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Maker School

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The AI Advantage

69.9k members • Free

34 contributions to The AI Advantage
Hi everyone, I know I'm not the only one who's been banging my head against the wall trying to fix scattered AI project context and lost decisions.
After a lot of trial and error, I think I've finally found a simple fix. I wanted to share it in case it's helpful for anyone else (it should cost less than $10/m): Here's the simple guide: 1. First, set up a Notion database with 4 columns: "Project," "Decision," "Why It Worked," "Date." 2. Next, after each AI session (ChatGPT, Claude, etc.), spend 2 minutes logging what you decided and why. 3. Finally, tag each entry by project so you can search it when you come back weeks later. The problem I kept hitting: coming back to projects after a few weeks and having NO IDEA why I made certain decisions or which prompts actually worked. Felt like starting from scratch every time. This tiny system is helping me keep context without burning hours re-learning my own work. I really hope this helps save someone the headache! 🙏 Happy to chat more if you need a walkthrough.
Is ChatGPT Health healthy?
ChatGPT Health is led by Instagram’s former VP of Product. The person who spent 12 years optimizing for engagement at Instagram and Meta - keeping you scrolling, clicking, coming back - is now designing OpenAI tools for health decisions. What do you think can be the consequences? And do you use AI for your health?
Is ChatGPT Health healthy?
1 like • 2d
@Diana Skipper Szyper Critical thinking is the missing layer most people skip when using AI for health research. The surface-level use is the real risk—people ask "why does my chest hurt," get a generic answer, and either panic or ignore it instead of actually seeing a doctor. Teaching people to question AI outputs (especially in high-stakes areas like health) is probably more valuable than the AI itself right now. What's the biggest pattern you've noticed with students using AI without critical thinking? Accepting the first answer, or not knowing what follow-up questions to ask?
0 likes • 7h
@Diana Skipper Szyper That's the core issue—people expect AI to understand their context without actually giving it proper context. Same problem in prompting, same problem in communication. For health specifically, that's dangerous. Vague input → vague output → bad decisions.
Hi everyone, Anyone else struggling with keeping AI project context organized across multiple tools?
I've found it really hard over the last couple of weeks, and I have a feeling a bunch of you are in the same boat. I'm thinking about how to solve it. Here's the process I'm working through right now (it looks like it should be under $20): 1. First, set up a simple Notion database with columns: "Project," "Decision Made," "Why It Worked," "Date." 2. Next, after each major AI session (ChatGPT, Claude, etc.), log what you decided and why in 2-3 sentences. 3. Then, tag each entry by project so you can search it later when you come back weeks later. The problem I kept hitting was returning to projects after a few weeks and having zero memory of why I made certain decisions or which prompts actually worked. Felt like starting from scratch every time. This tiny habit is helping me keep context without burning time re-learning my own work. Anybody have thoughts on this? Hope this idea helps someone 🙏 — and happy to walk through it if anyone gets stuck. Thanks!
Introduction
Hi everyone! I’m Jacqueline, a purpose-driven leadership and personal development coach, author, and entrepreneur. I use tools like ChatGPT and Claude.ai and am now focused on moving from experimenting with AI to intentionally implementing it across my business. I’d love to learn how to build AI-powered systems, especially for marketing, client relationships, and scheduling, to scale efficiently without losing the human connection. I joined this community to learn best practices, stay ahead of the curve, and connect with others who are actually building with AI. Fun fact: I’m a retired U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel who’s jumped out of airplanes… yet I still plan my days with handwritten notes and sticky notes 😄
0 likes • 2d
@Jacqueline Smith The sticky notes → AI systems transition is real. A lot of coaches I've worked with struggle with the same thing: they want automation but don't want to lose the personal touch. For marketing, client relationships, and scheduling, the key is automating the repetitive stuff (email sequences, booking confirmations, CRM updates) while keeping the high-touch moments human (coaching calls, personalized check-ins). If you're moving from "experimenting" to "implementing," start with one workflow first—probably scheduling, since it's the easiest to automate without feeling robotic. What's the biggest time-suck in your day right now? That's usually the best place to start.
A Question: What kind of person are you being this year?
"Last Friday was National Quitters Day. The point in January when a lot of New Year’s resolutions quietly fall apart. I don’t think most people quit because they lack discipline. I think they quit because they try to optimize before something is actually installed. 🧠 A reminder I’ve been sitting with: You can’t optimize a habit that doesn’t exist yet. We want the clean system. The perfect routine. The most efficient version. But we’re often trying to refine something that hasn’t become normal yet. I see this pattern a lot. And I catch myself in it too. ✅ Habits that feel solid and embodied for me right now: 🟢 Morning routine 🟢 Meditation 🟢 Working out 🟢 Morning time with my wife These don’t require much effort anymore. They’re just part of my day. 🛠️ Habits I’m actively installing right now: Not improving. Not streamlining. Installing. 🟡 Morning and evening Skool check ins One for presence One for intentional outreach 🟡 A simple weekly posting rhythm Repeatable Almost boring on purpose 🟡 A layered planning approach Rough draft at the start of the quarter Second pass the month before Final adjustments during the month With room for real life to shape things What’s been humbling is how often I want to optimize these too early. Templates. Tools. Timing tweaks. All useful. Just not yet. 🚶 Last week was a good reminder that momentum matters more than precision. Movement installs habits. Refinement comes later. Once something is in motion, optimization helps. Before that, it often just slows things down. 🪞There’s also an identity layer here that feels important. Habits tend to stick when they match who we believe we are becoming. Not because we force them. But because they feel natural to maintain. If you want to share: What’s one habit you’ve been trying to improve before it’s actually installed? Or said another way: What kind of person are you practicing being this year?"
A Question: What kind of person are you being this year?
1 like • 2d
@Jason Hagelberg "Movement installs habits. Refinement comes later." This is the part most people miss. They design the perfect system before they've done the thing once. I've been guilty of building elaborate productivity setups for habits I haven't even started yet. Then the system becomes the procrastination. What's working for me now: do the thing badly for 2 weeks, then optimize. But not before. What kind of person am I practicing being? Someone who ships messy work instead of polishing ideas that never leave my head.
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Rehan Pathan
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11points to level up
@rehan-pathan-1082
I will do it at any cost!!!!

Active 4h ago
Joined Jan 1, 2026
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