And after all, AI doesn’t just lower the cost of executition, it also lowers the cost of experimentation. You don’t need a dev, a designer, or a big budget to test an idea anymore.
You just need the guts to try.
When people realize they can turn wisdom they’ve already earned, like their own frameworks, insights, playbooks into tools others can use, they’ll feel so much more empowered.
You have captured the most critical mindset shift. It's about seeing AI as a thinking partner and conversation partner, rather than a tool to simply "do it for me, write it for me, think for me."
That simple shift in framing is everything. It ensures we use this technology to deepen our work, not dilute it. It's how we keep our insight, our creativity, and our essential human-ness at the very center of the process.
As you have shown, this positions AI not as a crutch, but as a tool for sharpening our own minds.
It makes me wonder: what skills do we, as humans, need to cultivate to become better conversation partners with these new technological counterparts?
Thanks for the shoutout, Kim. I look forward to seeing your quiz. Love all the "vibe coding" experiments you're doing!
You're most welcome!
Let me know if you're up for a Zoom call - would love to share some behind-the-scenes and get your feedback.
Love this lens, Kim!
And after all, AI doesn’t just lower the cost of executition, it also lowers the cost of experimentation. You don’t need a dev, a designer, or a big budget to test an idea anymore.
You just need the guts to try.
When people realize they can turn wisdom they’ve already earned, like their own frameworks, insights, playbooks into tools others can use, they’ll feel so much more empowered.
Thanks for mentioning me, appreciate it!
This is beautifully articulated, Kim.
You have captured the most critical mindset shift. It's about seeing AI as a thinking partner and conversation partner, rather than a tool to simply "do it for me, write it for me, think for me."
That simple shift in framing is everything. It ensures we use this technology to deepen our work, not dilute it. It's how we keep our insight, our creativity, and our essential human-ness at the very center of the process.
As you have shown, this positions AI not as a crutch, but as a tool for sharpening our own minds.
It makes me wonder: what skills do we, as humans, need to cultivate to become better conversation partners with these new technological counterparts?