Explaining & Entertaining - announcing three new AI courses
Dave Birss
Author of The Sensible AI Manifesto | Check out my LinkedIn Learning courses
I've been quiet for a few weeks. And I want to explain myself.
Three months ago(-ish) LinkedIn Learning launched my 'How to Research and Write Using Generative AI Tools' course. It went on to be hugely popular, so they asked me to do some more courses. Initially it was five more. Then eight. And I'm not quite sure where we are now.
On Friday, the first three of these courses shuffled onto the platform.
Yes, three courses. In one day. I can't believe it myself!
They are:
All of them share some handy-dandy prompts that you can use immediately in your role. And I hope you find them super-useful.
I'm already getting some lovely feedback for them - but I'd love to know what you think. All opinions welcome!
I'm still beavering away on the next courses. But in the spirit of this newsletter, I want to share with you how I create my courses. Because I've only recently realised the way I create them is by pure experimentation.
Let me explain.
Prompt engineering is a new skill. There are no best practices to lean on. There are no official textbooks to crib from. There are no real experts (I define myself as an explorer rather than an expert). So I have no choice but to play around in my efforts to discover how best to use it. Here are some ways I do that.
Try out other people's approaches
I started by watching lots of YouTube videos and devouring every blog post I could find on the subject. Most of them were pretty awful but there were some gems in there. I tried out lots of prompts to see what worked best. And I was soon able to separate the smart thinkers from the charlatans. I then spent time refining the approaches to improve them further. This was a big part of my early journey.
Hunt for the principles
When I'm trying out approaches and developing my own methods, I look for patterns and learnings. I ask questions and keep my eyes open for the unexpected. I note down what I learn and then use those to develop frameworks. This takes curiosity and observation. And a fair amount of head scratching.
Develop hypotheses and test them
I give myself plenty of opportunities to ask "I wonder if...". This is a vital part of the process to me. I've currently got a few hypotheses that I'm waiting to test. How does your level of politeness impact the quality of responses? Do different languages lead to different qualities of response? Do bad grammar and spelling errors have an impact on your responses? I'm currently trying to work out ways of testing them. (If you speak another language, please get in touch so that we can test the language one together!)
领英推荐
In recent weeks, this has led me to a new analogy for what I do. I now see myself as a jungle explorer who hacks through the foliage hunting for knowledge. When I find it I run back and make a map for the group to make it easier for them to get there.
It may sound stupid or pretentious but it's helping me understand my own process better.
How do you learn new stuff? I'd love to hear your approach.
Join me to discuss AI for your role
This week I'm on two LinkedIn Lives to talk about Generative AI. And I'd love it if you'd join me and maybe ask some questions.
The first one is tomorrow. It's a chat with Bonnie Biafore , Christina Charenkova and Doug Rose about AI in the context of project management. If that's your thing, click on the image to book a place - or click here .
The second one is on Thursday, where I'll be chatting to Tatiana Kolovou about AI in the context of communications. I'll be sharing some tips and maybe even some free prompts to help you. Please join us and try to stump me with a difficult question. Again, click on the image to book your place - or click here .
Fancy a free weekly prompt in your inbox?
It's simple. Sign up to the Promptly Yours newsletter right here .
This article is part of the?Experiments in Creativity?newsletter,?which examines the frontiers of creative thinking and creative work. Often that involves a bit of science or technology. If you want more of this kind of thing, you can?subscribe?to get notified when a new article posts .
If you want to learn more about what I talk about, check out my courses on?LinkedIn Learning ?and?davebirss.com. ?If you haven't signed up already, it's a good idea to start with my?FREE Creative Bootcamp course .
If you'd like to book me for a talk or training session, send an email to?[email protected]
Technical Writing & Copywriting -- for Geeks or Civilians
1 年Re the language thing: it might be interesting to try the following, for example: 1) Give the robot a passage in English. Something interesting. (Or how about A Clockwork Orange? Significant amount of gibberish.) 2) Ask it to translate the passage from English into French. 3) Now translate it from French to Mandarin. 4) Now translate it from Mandarin to Arabic. 5) Now translate it from Arabic to English. 6) How close is that final English-language translation to the original English-language passage?
Dublador | Narrador de Audiolivro | Artista de Voz | Locutor | Tradutor para dublagem | MBA em Gest?o do Entretenimento
1 年(If you speak another language, please get in touch so that we can test the language one together!) Hi, If you want to test this bias, I'm a Brazilian voice actor and translator. Just get in touch.
Account Coordinator at Inspired Thinking Group (ITG)
1 年Glad to have found your courses showcasing how to build powerful prompts to get improved outcomes. Many other courses offer simple prompts that the average person could input and they offer little to no value. Thanks Dave Birss!
Marketing professional
1 年This looks great - and the pic is awesome!!!
Organizational Change Educator & Speaker / Strategic Change Leadership Coach & Mentor / LinkedIn Learning Instructor to 300,000+ professionals / Ex-Accenture, EY
1 年Congrats on the 3 new course releases Dave - can’t wait to get stuck in!