Wondering how will ChatGPT be better than before with the most recent update.
This has been my biggest go-to and even 3.5 does a decent job! I write up key points and ChatGPT pretties it up for me.
Drop the prompt
I do this but with transcripts rather than taking notes myself. Sometimes it picks up a lot of noise and I have to weed that out to get it to work, but when it works it’s really nice.
I thought of this but got paranoid about sharing confidential company info :')
I complain at it when I’m feeling overwhelmed. V good listener.
I (we) created a product for same problem and solution powered by GPT 4.
Yup, it is my personal therapist.
I use it to structure problems. I give it generic things like: "what metrics would you monitor to track X implementation" or "provide a template PRD for an API Product". I don't use any sensitive data and try to make the prompts general as possible.
This is a good answer
Almost entirely for SQL queries I'm too lazy to write
Do you do have any privacy hacks for this? IT security has been cited as a hesitation at some businesses so trying to figure out what I can do
For me, just using aliases. Eg, ACME is looking for all columns with "REPLACE" in name where the Created_at columns date is prior to Jan 1,2024. Write me a sql query to retrieve it."
Then replace the relevant terms with your proprietary names or concepts.
Just turn off chatgpt setting where you share data for training purposes.
I don’t give a fuck and just put in all the confidential info lol
As a student I was wondering should I even learn SQL and python before applying for job
No need to wait till before. Do the free w3 schools courses on both. Will be enough to help. Python is super versatile so never hurts to know
I wonder the same, if anyone could suggest.
I’ve been a po for 5 years without it
Good point, I’ve been learning it recently, anytime I run into trouble I just ask chatgpt.
Yes, you should learn SQL, Python and probably Git. Every PM should have at least a rough understanding of how data is queried and how code works and is deployed.
You don't need a deep understanding, but it'll make it much easier to work with your dev partners.
This
Mainly just copy edit for clarity.
‘Rewrite this in a clear and concise manner. Use a business conversational tone and uk grammar’
I use it for many things: 1. Generating insights from a sheet of data 2. First draft of the PRD 3. Writing the mail better 4. Website content 5. Suggestions on roadmap prioritisation
It doesn’t help me in doing anything completely from start to finish because it lacks the context and reasoning, but it’s like brainstorming with a junior PM who may give some good ideas or a different angle here and there.
My company actually just did a series of "AI workshops" to ensure we are all using ChatGPT etc in a standardized way, as everyone was using it differently. Was pretty helpful. Main outcomes:
- ChatGPT for research and content creation - but we are not allowed to put any personal opr company IP into it (we have an official policy outlining what this is)
- We are not allowed to use ChaGPT to create user stories, personas, journeys etc, but instead now use Userdoc as it has knowledge of our software systems etc, so it's a lot more accurate (and people were making very generic user stories with chat GPT!)
- My team has just purchased a ChatGPT Teams plan - and we are soon experimenting with creating Custom GPTs. these are like, sharable instructions we wil ltry for different use cases - e.g. we are thinking of one for "Team Policies" which we can ask about our internal and external policies. Seems interesting, not sure how good it will be as we haven't started it yet
My group fully blocks chat but allows copilot and Gemini. Lots of teams across the business use it, some misuse like data and analytics to translate from python queries into SQL for example. I tell my team, LLMs are just a tool. To enhance your work nothing proprietary nothing specific but if you helps you build well structured user stories or assist you in research have at it
Intersting, Isn't Gemini chat though?
They block ChatGPT but allow gemini and copilot
Ahh I see. I actually thinkg Gemini 1.5pro is better anyway - bee playing with that all lot lately.
Does your company have an issue with placing information in there which is publicly available on a product through either the website or a knowledge base?
Yeah, for ChatGPT it does - we cannot put any private information. I believe our IT department spoke with Userdoc and agreed their security/privacy allows us to enter our software details.
But yeah, it's something you need to double check for sure!!
I’m using it during work on my personal laptop to build an app that I hope will be my ticket out of this job.
I created a whole document to communicate a major change with stakeholders almost exclusively using GPT. I had it create a template of what I wanted to have, make adjustments, and then edited it to fit my needs. Saved me like two days
"write me a user story in gherkin format that describes x, y, and z..."
Only did that once but it was because a dev didn't know what Boolean in search meant and I just didn't want to write the dumbest story of my life.
Mostly I use it for general team advice i.e. who has what responsibilities, how can I deal with certain issues, etc. It's not perfect but it'll at least get you started.
I create agents in folderr.com for all sorts of things. Like product support, writing requirements automatically from a customer call transcript, writing PRDs, etc. it’s like Dropbox with ai on top (select any model), and you can then build workflow automation to interact with the agents.
What's folderr.com?
What's folderr.com?
I ask it how to use the Reddit search function. 🤪
Generate summaries of long slack threads
Using it to write my user stories and acceptance criteria, and then refine the heck out of it. Still assessing if it’s faster than starting from scratch.
Excel and GSheet formulas!
I use it to rewrite my sentences that I’m too lazy to word it better
Recently, I've been using Perplexity more, but with the new open Ai update, maybe I'll give it a go again
It writes my resume which generates a good amount of revenue for me.
Don't a lot of companies screen for AI resumes and automatically reject them?
Don’t know, my comment was a joke
A product manager can leverage ChatGPT in various ways to streamline their work:
Idea Generation: Use ChatGPT to brainstorm new product ideas, features, or improvements. It can provide diverse perspectives and innovative suggestions.
Market Research: Utilize ChatGPT to gather insights from customer feedback, surveys, and social media. It can help in understanding market trends and user preferences.
User Support: Integrate ChatGPT into customer support channels for quick responses to common queries, troubleshooting, and FAQs.
Content Creation: Generate content such as product descriptions, blog posts, and marketing copy using ChatGPT. It can assist in crafting engaging and informative content.
Data Analysis: Analyze data and generate reports using ChatGPT, helping in decision-making processes and identifying areas for improvement.
Prototyping: Collaborate with ChatGPT to create product prototypes, wireframes, and mockups based on user input and requirements.
Project Management: Use ChatGPT for task management, scheduling, and coordination within teams, enhancing productivity and efficiency.
Training and Onboarding: Develop training materials and onboarding guides with ChatGPT, simplifying the learning curve for new employees and users.
By integrating ChatGPT into various aspects of product management, professionals can enhance creativity, efficiency, and decision-making processes.
Thanks, ChatGPT.
Brought to you by ChatGPT
Not sure why this is downvoted. Although it's clearly LLM generated, it has some good ideas, and it's not wrong.
Structure problems to be solved, how to manage internal stakeholders, built a GPT for personas.
Definitely going to work more with custom GPTs
I use it to write searches for my Splunk dashboard.
Plaud is pretty nice. Have been using it to aggregate meeting notes and action items
I've used it in a couple of different ways.
Copy a huge thread into my internal gpt site and get a five sentence summary and any actions for me.
Controversial but I don't use it in any area of my life. I don't want to get lazy cuz AI does simple tasks for me and then I lose the ability to do those tasks on my own. And speaking personally, I absolutely would.
I just use it to help add fluff to blog articles that I have to write for SEO on our site
It’s not allowed to put company work in a competitors product.
I've used it to create the first draft of product recap blogs and press releases. Does a pretty good job on the product recap blog if you have release notes already. Press release wasn't great so there was much editing afterwards.
As a starter to whatever I am doing drafts and such, essentially the things I will google I replace with it but I also add on perplexity for my search work.
We create tech books. I use to create ad copies of the books sales page. It is not totally dependent on it, I have a rough copy and I just use GPT to refine it.
Sql mainly. Also, editing comms. More recently some more advanced experimental stuff with gen ai and Json formats
I use it to groom the backlog and refine requirements, including user guides and FAQs. Sometimes, I use it to understand and break down technical problems (cryptography, certs, difficult to read code blocks, etc).
I use to process email content and marketing material for grammatical corrections
I use it quite a lot. A couple of use cases:
- I usually gather all inputs in my notes, and then use ChatGPT to process those into whichever format I need, be it an epic, a user story or whatever. I've never not had to edit it, but it gets 80% of the job done, and tbh often more elaborate than what I would've done
- I use it to brainstorm workshop agendas. I try to engage our stakeholders as much as possible, so I have a penchant for unconventional workshops, and to this end ChatGPT is a really helpful partner.
- If I have some information I don't fully understand, I'll usually run it by ChatGPT before I bother the devs with it.
- I use it to refine OKRs
- If I've written some documentation, I'll use it to verify that it makes sense in the way it's intended to.
- SQL queries
I use it to communicate with stakeholders to make things short and understandable. Also to a broader audience with no technical background. I could do it myself of course but I find it much faster to delegate that
I’ve given it loads of customer reviews on our own products and competitor products from Amazon, Walmart etc. and then interviewed it as if it were the user or spokesperson for the users.
What do you like about your current X? what do you wish was better? What are some common complaints?
Create a C# code to extract users from Active Directory with all attributes then help me import the data to a SQL table using SSIS. There is also a 1000 rows limit, so you have to loop.
I have no knowledge of C#, this was a lot of help.
I asked it how to do market research and it reccomended Reddit….so here I am? 😅
the weekly how do you chatgpt thread.
I use it to process raw notes into something more readable by others.