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25岁女孩失业,如今在人工智能导师的帮助下创业

Emma Burleigh
2025-03-11

瓦莱丽·查普曼和莫迪·戈尔丁利用人工智能导师迅速掌握了品牌建设、沟通技巧、客户信息及复杂话题知识。

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• 25岁的内容创作者瓦莱丽·查普曼(Valerie Chapman)借助人工智能导师,通过打造个人品牌以及为他人提供咨询服务谋生。这些工具让她实现自给自足,成为自己的老板。曾就职于Adobe和领英(LinkedIn)的平面设计师莫迪·戈尔丁表示,人工智能是没有偏见的“智能导师”。

英伟达(Nvidia)首席执行官黄仁勋(Jensen Huang)曾表示,每个人都应配备人工智能导师,许多人已经意识到了人工智能的益处。一位25岁的广告创业者在失业后开创了自己的事业,如今在先进技术的帮助下自己当起了老板。

自主创业的内容创作者兼创意机构联合创始人瓦莱丽·查普曼向《财富》杂志透露:“回望(2023年)10月,我在25岁之前第二次遭遇解雇。我当时就想,‘这可不行’。我无法接受这种虚假的工作安全感。我心想,‘肯定还有别的出路’。‘我觉得我可以单干’,利用我的销售专长以及人工智能的海量信息,以独立创业者的身份创立一家自负盈亏的公司。”

查普曼创作关于人工智能和个人品牌的内容,并就如何利用这项技术制定创业策略为其他女性提供咨询服务。她最大的平台之一是领英,在那里她拥有超过1.6万名粉丝,发布的内容能收获数千条反馈。

“我现在就靠这个来维持生计,”查普曼说。没过多久,她便在领英上被视为思想领袖,并受邀前往领英总部。“仅仅数月前,我才开始在这个平台上发布内容,现在我就在他们的总部。我告诉他们,‘人工智能以及在领英上发帖让我无需再在公司上班。’”

为了创作线上内容,人工智能成了她的得力助手。通过每月花费20美元和200美元订阅ChatGPT,她不断尝试各种提示,学习如何成为更优秀的创作者、探索自己的细分领域并打造个人品牌。就连社交媒体上的灵光一现,她也会利用这些工具进行细致优化。借助ChatGPT的高级模型,查普曼还能快速对客户展开深入研究。

查普曼表示:“有了ChatGPT,我就能从中获得灵感。我认为这有助于我将想法付诸实践,完成任务,而有时完成任务甚至只是理清思路都成为最大挑战。我觉得它帮我弥补了这一短板。我能够更快地将创意从构思阶段推进到执行阶段。”

她还补充道:“这些工具就是我的导师,而且在没有其他辅助的情况下,我觉得自己确实学到了东西。我所学习的内容,足以支撑我离开美国企业界。它们指导我如何打造鲜明的个人品牌,我认为这可能比‘让我教你这门语言’之类的事情更有实用价值。”

利用人工智能导师学习硬技能和软技能的技术达人

54岁的专业人士莫迪·戈尔丁(Mordy Golding)拥有在Adobe和领英从事平面设计和产品管理的工作背景,他同样对人工智能导师青睐有加,甚至每天使用Claude AI多达30次。

戈尔丁在接受《财富》杂志采访时表示:“这是我迄今为止发现的,最接近拥有一位实时智能导师观察你的操作,并在你缓慢推进工作的过程中给予协助的工具。有了这样一位导师,你几乎可以掌握任何应用程序的使用,解决难题,从而避免陷入困境。”

戈尔丁借助多种人工智能工具来提升自己的技术和沟通技能,并将这些经验分享给领英上超过1.5万名粉丝。他说自己会使用ChatGPT、Claude收费20美元的模型、Granola以及Gemini等工具。这些工具在优化他生活方面发挥着不同的作用。Granola帮助他完成会议记录,还能一次性提取大量信息进行整理;Claude能从文档中提炼见解,并追踪随时间推移与聊天机器人的聊天记录;Gemini能够通过摄像头分析他的肢体动作、语气和语言,针对现实生活中的场景给出建议。

戈尔丁表示:“以前,我脑子里一次只能记住两件事,而现在我可以同时处理六、七件事。我觉得这非常有价值。”

除了人工智能导师易于获取(多数情况下无需订阅)之外,用户还称赞它是一位没有偏见的导师。这项技术能让那些对学习新事物有所顾虑的人更轻松地体验学习过程。学习一项新技能可能会让人望而却步,而人工智能导师能够消除这种焦虑。

莫迪说:“如果我们在工作中遇到不懂的地方,往往羞于发问,因为这意味着我们承认自己有不懂的地方。当你与人工智能合作时,你可以问它任何问题。它不会失去耐心,也不会因为你问了愚蠢的问题而生气。” (财富中文网)

译者:中慧言-王芳

• 25岁的内容创作者瓦莱丽·查普曼(Valerie Chapman)借助人工智能导师,通过打造个人品牌以及为他人提供咨询服务谋生。这些工具让她实现自给自足,成为自己的老板。曾就职于Adobe和领英(LinkedIn)的平面设计师莫迪·戈尔丁表示,人工智能是没有偏见的“智能导师”。

英伟达(Nvidia)首席执行官黄仁勋(Jensen Huang)曾表示,每个人都应配备人工智能导师,许多人已经意识到了人工智能的益处。一位25岁的广告创业者在失业后开创了自己的事业,如今在先进技术的帮助下自己当起了老板。

自主创业的内容创作者兼创意机构联合创始人瓦莱丽·查普曼向《财富》杂志透露:“回望(2023年)10月,我在25岁之前第二次遭遇解雇。我当时就想,‘这可不行’。我无法接受这种虚假的工作安全感。我心想,‘肯定还有别的出路’。‘我觉得我可以单干’,利用我的销售专长以及人工智能的海量信息,以独立创业者的身份创立一家自负盈亏的公司。”

查普曼创作关于人工智能和个人品牌的内容,并就如何利用这项技术制定创业策略为其他女性提供咨询服务。她最大的平台之一是领英,在那里她拥有超过1.6万名粉丝,发布的内容能收获数千条反馈。

“我现在就靠这个来维持生计,”查普曼说。没过多久,她便在领英上被视为思想领袖,并受邀前往领英总部。“仅仅数月前,我才开始在这个平台上发布内容,现在我就在他们的总部。我告诉他们,‘人工智能以及在领英上发帖让我无需再在公司上班。’”

为了创作线上内容,人工智能成了她的得力助手。通过每月花费20美元和200美元订阅ChatGPT,她不断尝试各种提示,学习如何成为更优秀的创作者、探索自己的细分领域并打造个人品牌。就连社交媒体上的灵光一现,她也会利用这些工具进行细致优化。借助ChatGPT的高级模型,查普曼还能快速对客户展开深入研究。

查普曼表示:“有了ChatGPT,我就能从中获得灵感。我认为这有助于我将想法付诸实践,完成任务,而有时完成任务甚至只是理清思路都成为最大挑战。我觉得它帮我弥补了这一短板。我能够更快地将创意从构思阶段推进到执行阶段。”

她还补充道:“这些工具就是我的导师,而且在没有其他辅助的情况下,我觉得自己确实学到了东西。我所学习的内容,足以支撑我离开美国企业界。它们指导我如何打造鲜明的个人品牌,我认为这可能比‘让我教你这门语言’之类的事情更有实用价值。”

利用人工智能导师学习硬技能和软技能的技术达人

54岁的专业人士莫迪·戈尔丁(Mordy Golding)拥有在Adobe和领英从事平面设计和产品管理的工作背景,他同样对人工智能导师青睐有加,甚至每天使用Claude AI多达30次。

戈尔丁在接受《财富》杂志采访时表示:“这是我迄今为止发现的,最接近拥有一位实时智能导师观察你的操作,并在你缓慢推进工作的过程中给予协助的工具。有了这样一位导师,你几乎可以掌握任何应用程序的使用,解决难题,从而避免陷入困境。”

戈尔丁借助多种人工智能工具来提升自己的技术和沟通技能,并将这些经验分享给领英上超过1.5万名粉丝。他说自己会使用ChatGPT、Claude收费20美元的模型、Granola以及Gemini等工具。这些工具在优化他生活方面发挥着不同的作用。Granola帮助他完成会议记录,还能一次性提取大量信息进行整理;Claude能从文档中提炼见解,并追踪随时间推移与聊天机器人的聊天记录;Gemini能够通过摄像头分析他的肢体动作、语气和语言,针对现实生活中的场景给出建议。

戈尔丁表示:“以前,我脑子里一次只能记住两件事,而现在我可以同时处理六、七件事。我觉得这非常有价值。”

除了人工智能导师易于获取(多数情况下无需订阅)之外,用户还称赞它是一位没有偏见的导师。这项技术能让那些对学习新事物有所顾虑的人更轻松地体验学习过程。学习一项新技能可能会让人望而却步,而人工智能导师能够消除这种焦虑。

莫迪说:“如果我们在工作中遇到不懂的地方,往往羞于发问,因为这意味着我们承认自己有不懂的地方。当你与人工智能合作时,你可以问它任何问题。它不会失去耐心,也不会因为你问了愚蠢的问题而生气。” (财富中文网)

译者:中慧言-王芳

• Valerie Chapman, a 25-year-old content creator, leverages AI tutors to make a living by growing her personal brand and consulting others. The tools allowed her to be self-sufficient and her own boss. Mordy Golding, a graphic designer who has worked at Adobe and LinkedIn, says AI is an “intelligent coach” without judgement.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has said that everyone should have an AI tutor in their back pocket, and many have already caught wind of the upsides. One 25-year-old advertising entrepreneur found her calling after getting fired from her job, and is now her own boss with help from the advanced tech.

“Back in October [2023], I was laid off for the second time before 25. And I was like, ‘No way.’ I could not deal with this false idea of job security. I was like, ‘I feel like there’s another way,’” Valerie Chapman, a self-employed content creator and creative agency co-founder, tells Fortune. “I thought, ‘I think I could just go on my own’ and use my sales skills and the incredible information we have with AI to build a self-sustaining company as a solopreneur.”

Chapman creates content on AI and personal branding, consulting with other women on how to leverage the tech to develop their entrepreneurial strategies. One of her biggest platforms is LinkedIn, where she has over 16,000 followers and posts that rake in thousands of reactions.

“That’s how I pay my bills now,” Chapman says. It didn’t take long until she was recognized as a thought leader on the app, and was invited to LinkedIn’s office. “I just started posting on this app a few months ago, now I’m in their headquarters. And I told them, ‘AI and posting on LinkedIn is the reason I don’t have a corporate job anymore.’”

To craft her online content, AI has become her bread and butter. With her $20 and $200 monthly ChatGPT subscriptions, she tests out prompts on how to become a better creator, carve out a niche, and build a personal brand. She’ll even run spontaneous ideas for social media through the tools for fine-tuning. With the more expensive ChatGPT model, Chapman can also conduct deep research on clients very quickly.

“With ChatGPT, I can just bounce ideas off of it. And I think it helps [me] execute and get things across the finish line, where sometimes completing the task or even getting the juices flowing is like the hardest part,” Chapman says. “I think it helps close that gap for me. I was able to take things from the idea phase to like the execution phase much faster.”

She added: “These are tutors, because I don’t use anything else, and I feel like I have learned. I’ve definitely learned enough to leave corporate America. That tutored me well enough to build a personal brand, which I would say is probably even more useful than perhaps something like, ‘Let me tutor you on this language.’”

The tech-wiz using AI tutors for hard and soft skills

Mordy Golding, a 54-year-old professional with a background in graphic design and product management at Adobe and LinkedIn, loves AI tutors too. He even uses Claude AI up to 30 times a day.

“This is the closest that I found so far to having a live, intelligent coach watching what you’re doing and helping you along in the slow work,” Golding tells Fortune. “You have this coach that can pretty much talk you through any application, and help you figure things out, where you’re no longer going to get stuck.”

Golding leverages a lot of AI tools to enhance his technical and communication skills, and he shares those lessons with his over 15,000 LinkedIn followers. He says he uses ChatGPT, Claude’s $20 model, Granola, and Gemini, among others. And they range vastly in how they optimize his life. Granola helps him take meeting notes and can draw upon them to digest a lot of information at once; Claude distills insights from documents, and tracks the chatbot conversations they have over time; and through his camera, Gemini can analyze his body movements, tone, and speech to make suggestions for real-life situations.

“Before, I could really only hold two things at a time in my head. But now I can juggle six or seven things at a time,” Golding says. “I find that incredibly valuable.”

Beyond AI tutors being at everyone’s fingertips—in many cases with no subscription required—users tout the benefit of a non-judgemental coach. The technology can make the experience of learning more comfortable for those who may be hesitant to learn something new. It can be daunting to chase a new skill, and AI tutors can take away some of that anxiety.

“If we’re at work and we don’t understand something, we’re embarrassed to ask, because that means we’re admitting that we don’t know something,” Mordy says. “When you’re working with an AI, you can ask the AI anything. It doesn’t run out of patience. It doesn’t get annoyed when you ask stupid questions.”

财富中文网所刊载内容之知识产权为财富媒体知识产权有限公司及/或相关权利人专属所有或持有。未经许可,禁止进行转载、摘编、复制及建立镜像等任何使用。
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