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Instead of just using one AI, create a "team" of specialized assistants. Use one AI as your chief architect for trade-offs, another for coding, and a third for product strategy and planning. This approach accelerates both learning and project execution.
To build a useful multi-agent AI system, model the agents after your existing human team. Create specialized agents for distinct roles like 'approvals,' 'document drafting,' or 'administration' to replicate and automate a proven workflow, rather than designing a monolithic, abstract AI.
Instead of relying on a single AI, use different models (e.g., ChatGPT for internal context, Claude for an objective view) for the same problem. This multi-model approach generates diverse perspectives and higher-quality strategic outputs.
Treat AI assistants like individual team members by naming them and running them on dedicated hardware (like Mac Minis). This approach makes it easier to 'train' them on specific tasks and roles, transforming them into specialized, highly effective agents.
Building a single, all-purpose AI is like hiring one person for every company role. To maximize accuracy and creativity, build multiple custom GPTs, each trained for a specific function like copywriting or operations, and have them collaborate.
Instead of relying on a single, all-purpose coding agent, the most effective workflow involves using different agents for their specific strengths. For example, using the 'Friday' agent for UI tasks, 'Charlie' for code reviews, and 'Claude Code' for research and backend logic.
Top performers won't rely on a single AI platform. Instead, they will act as a conductor, directing various specialized AI agents (like Claude, Gemini, ChatGPT) to perform specific tasks. This requires understanding the strengths of different tools and combining their outputs for maximum productivity.
A single AI agent attempting multiple complex tasks produces mediocre results. The more effective paradigm is creating a team of specialized agents, each dedicated to a single task, mimicking a human team structure and avoiding context overload.
Instead of creating one monolithic "Ultron" agent, build a team of specialized agents (e.g., Chief of Staff, Content). This parallels existing business mental models, making the system easier for humans to understand, manage, and scale.
Just as you use different social media apps for different purposes, you should use various specialized AI tools for specific tasks. Relying on a single tool like ChatGPT for everything results in watered-down solutions. A better approach is to build a toolkit, matching the right AI to the right problem.
Shift from using AI as a tool to building a team of custom GPTs with specific roles (e.g., Marketing Strategist). "Train" them with comprehensive documentation and SOPs, just as you would a new human hire, to achieve specialized, high-quality output.