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AI Automations Accelerators

224 members • $97/m

AI For Social Good

151 members • $27/m

5 contributions to AI For Social Good
Exciting personal update - Kinetic Sculpture Installation
Happy Friday Everyone! Before AI. Before nonprofits. Before all of this… I used to invent stuff as a professional inventor. One of my projects I'm most proud of was collaborating with a kinetic sculptor named Amos Robinson in San Diego. I just found out that one of the pieces we worked on got installed in the public! It’s a set of infinity mirrors, spinning on a 10-foot pedestal. I'm super excited and wanted to share with you all.
1 like • Jun 26
Congratulations Kevin, this is so exciting.
Email Formatting using ChatGPT
When I travel for work, our travel agency sends us this convoluted email that's barely legible ( see attached photo ). So, I wrote an automation in Make.com that uses ChatGPT to reformat the email into a legible table ( see attached photos). It took some testing to get the prompt just right but I'm happy with the result. If anything is unclear, let me know. Hope this helps you 🙏
Email Formatting using ChatGPT
2 likes • Feb 12
Jonathan, I am dating myself here, but these are old school US Gov. DOD contractor PDF travel itinerary emails. I had no idea they were still using these. I have an amazing template, I will need to dig up that transforms these into perfect phone screen shots. Give me a few days to dig it up but it is ridiculous that they are still using this as an end user product.
AI Sounds too much like AI? Here is how to solve it.
Have you seen something written online and think.... "Yeah...that sounds like AI writing". Or maybe you have used ChatGPT only to get a generic output that is a total "Game Changer" There are certain trigger words that I see that signal to me that something is written by AI. And there is an easy way to instantly improve the writing from AI. Give instructions to never use these really common AI words. To make it easier, I'm made a list of all the words to omit. You can use this list at the start of the conversation or add it to a custom GPT to improve your results. Here's a link to the list that is always updated https://quirky-pullover-693.notion.site/Words-to-Omit-in-ChatGPT-e5e7cdb5698240bb8c5670a0c025cd59?pvs=4 ---------------------------------------------------------- Or you can just copy and past the list below: ___________________________________ #Words to Omit (Avoid using the following words) Avoid using the word "multifaceted" Avoid using the word "reshaping" Avoid using the word "ensures" Avoid using the word "boon" Avoid using the word "vast" Avoid using the word "vastly" Avoid using the word "keen" Avoid using the word "numerous" Avoid using the word "frontier" Avoid using the word "quest" Avoid using the word "revolutionizing" Avoid using the word "striking" Avoid using the word "melds" Avoid using the word "plethora" Avoid using the phrase "beacon of hope" Avoid using the word "luxuries" Avoid using the word "supercharge" Avoid using the word "powerhouse" Avoid using the word "shadowed" Avoid using the word "goldmine" Avoid using the word "spellbinding" Avoid using the word "turbocharge" Avoid using the word "wizard" Avoid using the word "shackles" Avoid using the word "soar" Avoid using the phrase "Treasure trove" Avoid using the word "thrilling" Avoid using the word "triumph"
1 like • Feb 7
I think hootsuit has a list too, I will add here if I find some not included here. Good list, thank you for sharing.
AI For Grant Writing: Scoring using AI
HOW TO: Use AI to improve your grant writing by scoring your grant against the rubric and provide suggested improvements It is easy to get bogged down in a complicated grant narrative And forget to compare what you have written directly the rubric To ensure it address the exact points that the reviewers want to see But it is possible to use AI to speed up this process without losing your unique voice and skill as a grant writer. Here's the process I follow: - First, I give AI some initial instructions and context. "You will act as an expert grant reviewer and the goal of this conversation is to improve the grant based on the scoring rubric." - Second, I give it the current draft of my grant narrative. - Third, I copy and paste the scoring rubric. This is key so the AI knows exactly what standards it’s trying to meet. The real power happens when AI scores the draft based on the rubric - It points out where you're doing great - And where there’s room for improvement Lastly, ask the the AI to rewrite the section of the grant with the improvements it identified The most important part of the process is reviewing its suggestions and tweaking them with your expertise. At the end of the day, it’s all about combining AI’s efficiency with human oversight to create a stronger grant narrative. Curious to see how it works? Try following this guide on a grant your working on. It's not always perfect but it can provide some great insights to ultimately let you submit a better grant in less time.
AI For Grant Writing: Scoring using AI
1 like • Oct '24
Kevin, thanks for saying this. The more I use AI, the more I truly believe AI is a great Human cooperative partnership. It needs very little guidance once it completely understands the goals and perimeters…but those are set, reviewed, enhanced by humans, in this case, the grant writer/reviewer. I feel, I would be remiss, if I did not mention that at the very beginning, I like to give the AI a long leash prompt in a way that lets the AI write the grant, based on whatever knowledge base I gave it. I almost ask it to write it like it is writing me a storybook, lead me down a path where there are endless possibilities for my project if I were to receive the grant. I do this not because, I want the AI to write the grant but to possibly spark a pitch avenue that I had not thoughT to include. Sort of like having a brainstorming session with your team, for a staff of one. Just my two unsolicited cents. Have a great day everyone. Michelle
Forests
Aloha, I am Michelle Rios born/raised in Austin, Texas, most of my adult life anchored in Washington, DC, in 2017 semi-retired to Honolulu with my amazing husband(born here) of 23 years and our 2 rescue dogs. We love turtles and trees. Hubby is Executive Director of Hawaii Forest Industry Association. So I volunteer on their committee for wood artisan show and creating Digital Assets for their membership. I have just started making Chat Bots and Chat Agents to automate their social media and act as their assistant to handle phone calls and emails. They are foresters and most of them are quite terrible at digital anything. They much prefer to be outside.
1 like • Sep '24
So we lived in DC a for 25 years. We would have. NEVER left our windows open while we were gone and the idea of no AC was insane. Now, in Hawaii we have AC but until this year we really turned it on, the humidity has been insane. And even though we have 36 windows on the front side of the house have them closed is making me bananas. So yes, fresh air and 6 minutes to the ocean, even if I don’t go, knowing I can, seems to do wonders for my state of mind. Right now, w are using discounted Chatbots as a membership perk for the association. But I am launching a SMS Chat Agent next week for small business owners who can’t always answer the phone. If you miss a call, and they leave their phone number the Chat Agent texts them to say owner “soSo” is not available right now but he/she asked me to reach out to you, “how they can help?” It can answer programmed FAQ and set appointments. So a personal assistant but for $6.54 cents a day.
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Michelle Rios
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@michelle-rios-3387
Latina from Austin, Texas, BA: Mass Comm. Spent 25 years in D.C. Travel for rare rum. Happily married 24 years, 2 rescue dogs. Semi-retired in Hawaii.

Active 76d ago
Joined Sep 16, 2024
Hawaii
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