This nails something a lot of “AI thought leadership” misses. Authority isn’t in how well you can make AI talk. It’s in what you don’t choose. Judgment. Taste. Scars. The ability to look at 50 options and quietly say, “Most of these will fail in the real world.” That’s trust. And AI finally gives experienced people a way to show it without pretending they’re writers.
This is something anyone with enough experience can do, and - at least in my experience - always brings good results when compared when trying to invent or create things from scratch.
Your example is super-fitting as well as your closing thought.
This nails something a lot of “AI thought leadership” misses. Authority isn’t in how well you can make AI talk. It’s in what you don’t choose. Judgment. Taste. Scars. The ability to look at 50 options and quietly say, “Most of these will fail in the real world.” That’s trust. And AI finally gives experienced people a way to show it without pretending they’re writers.
Thank you
Well done, Robin. Many good take aways from this. And nice to see you again after all these years!
Yes, Neural, I am glad it clicked also for you.
This is something anyone with enough experience can do, and - at least in my experience - always brings good results when compared when trying to invent or create things from scratch.
Your example is super-fitting as well as your closing thought.
Happy to be in sync.