Three months after the artificial intelligence tool ChatGPT was introduced to the world, workers are already using it to make their lives easier. Experts in fields such as real estate, healthcare, and finance say they can use AI to save time and work more efficiently.
These employees describe how they use the tool in their daily work.
write real estate list
Mara Sander, a top real estate agent for the Hamptons-focused Corcoran Group, has been using ChatGPT regularly over the past few weeks to help her build property listings and devise marketing strategies for her properties.
“I asked them to write ad copy for a house in Bridgehampton on two acres with a pool and tennis court, and listed other features they wanted to highlight,” she told CBS MoneyWatch. “And we will weave this great copy into something that can actually be used.”
She also uses ChatGPT to change the tone of her listings. “They’ll say, ‘Please write this for a millennial audience,’ or ‘Make it funny.'”
corcoran group
Her routine these days is to have her team create the first draft of the list and “crunch it to see if ChatGPT can edit it and make it more concise,” she says. said.
On a whim, she asked the bot to create a marketing plan for one of her listings. she delivered. She gave her a breakdown of the campaign, including digital, print and social outreach, she told her CBS MoneyWatch.
“We took everything from direct mail to online digital advertising to social media to get to the ideal percentages,” says Sander.
Having worked as an agent for the last 20 years, Sander is extremely competent and efficient even without ChatGPT.
“But it’s convenient,” she said. “It’s like you’re talking to someone else. To have a therapist at work say, ‘Am I on the right track with this? Or should I look elsewhere?’ It’s something.”
Elia Mazor, marketing manager for The Glazer Team at Corcoran, uses ChatGPT to write a list Create other content.
“Sometimes using the same kind of template and just changing words here and there can lead to writer’s block or all sound the same. , and offer different tones,” he said.
Glazer team
financial planner assistant
Certified financial planner Michael Reynolds uses a chatbot to help draft blog posts explaining financial documents like wills and trusts to clients.
He tells ChatGPT what topic he wants to talk about and enters a prompt like this:
Spit out paragraphs that Reynolds edits in his own voice.
Elevation Financial
In a recent article on real estate planning, Reynolds used ChatGPT to describe “property planning It’s an act of love for the one you leave behind.”
“When I asked ChatGPT for an explanation, they put together a few paragraphs on why it’s thoughtful and caring to do these things,” Reynolds said.
This process took about 20 minutes. Had he written the article alone, he said it would have taken him nearly two hours.
Reynolds says he doesn’t use the tool to help clients make financial decisions.
“Financial planning is very nuanced, individualized and personal.It is hard to imagine using ChatGPT to spit out recommendations without knowing the client. I think ChatGPT is more valuable in generating teaching materials to do,” he said. “We do more than just crunch numbers. We coach people, listen to their concerns, and help them talk about emotional situations. Hard work is irreplaceable today.”
Another Nick Meyer Financial planner making short videos on TikTokhe said, uses it as a starting point for coming up with new content ideas.
“I use it instead of Google searches to get ideas for topics or to edit what I’ve already written,” he said. It also helps make his videos interesting.
“You can insert a few lines of script and say, ‘Do you want this to be more comedy, or do you want to put a joke in this line, or be more concise,'” says Meyer.
The “gob” of medical information
Harvey Castro, a board-certified emergency physician, advises digital health companies on how to best integrate ChatGPT into their healthcare sector.
One great application, he says, is creating and translating patient discharge orders. That is, the rules that the patient should follow after the examination.
Castro, an emergency medical expert, said that when he gets an unclear question related to dermatology, he enters the question on ChatGPT to find out more. Previously, he now relied on other clinical search engines and resources such as his MDConsult called ClinicalKey.
“You type it in and it gives you a lot of information, so it’s supplemental,” Castro said.
Physicians also use it to input patient symptoms and return a differential diagnosis, a list of conditions that may be related to the current symptom, Castro said.
“It’s already happening today,” he said.
study companion
Rushabh Doshi, a sophomore at Yale Medical School, likes to use ChatGPT to create sample questions while studying for the US medical licensing exam.
Although the Test Prep Service has limited practice questions, ChatGPT can generate new questions on any topic based on the prompts you enter.
Courtesy of Rushabh Doshi
It also helps prepare for patient interactions, but this is strictly for medical education, not patient care.
“If a patient with a disease you don’t know comes in, you can go to ChatGPT and read it,” he said.
It also provides information to help conduct a more thorough patient evaluation. “We’re asking them to provide a guide to the types of questions to make sure we’re conducting a comprehensive patient interview.”