0:02 Most people use Chat GPT like it's a
0:03 smarter Google. But what if I told you
0:05 that you could run your business,
0:07 improve your mindset, and even fix your
0:09 money problems automatically? These are
0:12 14 insane ways to use chat GPT that
0:13 honestly feels like cheating and
0:15 nobody's talking about them. So, let's
0:17 get into it. FYI, I'm going to give you
0:19 a lot of information in a minute, but I
0:20 want you to know that I've given you all
0:22 the prompts for it. So, you may feel
0:24 overwhelmed, but if you go in the link
0:25 in the description, you get all of the
0:27 prompts. So you can just click the link
0:28 and get all of those and you'll know
0:30 exactly what to put into chat GPT to get
0:32 these outputs that I talk about. The
0:34 first one is your decision audit engine.
0:36 If you're anything like me, you struggle
0:37 to make decisions. I feel like most
0:39 entrepreneurs have very busy brains and
0:41 sometimes it can be really hard to make
0:42 fast decisions and fast decisions is
0:45 honestly the route to success. So what I
0:48 do is I go to chat GPT. I log all of my
0:50 business decisions, but I also get it to
0:51 challenge me. So I say, "I'm thinking
0:53 about this. What do you think about
0:55 this? Is this a good move?" Because I've
0:57 already trained my chat GBT on all of my
0:58 vision and my goals and things like
1:00 that, which I'm going to show you in a
1:02 second, it really knows whether the
1:03 decisions that I'm trying to make are
1:04 actually in line with the vision and the
1:06 goals that I want. So, when I use this
1:08 decision audit engine, it really helps
1:09 me to see things from a different
1:12 perspective. And sometimes if chat GPT
1:13 tells me not to do something, I take it
1:15 a lot better than when my husband tells
1:16 me. It just lands a little bit
1:18 different, right? So, for example,
1:20 recently I was trying to figure out if I
1:21 should do something. It was a big
1:22 investment and I really wanted to do it.
1:24 Chat GBT came back to me and said, "Do
1:26 you know what, Carly? This sounds like
1:27 it's an ego play. I don't think you
1:29 should do this." Oh, if my husband said
1:32 that to me, he would be out. But for
1:34 Chat GBT, I was like, "Okay, fair play.
1:36 Let's let's move on." So, a decision
1:38 order engine is really, really good for
1:39 making fast decisions and moving
1:42 quickly. The second one is your AI
1:44 playbook generator. So, this is where
1:47 you can create all of your SOPs about
1:49 everything that you do dayto-day. The
1:50 reason this is important is if you ever
1:52 want to sell your business, you are not
1:53 going to be able to sell your business
1:55 without these SOPs in place. So you
1:57 don't want to be scrambling and trying
1:58 to figure out how do I actually do all
2:00 of this stuff and trying to document it.
2:02 Also though, if you don't want to sell
2:03 your business, but you don't want to be
2:05 tied to your business, you need to make
2:07 sure that you are replaceable. And so
2:08 the best way of doing that is by
2:10 creating these SOPs. It means that when
2:12 you do come to hire more people to
2:14 eventually move you out of the business,
2:16 handing that over feels a lot more
2:17 comfortable and you know it's going to
2:19 be done to a certain standard. Now,
2:21 doing these SOPs, even the word makes me
2:23 want to fall asleep. But the best way of
2:26 doing this is by doing a loom, recording
2:27 your screen in real time while you do
2:29 that task, then you can take that loom,
2:31 take the transcript, put it into chat
2:33 GPT, and it's going to generate loads of
2:35 SOPs for you, and eventually you can
2:37 build up your whole stack. So, if you
2:38 want a business that eventually runs
2:40 without you or if you want to sell, you
2:41 definitely need to do this one. The
2:44 third one is cold DM sharpening. Now,
2:45 back in my network marketing days, I was
2:48 the queen of cold DMing. I'd be like,
2:49 "Hey, girl." Just sliding into people's
2:52 DMs. And honestly, I look back at some
2:53 of those messages now and I think, "What
2:55 were you doing? Why on earth did you say
2:58 that?" So, now we have our little secret
3:00 AI genius where we can go to chat GPT
3:02 and we can say, "Can you help craft
3:04 these cold DMs for me?" It's going to
3:06 know your ICP. It's going to know your
3:07 audience. It knows this person really
3:09 well, but it also has your brand voice.
3:11 So, you can actually get much better
3:13 cold outreach messages than that
3:15 absolute crap I was putting out before.
3:17 But also, if you do then have some
3:19 conversations that go really well, for
3:22 example, I sell my AI audits a lot of
3:24 the time through DMing, you can take a
3:26 conversation that went really well and
3:28 you can put that through your cold DM
3:30 sharpener and you can say, "Why did this
3:32 work? Can you give me feedback on this?
3:33 Can you give me the framework of how
3:35 this conversation went?" and let's use
3:38 this framework in future. The fourth one
3:41 is your dream to action pipeline. You
3:42 know when you're laying in bed, maybe
3:44 this is just me, but I lay in bed and
3:45 all my bright ideas come to me at
3:47 nighttime and I'm like, this is why I
3:49 actually have a whiteboard. I have a
3:51 whiteboard next to my bed because in the
3:53 night I wake up and I'm like, I need to
3:55 do this now. And so I just go on my
3:57 whiteboard and I write it out. What you
3:59 can do is in the morning, if this is
4:01 still something that's burning in you
4:02 and this is still something that you
4:04 want to do, you can go to chat GPT. You
4:05 can give it your one-year goal and it's
4:08 going to give you a 30 to 60, 90-day
4:10 plan broken down into all the tasks that
4:12 you need to do, including all of the
4:14 KPIs as well. Sometimes something can
4:16 feel like a really big goal and you
4:18 think, "Oh, how on earth do I even get
4:19 there?" And it's going to break down
4:21 that whole thing for you. So, I always
4:23 do this when I'm setting myself a big
4:25 juicy goal. The next one is AI board of
4:27 advisers. Now, I've actually got a whole
4:29 video on this. I'll link it in this and
4:30 it's how to build your team of AI
4:32 employees. So you could have something
4:34 like a financial advisor, sales and
4:37 marketing expert, a copywriter, all of
4:38 the people that you would love to have
4:40 as actual team members. You can build
4:43 these out as AI employees, but you can
4:45 even go further than that. So imagine if
4:47 Alex Wimoszi was sitting in your office
4:49 every day and he was like, "Right,
4:50 Carly, now we're going to do this." And
4:52 you just wanted to talk to him all the
4:53 time. Mine would be Daniel Briley. If he
4:55 came and sat with me all the time, I
4:57 feel like I would be absolutely flying.
4:59 And this actually happened with me. So,
5:02 when I was on holiday, I was reading Dan
5:04 Martell's book, Buy Back Your Time.
5:05 Really recommend, by the way. And it was
5:07 really helping me to see my business
5:08 differently and see how I wanted to
5:10 change things in my business to get
5:12 myself out of it more. And so, I had all
5:14 these ideas, as you naturally do when
5:16 you go away on holiday, and you have
5:17 space to actually think for the first
5:20 time. And my head was so busy, I just
5:22 couldn't make sense of all these ideas
5:24 that were coming to me. So, I created
5:26 Dan Martell in AI form as one of my
5:28 board of adviserss. And then I was
5:30 sitting on the sun sun lounger and I was
5:32 chatting to Dan and I was saying I'm
5:33 thinking about doing this. What do you
5:35 think? And in line with the book that
5:36 he'd written that I knew that I wanted
5:39 to follow, he gave me advice he on how I
5:41 should move forward. So if you want to
5:43 be the next YouTube star, you could get
5:45 Mr. Beast to advise you. If you want to
5:49 be the most amazing chef, you could get
5:51 Gordon Ramsay to advise you. Whatever it
5:52 is that you want, you could build your
5:54 board of adviserss based on actual real
5:56 people. You feed them their book, their
5:58 videos, their YouTube stuff, and they're
5:59 going to start to actually train you and
6:02 advise you. Love this one. The next one
6:05 is the offer builder assistant. This is
6:07 really cool because sometimes I can put
6:09 an offer out and I think it's a really
6:11 good offer, but actually it's not what
6:13 my ideal client wants. So before I put
6:15 anything out, whether it's a coaching
6:17 program, a membership, a SAS product, I
6:19 will actually go to my offer builder
6:21 assistant and I will describe my
6:22 product, describe my audience, and
6:24 describe the problem that I'm trying to
6:26 solve. And then the GPT will give me
6:28 advice back and it will put it through
6:31 Alex Hozy's $100 million offers
6:33 framework. Then I can get actual
6:35 feedback on whether this is a good offer
6:37 or not. I don't have to just cross my
6:39 fingers and hope. I'm actually putting
6:40 it through a proper framework, which I
6:42 know works. And it means that I can
6:44 tweak it and it will say something like,
6:46 "Add a bonus here. Add a bit of urgency
6:47 there. Why don't you try this?" And it
6:48 just gives me so much confidence to know
6:50 that this offer that I'm putting out
6:52 actually has meat behind it. There is a
6:54 reason why I'm doing all of these things
6:55 and I'm not just chucking stuff in and
6:58 hoping that it works. The next one is
7:01 the emotional debrief partner. Woo, this
7:03 is a good one. So, you know when you've
7:04 just had a really day and you're
7:06 like your brain is all over the place
7:08 and everything just feels heavy and
7:09 sometimes, I mean, as a woman, sometimes
7:11 I'm like, I feel and I don't know
7:13 why I feel and I can't make sense
7:14 of my head. I know that happens for
7:16 everyone as well. So, with the emotional
7:19 debrief partner, you can voice note your
7:21 thoughts and feelings and how you're
7:23 feeling and it will extract the lessons
7:25 and shift your perspective. So, if
7:27 you're into journaling, this is kind of
7:28 another way of doing it. You can go off
7:30 on a walk. I recommend going on a walk
7:32 anyway if you've had a day. But go
7:35 off on a walk, voice note into chat GBT,
7:36 talk about what's going on. It doesn't
7:38 need to make sense. You literally just
7:41 word bomb it into this chat GBT and it's
7:42 going to start to help you make sense.
7:44 It's going to ask you certain questions
7:46 just like a therapist would to help you
7:48 get some clarity on that, but also help
7:50 you understand the lesson in something
7:51 that may have been particularly hard
7:54 that day. So, this really helps reduce
7:57 the noise in my head, regulate my kind
7:59 of nervous system and get me back to a
8:01 base level and then keep moving forward.
8:04 Next one is the contract simplifier. I
8:05 don't know about you, but if I see a
8:07 contract and loads of text on a white
8:09 background, I'm like, I just don't want
8:12 to look at that. My brain completely
8:13 switches out. And I'm also not great at
8:15 spotting things. I don't know all the
8:16 legal jargon and stuff like that. I
8:17 don't really know what to look out for.
8:19 So, with the contract simplifier, you
8:22 can actually put in the contract. It's
8:23 going to rewrite it in plain English,
8:25 all that really fancy language. It's
8:27 going to highlight the red flags and
8:28 it's going to give you smart questions
8:31 that you need to ask back. This helps me
8:33 so much and it's got me out of a lot of
8:35 sticky situations and it really helps me
8:36 understand what I'm getting into. So, if
8:38 you don't like all that kind of legal
8:40 stuff, then this is a great one for you.
8:42 The next one is AI visual board
8:44 designer. Now, this one's a little bit
8:47 woo. Back in my network marketing days,
8:49 I used to just woo woo my way through
8:51 everything. I'd be like, if I just sit
8:53 here and manifest everything, everything
8:55 will come to me. Little teaser for you.
8:57 Um, that doesn't happen. You actually do
8:59 have to do the work. But there is still
9:01 a little bit of woo in me. And I like to
9:02 see a visual of what I'm looking to
9:05 create. So below my whiteboard in my
9:06 bedroom, I also have my vision board.
9:08 And I used to sit and cut and paste and
9:10 stick it all together. But now you can
9:13 use AI. So you can use a GPT and
9:16 midJourney to create images of your
9:18 dream life and turn them into a digital
9:20 vision board. So, you can just say, "I
9:23 want to move to IBA. I want to earn 100K
9:25 a month. I want to have this incredible
9:27 woman's body." If you're a man, I
9:28 probably wouldn't [clears throat] do
9:29 that, but you know what I mean. Um, so
9:31 you're going to put on whatever it is
9:32 that you want. It's going to have a
9:34 whole collage of what it is that you are
9:35 creating, and then every day you can
9:37 look at that and it hasn't taken you
9:39 loads of time to do it. The next one is
9:42 your client avatar generator. This is so
9:44 important. And whenever I talk to my
9:46 coaching students about this, they
9:47 always roll their eyes and they're like,
9:49 "Oh, yeah. ideal client profile, but
9:51 it's so important. If you are spending
9:53 all this time writing cold emails and DM
9:55 scripts and creating YouTube videos and
9:57 doing all of this stuff, but you don't
9:59 know who you're speaking to, that is
10:01 going to completely fall flat. So, a
10:03 client avatar generator is really going
10:05 to help you build a hyperdetailed
10:07 customer avatar, their pain points,
10:09 their objections, their desires, their
10:11 decision-making style. And something
10:13 else that you can do as a another part
10:16 of this is use an outcome finder. So
10:18 whenever again whenever I'm creating a
10:19 product or something like that, I will
10:21 always do an outcome finder and I do a
10:23 little exercise to see what is the
10:26 number one outcome that my ideal client
10:28 avatar wants. Once I know that ideal
10:30 client avatar, it really helps me find
10:32 out what that outcome is and then all of
10:34 my content lands so much better. So this
10:36 is a really important one. Do not skip
10:37 over this if you feel like this bit's
10:40 boring. Super super important. The next
10:43 one is your sales call analyzer. So, you
10:45 need to be analyzing your sales calls in
10:47 order to know how to make them better.
10:48 There is no point in doing hundreds of
10:50 sales calls a month, and you really have
10:52 no idea what's made it a good one and
10:54 what's not. There is a formula to these.
10:56 So, what you can do is you can take the
10:58 Zoom transcript or the Google Meet
11:00 transcript, whatever it is that you use,
11:01 put that into your chatbt and it's going
11:04 to pull out the key pain points, the key
11:05 objections, the missed pitches, the
11:07 follow-up steps, and the script
11:09 improvement. So, it's going to help to
11:10 train you and your sales team to be
11:15 better, but also that is gold. If you
11:18 can summarize the main pain points and
11:19 objections that your ideal clients are
11:21 giving you on these calls, you can then
11:23 plug that into your marketing GPT and
11:25 use that in your marketing as well. So,
11:27 don't go just willy-nilly doing all
11:28 these sales calls and not actually
11:30 analyzing them because there is so much
11:33 gold in them. The next one is your
11:36 content machine. Your content machine is
11:37 not just like, "Hey, can you create me a
11:39 LinkedIn post?" What it's going to do is
11:41 actually ask you questions about your
11:43 life stories. The real depth of your
11:45 personal brand and your IP is in your
11:47 life stories. It's in you. It's in
11:49 things that only you have. And as we
11:51 move into the world of AI where
11:52 everything is just going to be so kind
11:56 of surface level AI generated, we need
11:59 to double down on authenticity, life
12:01 stories, what makes you unique. And this
12:03 is a really good prompt that's going to
12:04 help you do that. So, it's going to ask
12:06 you questions about your life stories
12:08 and turn them into a piece of content
12:10 which is like point, story, and the
12:13 lesson. This is super powerful content.
12:15 And if you can use this to extract it
12:17 from you, you're probably thinking, I
12:18 haven't got a life story. I don't know
12:20 what I would say. Nothing really
12:21 happened to me. Nothing's really that
12:24 interesting. There is so many stories
12:25 that you probably have completely
12:26 disregarded because you think that
12:28 they're boring. But this exercise really
12:30 helps pull them out of you and actually
12:32 turn them into really valuable content.
12:33 And one of the most important things to
12:34 focus on when you're creating content
12:37 today is to create content that is
12:39 relatable. If someone relates to you,
12:41 they are going to be much more likely to
12:43 work with you than if they are impressed
12:45 by you. So relatability is a really key
12:47 thing and sharing your life stories and
12:49 sharing these things about you that only
12:51 you have is a really great way of doing
12:53 that. The next one is your risk analysis
12:55 buddy. Now I am terrible at risk
12:57 analysis. I'm always like glasses half
12:59 full. And so I'm like, "Yeah, it'll be
13:00 fine. We'll figure it out. I think
13:02 everything is figure outable. So
13:04 whenever I see a risk, I'm always
13:06 naturally thinking of, yeah, but if that
13:07 happens, I can do that and that will be
13:09 fine. But really, you need to have a
13:11 good level of risk analysis. So what you
13:13 can do is you can go into chat GBT here
13:16 in your risk analysis buddy. You can
13:18 describe a risky decision and the chat
13:20 GBT is going to break down the pros and
13:22 the cons of that but also point out
13:24 risks which you may not be able to see
13:26 yourself and it will kind of like
13:29 roleplay what the scenario is if this
13:31 thing is to happen. I never do that. I'm
13:33 a positive role player. I'm like yeah
13:35 you know if it goes wrong it'll be fine.
13:37 But actually if you're going into
13:38 business and you're making some big
13:40 decisions you need to see all angles of
13:43 how this could go. So your risk analysis
13:44 buddy is really going to help you do
13:46 that. And the last one is to roleplay
13:49 tough conversations. This is super
13:51 powerful. This is good in business if
13:53 you are someone that tends to kind of
13:56 avoid uncomfortable conversations and
13:57 there's stuff that you need to say but
13:58 you don't want to say it because you
13:59 don't want to offend people or you want
14:00 to be nice. Maybe there's someone that
14:02 you need to fire. Maybe there's someone
14:03 that you need to pull up on something
14:05 and you don't know how to have that
14:06 conversation. You can come into your
14:09 chat GPT and you can simulate
14:11 conversations with your employees, with
14:12 your clients, with your partners and you
14:15 can practice the responses before the
14:17 real talk. So this is super super cool
14:19 and you can even take this further. So
14:22 you could then say this is what they are
14:24 like as a person and you can describe
14:25 the person that you're trying to have
14:27 this tough conversation with and it's
14:29 going to give you the language and the
14:31 way to frame it in a way that's going to
14:33 match their personality. I'll give you a
14:35 random example of this. So, a friend of
14:37 mine, she has a grown-up son, so he's
14:40 like in his 30s. And she was saying to
14:42 me, "I'm really struggling to get him to
14:44 communicate with me, you know, she was
14:46 messaging him all the time, like, I'm so
14:47 proud of you. You do so much, blah,
14:48 blah, blah." These really long
14:50 paragraphs. And he would just reply back
14:53 like, "Thanks." And she was like, "How
14:54 do I get something from him? I feel like
14:56 he's not even hearing what I'm saying."
14:58 So, she went into her chat. She
15:00 described what he was like as a
15:02 character. She put in some of their past
15:04 chats of things that she had said and
15:06 things that he'd said and really gave
15:08 ChachBC an idea of who he is as a
15:11 person. And she said, "I just want him
15:12 to know that I'm proud of him and I
15:14 really love him." Chat GBC came back and
15:16 said, "Why don't you try saying this?"
15:19 No joke, God's on his truth. She put in
15:21 the message word for word that Chat GBT
15:23 came back with and her son within
15:25 literally within 30 seconds came back
15:27 and said, "Thanks, Mom. I really love
15:28 you, too."
15:30 That may not seem like a lot, but when
15:31 you have grown up children that don't
15:33 show you any emotion at all, she was
15:35 literally like crying. She was like, I
15:36 feel like he's actually heard me. He
15:38 hasn't said I love you in years. And it
15:40 was the best thing. So whether this is
15:43 children, employees, husbands, wives,
15:45 whatever, if you feel like there is a
15:47 communication block, then use chat GBT
15:50 to describe that person and see how you
15:52 may be able to communicate better. It
15:53 doesn't mean that you have to run every
15:55 conversation through chat GPT. It's not
15:57 like your husband's going to walk in and
15:58 say something to you and you're like,
16:00 "Oh, hold on, hold on. Let me just It's
16:01 not going to be like that, but it's
16:03 going to help you to learn how to
16:05 communicate better." So, if it comes
16:07 back with a response and it works, go
16:09 back to chat GBT and say, "That really
16:11 worked. Why did that work? Can you help
16:13 train me to communicate like this all
16:15 the time?" So, that is a lot. We covered
16:16 a lot, right? But there are so many ways
16:19 that you can use chat GBT apart from
16:20 being like, "How do you cook chicken in
16:22 an air fryer?" Does anyone use chatbt
16:24 for cooking by the way? I do all the
16:26 time. Great for recipes. That's another
16:28 one. By the way, I'm going to give you a
16:30 little bonus one. Another one is when
16:32 I've done this before. I've gone into my
16:34 cupboard. I'm the worst cook ever, by
16:35 the way. But I've gone into my cupboard
16:37 at home and there's been like no food in
16:39 the cupboard. I've taken a picture of it
16:40 and I've said, "What can I cook with
16:42 this?" And it came back with some full
16:46 Mediterranean chicken pasta thing.
16:47 Nailed it. Kurt came home from work and
16:49 I was like, "Tada!" He was well
16:51 impressed. So, if you're at cooking
16:53 as well, then there you go. little bonus
16:55 one for you. So anyway, I want to give
16:57 you a call to action today. I want you
17:00 to pick one of these tactics and try it
17:01 today. Think about the things that I've
17:03 talked about. Always start with the
17:04 thing that's going to have the biggest
17:06 impact on you. Now, which area of all of
17:08 those things I've spoken about causes
17:09 you the most stress, the most struggle,
17:11 the most pain, the most whatever, and
17:13 start with that one thing. And I want
17:15 you to comment below which one you're
17:17 starting with. And if you want my custom
17:18 prompts, all you need to do is click the
17:20 link in description. You can get all of
17:22 my custom prompts there so you can start
17:24 using these and you'll be off on your
17:26 merry way. I'm so excited for you to
17:27 dive into these. They're going to have a
17:29 massive impact for you and I cannot wait
17:31 to hear how you get on. I'll see you