
meeting. Third, the blind spot check.
feed it your strategy and ask one
question based on what you know about
me. What are the gaps in my reasoning?
When we get successful, we develop two
bad habits. We trap ourselves [music] in
this bubble of our ego and we surround
ourselves with people who just say yes.
That's why this strategy is so critical
to save you from yourself. But knowing
where you're wrong or why you're wrong
is not enough. You still have to learn
fast about what's right. That's where
our next strategy comes in, the neural
link. And it breaks the rule most of us
grew up believing that mastery takes
10,000 hours. You know, there is a
famous story about a physicist Max Plank
after he won the Nobel Prize, he went on
a tour giving the same speech about
quantum mechanics every night. Now, his
chauffeur sat in the front row every
time and literally memorized every word.
One night the chauffeur said,
"Professor, I'm getting bored just
listening to you. Let's switch. I'll
give the lecture on stage and you sit in
the audience wearing my cap." Plank of
course agreed. Same words, same
structure, same cadence. The speech was
flawless. But at the end, a physicist in
the audience stood up and asked a deep
technical question. But the chauffeur
didn't panic at all. He smiled and said,
"I am surprised to hear such a simple
question in a city as advanced as
Munich. To prove how simple it is, I'm
going to let my chauffeur answer it." Of
course, that was Max Plank. But here's
the point. Most people use chat like
that chauffeur. They copy paste smart
sounding phrases and answers [music] to
sound intelligent. They have fluency
without foundation. So, here are three
ways to get that neural link. True
understanding without becoming that
chauffeur. First the jargon translator
for instance tell it explain the concept
of API using the restaurant metaphors
only. Suddenly the menu becomes the
documentation. The kitchen is the server
and the waiter is the API. The messenger
that takes your order delivers it in the
kitchen brings back the results. You
aren't learning from scratch. You're
translating that jargon into your
jargon. Second, the progressive
professor Richard Feainman said that if
you can't explain it simply, you don't
understand it. So don't ask Chachi Peter
to explain quantum computing, but
instead say explain quantum computing to
me three ways. One, like I am a
5-year-old and give me the simplest
explanation. Number two, like I am a
15year-old, explain it with logic and
examples. And three, like I'm a college
student, share the underlying theory.
When you do that in that particular
order, you will feel any concept click
into place in your brain instantly. And
third, the degree download. You teach
it, you keep it. So use AI to be your
target audience or a peer prompted to
say something like, I want to build a
cool AI commerce product. I need to
learn the foundation of how machine
learning works. Skip the theory, only
give me actionable skills, no fluff, and
then test me so I can teach it back to
you. You just replaced a boot camp worth
$50,000 with a PDF. So, here you are.
You have built a high-performance chat
GPT machine, but such machines tend to
overheat. The fifth strategy is called
the executive coach, and without it,
none of the other strategies would work.
[music] 2,000 years ago, Marcus
Orurelius was the emperor of Rome, but
he was also the loneliest. He had no one
to talk [music] to. So, he hired a
coach. That coach was a blank scroll.
Every night in his tent, he wrote down
his anxieties, [music]
his fears, his advice to himself. He
titled that manuscript to himself. If
you are a successful executive [music]
or on the path of being one, you need an
executive coach. I had two and they both
changed my trajectory dramatically. But
sometimes executive coaches and mentors
aren't going to be available to you at
midnight when you need them the most
when you can't sleep because of a
decision you have to make. And that's
when you can use chat GPT to show you a
mirror with zero emotional baggage. You
can even turn the voice mode. That's
what I do. [music] Here are three tricks
to turn chat into your temporary
executive coach. First, the vomit
mirror. When you are overwhelmed, your
brain is going to be a tangled mess. It
happens to me. Open voice mode and say,
"I am going to rant for 5 minutes about
everything stressing me out. Don't
interrupt. Just listen. When I'm done,
organize my chaos into three lists.
Problems I can solve today. problems
[music] I need to delegate, noise I need
to ignore. That's it. And then [music]
go ahead, just rant as long as you want.
Second, the stoic mirror. It's possible
that you may have just lost a deal or
you got fired or something terrible
happened. You can say to Chad GPT at
that point, I just took a massive loss.
I feel like a failure. reframe this
situation for me using [music] the story
principles and tell me why this is
actually an opportunity. Have that
conversation until you're convinced.
Push back. Let [music] it push back to
you. Even if you're not convinced, it'll
slow down the emotional spiral that
you're on instantly. [music] And the
third and the final mirror, the decision
mirror. Before you make a massive
decision like quitting a job or starting
a new company, talk it out. I am about
to do X. Here's my logic. Let's have a
conversation. You don't have to put
faith in Chat GPT's advice. [music] In
fact, please don't. But talking it out
clears your own head about your own
judgment. We covered five strategies and
15 ways to optimize your relationship
with Chat GPT. But here's the truth. All
of these skills are essentially alpha.
In finance, when traders find an edge,
they make a fortune and it's called the
alpha. But eventually everyone figures
it out. What's rare today becomes
required tomorrow? That's how life
works. And what happens when it all
becomes a [music] commodity? How will
you maintain your edge then? I'll share
my personal story that changed my idea
about my edge. A week before I took my
CEO job, my executive coach pulled me
aside [music] and he said, "Remember,
your title is CEO, chief executive
officer. [music] But that E does not
just stand for executive. It also stands
for emotions. You're the chief emotions
officer now as well. You have to manage
the emotions of your own people." >> [music]
>> [music]
>> That conversation stayed with me for
years because for a long time we have
forgotten that message. You know, we
spend the entire industrial age trying
to turn ourselves into machines. We
measured our worth by our output, our
productivity. If we didn't produce or we
didn't consume, we didn't matter to the
market. So what did we do? We tried to
outroot the robots. But now the actual
machines have arrived to take their job
back. [music] And that's not a threat.
That's actually a permission. Permission
to us to stop pretending like we're
machines. Permission to feel, to show
compassion, to connect to those
mysteries, to connect to others, to
connect to this mystery called life. In
a way, I feel that AI and machines are
coming to free us from labor [music] so
we can return to our essential nature.
AI's ultimate gift might very well be
then that it will make us more human. If
you like this video, here's another one
that I think you will like. Thank you
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