Beyond The Prompt - How to use AI in your company

Jeremy Utley & Henrik Werdelin

Beyond the Prompt dives deep into the world of AI and its expanding impact on business and daily work. Hosted by Jeremy Utley of Stanford's d.school, alongside Henrik Werdelin, an entrepreneur known for starting BarkBox, prehype and other startups, each episode features conversations with innovators and leaders to uncover pragmatic stories of how organizations leverage AI to accelerate success. Learn creative strategies and actionable tactics you can apply right away as AI capabilities advance exponentially.

  1. Can AI Replace Me? Evan Ratliff on Letting an AI Clone Live His Life

    HACE 2 DÍAS

    Can AI Replace Me? Evan Ratliff on Letting an AI Clone Live His Life

    In this episode, Evan Ratliff, journalist and creator of the podcast Shell Game, shares the wild and personal story behind his experiment in AI voice cloning. What began as curiosity turned into a six-month dive into building an AI version of himself—one that could answer phone calls, conduct interviews, and even fool friends and family. From scamming the scammers to testing AI therapy, Evan walks us through what it’s like to put a synthetic version of yourself into the world and watch how people respond. The conversation explores the uneasy collision of identity, automation, and ethics. Evan talks about the emotional reactions people had when they realized they weren’t actually talking to him, the disturbing effectiveness of AI in fraud, and the strange intimacy of hearing your own voice say things you didn’t write. He also reflects on what it means to resist optimization—not because tech can’t help, but because some parts of life aren’t meant to be outsourced. This episode is a human story wrapped inside a technological one—about trust, loneliness, and how we navigate a world where even our voices aren’t entirely our own. Key takeaways:  AI voice agents challenge more than trust—they challenge identity. Evan’s experiment revealed just how disorienting it is when people hear your voice and think it’s you—only to realize it’s not. The emotional impact was real: friends felt tricked, disconnected, and in some cases, deeply lonely.Scammers are already using AI—and they’re getting better at it. Far from being hypothetical, AI-powered scams are already widespread and industrialized. Voice cloning isn’t just a curiosity—it’s a weapon, and we’re all potential targets. A family safe word might be your best defense.Not everything should be optimized—and maybe that’s the point. Evan pushes back on the idea that life should be frictionless. In the pursuit of efficiency, we risk removing the small, inconvenient interactions that actually make life meaningful—like small talk, shared confusion, and human error.This moment feels like early social media—and we should be paying attention. Henrik and Jeremy reflect on the eerie parallels between today’s AI boom and the rise of the social web. Back then, few anticipated the long-term impact on mental health and connection. With AI, we may be walking into similar territory—unless we ask harder questions now.LinkedIn: Evan Ratliff | LinkedIn Website: Evan Ratliff – Journalist Shell Game Podcast: Shell Game | Evan Ratliff 00:00 Intro: Thoughts on AI Deception 00:40 Meet Evan Ratliff: Technology, Crime, and Identity 01:13 The Shell Game Podcast: Exploring AI Voice Cloning 03:50 Challenges and Improvements in AI Voice Technology 04:57 Inspiration Behind the Voice Cloning Experiment 11:05 Practical Applications and Ethical Considerations 17:31 AI in Scamming: Risks and Realities 25:04 Protecting Yourself from AI Scams 27:49 Reflecting on Technological Change and Human Adaptation 29:59 The Reluctance to Embrace New Technology 30:36 The Dangers of Social Media 31:59 AI in Therapy and Personal Experiences 33:39 Creating an AI Agent of Yourself 38:09 The Challenges of Small Talk with AI 38:55 Personal Tech Stack and AI Usage 42:59 Balancing Efficiency and Meaningfulness 45:32 The Future of AI and Human Interaction 52:18 Concluding Thoughts and Reflections 📜 Read the transcript for this episode: Transcript of Can AI Replace Me? Evan Ratliff on Letting an AI Clone Live His Life   For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelinJeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley   Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.

    58 min
  2. How the Chief Creative Officer of an Award-Winning Ad Agency Prompts the Perfect Pitch

    22 JUL

    How the Chief Creative Officer of an Award-Winning Ad Agency Prompts the Perfect Pitch

    In this episode, Jeff Benjamin, Global CCO of Tombras, shares how AI helps him get unstuck, build confidence, and push bold ideas forward—even when self-doubt creeps in. From romcom scripts to Arby’s pitches, he shows how AI acts as a sparring partner: sharpening thinking, stress-testing ideas, and keeping momentum alive. We get into what separates distinct from generic, why affirmation can be a trap, and how the urge to share is still at the heart of creativity. If you're chasing big ideas—or just trying to beat the blank page—this one hits home. Key Takeaways: Affirmation builds momentum—but can also blind you — One of AI’s biggest features is how confidently it backs you up. That “glazing” energy feels great—but if you don’t challenge it, you risk falling in love with something average. Confidence needs a counterbalance: taste.The best prompt is a person—not a question — Jeff gets better output by asking AI to role-play voices he respects—like Don Draper or a cold war-era Olympic judge. The magic isn’t in better instructions. It’s in asking from a more interesting perspective.Your idea is ready when it bubbles over — Jeff doesn’t go to his team with half-baked concepts. He waits until the idea is bubbling—when he can’t not share it. That moment is emotional, not procedural. AI helps him reach it faster—but the instinct to share is still deeply human.Big ideas have width—AI helps him see the shape — For Jeff, a great idea isn’t a line—it’s a landscape. If it’s a real “big idea,” it spawns more ideas: social angles, activations, scripts. AI helps him test whether a concept has legs—or if it’s just a clever line with no room to run.Jeff's LinkedIn: Jeff Benjamin | LinkedIn Tombras: Tombras | Full-Service Independent Advertising Agency 00:00 Overcoming Self-Doubt in Business 00:37 Meet Jeff Benjamin: Creative Leader at Tombras 00:56 The Role of AI in Creative Processes 02:24 Using AI as a Sparring Partner 04:34 Practical Examples of AI in Action 09:31 The Impact of AI on Team Dynamics 11:37 Balancing AI and Human Creativity 14:13 The Future of AI in Creative Industries 21:06 Exploring Human Skills for AI Mastery 22:09 The Art of Asking Better Questions 22:40 AI as a Creative Partner 24:41 The Excitement of Sharing Ideas 30:09 Generational Differences in AI Interaction 32:35 The Risk of AI Dehumanization 38:19 Concluding Thoughts 📜 Read the transcript for this episode: Transcript of How the Chief Creative Officer of an Award-Winning Ad Agency Prompts the Perfect Pitch   For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelinJeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley   Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.

    42 min
  3. Chief of Staff for the Masses: How Meta’s Joshua To Designs Wearables with AI

    8 JUL

    Chief of Staff for the Masses: How Meta’s Joshua To Designs Wearables with AI

    In this episode, Joshua To, VP of Product Design at Meta, shares how AI is reshaping how—and where—we interact with technology. He walks us through Meta’s evolving approach to AR and wearables, why notifications are still the killer use case, and how AI is becoming the “brain behind empathy.” We dig into what it means to build interfaces that understand you, why audio might be the future’s most underrated platform, and how designing for emotion changes everything—from form factor to function. Joshua also reflects on his path from launching a clothing brand to leading design at Google and Meta, and what those worlds taught him about craft, context, and human-centered systems. This one’s for anyone designing AI into the real world—where every interface choice carries weight, and intelligence starts with listening. Key takeaways:  Empathy Is the Real Intelligence — Joshua flips the definition of smart tech. It’s not just about outputs—it’s about understanding you. Context, tone, emotion—that’s what great AI will sense and respond to.Design for the Moment, Not the Feed — AR’s killer use case isn’t games—it’s restraint. Joshua shares why the best AI product might just be the one that knows not to ping you. Context-aware computing is the real unlock.Audio Is the Interface to Watch — Forget screens. The most powerful interface might be your ears. From wearables to ambient signals, Joshua explains why audio design is the next big frontier for human-centered AI.AR Isn’t a Feature—It’s a System of Consideration — Joshua reframes augmented reality as quiet, ambient infrastructure. The real power of AR isn’t spectacle—it’s subtlety. It helps you move through the world with less friction, not more.LinkedIn: Joshua To | LinkedIn Website: Home - Joshua To Meta: Meta Careers 00:00 Intro: Fixing Notifications With AI 00:54 Meet Josh: VP of Product Design at Meta 02:06 From Hoodies to Hardware: Josh's Journey 03:53 The Google Experience: From Ads to Product Management 10:37 The Evolution of Google Glass and AR 19:12 The Role of AI in Josh's Career 22:25 Designing the Future: AR, VR, and Attention Management 32:49 Contextually Aware Suggestions 33:38 Leveraging Generative AI in Design 34:52 AI's Role in Concept Art and Storyboarding 41:24 AI Tools and Model Capabilities 45:54 The Future of AI and Wearables 51:58 Reflections and Takeaways 📜 Read the transcript for this episode: Transcript of Chief of Staff for the Masses: How Meta’s Joshua To Designs Wearables with AI   For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelinJeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley   Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.

    1 h y 1 min
  4. The AI Implementation Audit: What Section’s CEO Learned in 18 Months

    24 JUN

    The AI Implementation Audit: What Section’s CEO Learned in 18 Months

    In this episode, Greg Shove, CEO of Section and founder of Machine and Partners, joins us for a "where are they now" follow-up—and doesn’t hold back. Greg walks through the rise of Pro AI, his new AI-powered coach, and why traditional upskilling is already obsolete. We explore the overlooked friction points in AI adoption, from cultural taboos (“it feels like cheating”) to failed enterprise rollouts. Greg challenges the prevailing mental models and warns that the real upheaval is still ahead: business model disruption, not product disruption. From royalty-based agents to outcome-based pricing, Greg lays out why service-heavy industries—from law firms to SaaS—are heading for a margin-crushing future. Plus: the moral responsibility of CEOs, the fallacy of lifelong learners, and why working with AI means holding onto your own judgment. A sharp, honest look at what it really means to work smarter—not just faster—in the age of AI. Key takeaways: AI use is no longer optional—it's the new baseline. Proficiency with AI tools isn’t a competitive edge anymore—it’s a basic requirement. Greg argues that “being in the AI class” is now table stakes, and organizations must rapidly close the gap between aspiration and actual adoption.Business model disruption will hit harder than tech disruption. Greg makes a compelling case that AI’s biggest impact won’t come from the tools themselves, but from entirely new ways of charging for value—like outcome-based pricing and AI-native service models that undercut human capital costs.Leaders must shift from AI policies to AI manifestos. Adoption is stalling because organizations lead with fear. Instead, Greg urges leaders to clearly message that using AI is smart, encouraged, and expected—and to model that behavior themselves.Most people won't be lifelong learners—so give them outputs, not courses. With Pro AI, Greg confronts a hard truth: most users don’t want to learn; they want results. AI-powered coaching that delivers outcomes—not just education—is the future of upskilling.Linkedin: Greg Shove | LinkedIn Website: Greg Shove | AI Strategist & Keynote Speaker for Enterprise Leaders Section: Section | AI workforce transformation for real ROI Machine & Partners: AI Consulting Services | Machine and Partners 00:00 Embracing AI: Changing Work Culture 00:29 Introduction: Meet Greg Shove 01:10 AI in Daily Work: Tools and Changes 03:59 Business Model Disruption: The Next Big Shift 12:45 Training and Adoption Challenges 19:14 The Future of Work: AI's Impact on Jobs 32:02 Leadership and AI: Strategies for Success 35:20 Embracing AI in the Workplace 36:51 Workflow Redesign with AI 39:39 The Role of AI Agents 40:12 Challenges in AI Adoption 45:14 Pro AI: The AI-Powered Coach 51:03 Disrupting Business Models with AI 57:52 Cognitive Offloading and AI 01:03:02 Final Thoughts and Reflections 📜 Read the transcript for this episode: Transcript of The AI Implementation Audit: What Section’s CEO Learned in 18 Months     For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelinJeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley   Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.

    1 h y 8 min
  5. Rebuilding from Inside: How John Waldmann Led an AI Shift Without Breaking His Team

    10 JUN

    Rebuilding from Inside: How John Waldmann Led an AI Shift Without Breaking His Team

    In this episode, John Waldmann, CEO of Homebase, shares how the 10-year-old SaaS company blew up its roadmap and rebuilt around AI—from culture to code. He walks us through the shift from 20-page PRDs to lightning-fast demos, reclaiming product leadership, and pushing teams into their “oh shit” moment with AI. We explore the leadership reckoning, cultural resistance, and practical playbook behind the transformation—and what it means for the future of SaaS, small businesses, and human-centered AI. If you're leading (or bracing for) an AI shift, this one’s packed with hard-earned lessons and honest insight. Key Takeaways:  You Can’t Wait for Buy-In—Leadership Means Pushing the Shift — John didn’t wait for excitement or alignment—he took back product leadership and forced the move toward AI. It wasn’t about consensus, it was about momentum. If you’re leading a team through this kind of shift, your job isn’t to ask for permission—it’s to create urgency before it's obvious.Speed Over Specs — Prototypes Are the New Strategy — Homebase moved from 20-page PRDs to live demos built in hours. That switch didn’t just make shipping faster—it changed the way teams learn, think, and listen to customers. The takeaway? Stop planning in the abstract. Ship something real, now.Culture Is the Real AI Roadblock — The hardest part of going AI-first isn’t tech—it’s trust, fear, and inertia. From engineers to support teams, John had to help people reach their “oh shit” moment with AI. That’s when change sticks. Until then, it’s just optional homework. Leaders need to make adoption inevitable.AI Should Bring You Closer to Your Customers, Not Farther — This episode isn’t about chasing shiny tools. It’s about using AI to reduce the noise—so your team can focus more on humans, not less. For John, pragmatic AI is about freeing up time, getting closer to customer problems, and making the org feel smaller, not colder.LinkedIn: John Waldmann | LinkedIn Homebase: All-in-one Employee Scheduling, Time Clocks, Payroll, & More | Homebase 00:00 Introduction and Initial Reactions to AI 00:31 Meet John Waldmann and the Story of Homebase 00:53 Reinventing Homebase as an AI-First Company 01:46 From PRDs to Prototypes: Building Faster, Learning Smarter 05:02 How AI Is Reshaping the Customer Experience 09:19 Culture Shock: Resistance, Skepticism, and AI Adoption 14:03 The End of SaaS as We Know It? 19:34 Leading Through Disruption: Ownership, Urgency, and Org Design 25:12 Forcing the Shift: Getting Teams to Embrace AI 27:50 Hiring the Unemployed—and Other Nontraditional Talent Bets 28:56 Curiosity > Credentials: What to Look for in AI-Ready Teams 31:57 New Expectations, OKRs, and Holding Teams Accountable 37:10 Serving Small Businesses Better with AI 44:52 Final Thoughts: Team Dynamics, Founder Risk, and What’s Next 📜 Read the transcript for this episode: Transcript of Rebuilding from Inside: How John Waldmann Led an AI Shift Without Breaking His Team |     For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelinJeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley   Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.

    52 min
  6. Why HR not CTOs Will Lead AI Augmentation - with Joshua Wöhle

    27 MAY

    Why HR not CTOs Will Lead AI Augmentation - with Joshua Wöhle

    In this episode, Joshua Wöhle, co-founder and CEO of Mindstone, shares how AI can go beyond automation to truly augment thinking, strategy, and workflows. He walks us through the personal rituals and frameworks he uses to spot high-leverage opportunities, and why iteration—not speed—is the real unlock. We explore how non-technical teams can build custom tools without code, why HR is the real AI driver in most orgs, and how the shift from SaaS to tailored internal solutions is reshaping the future of work. Packed with practical insights for anyone ready to move beyond the buzzwords and into real AI-powered productivity. Key Takeaways: AI’s Real Value: Augmentation Over Automation — Joshua explains why the biggest win with AI isn’t cutting tasks—it's using AI to amplify your thinking. If you’re only automating, you’re missing out on AI as a creative and strategic partner.Crack the Code on the "Utility Threshold" — AI should save you time or improve outcomes. If it doesn’t, you haven’t hit the utility threshold yet. Joshua shares how to spot when AI becomes truly useful—and how small tweaks can unlock massive gains.Why You Should Build, Not Buy (No Coding Needed) — Forget pricey SaaS tools. Joshua reveals how anyone—yes, even non-tech teams—can quickly build custom AI solutions that fit their workflow, saving time, money, and boosting flexibility.HR: The Unexpected Hero of AI Adoption — It’s not your CTO driving AI success—it’s HR. Joshua makes the case for why empowering people, not just deploying tech, is key to creating AI-augmented teams that thrive in the future of work.LinkedIn: Joshua Wöhle | LinkedIn Mindstone: Mindstone - Empower Your Team with Practical AI Skills 00:00 Introduction to Joshua Wöhle and Mindstone 01:10 Personal Practices for Automation 02:35 Early Wins in AI Automation 11:23 Levels of AI Proficiency 14:59 Utility Threshold in AI 24:51 AI in Organizational Structures 33:21 Introduction to the Early Space and AI Integration 33:45 Joshua's Entrepreneurial Journey and AI Augmentation 34:37 Challenges and Breakthroughs with AI 35:32 The Evolution of Building with Generative AI 37:56 The Future of SaaS and Internal Development 40:34 Practical Examples of AI Implementation 50:14 The Importance of Iteration and High-Value Tasks 54:56 Concluding Thoughts and Reflections 📜 Read the transcript for this episode: Transcript of Why HR not CTOs Will Lead AI Augmentation - with Joshua Wöhle |   For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelinJeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley   Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.

    1 h y 2 min
  7. What AI Can't Replace – How The Atlantic Deals with Disruption

    13 MAY

    What AI Can't Replace – How The Atlantic Deals with Disruption

    In this episode, Nicholas Thompson, CEO of The Atlantic, shares a personal and expansive look at how AI is reshaping creativity, leadership, and human connection. From using ChatGPT in marathon training to rethinking journalism in the age of agents, Nicholas explores AI not just as a tool—but as a thought partner. We dive into cognitive offloading vs. augmentation, the ethics of AI-generated content, and why preserving “unwired” intelligence still matters. He also reflects on leading through disruption, building analog habits, and fostering team-wide experimentation. A rich conversation on staying human in an increasingly automated world. Key Takeaways: Your “unwired” intelligence is your AI superpower — The more human skills you build—like deep focus, emotional presence, and analog thinking—the better you’ll be at wielding AI. Thompson argues that cultivating these unwired abilities isn’t just about staying grounded—it’s about unlocking the full potential of the tools.Don’t fight the storm—gear up and adapt — AI is already transforming media and creative industries. Thompson compares it to a coming storm: you can’t stop it by yelling at the clouds. Instead, embrace it, understand it deeply, and make strategic decisions based on where it’s heading.Leadership means showing, not just telling — As a CEO navigating disruption, Thompson doesn’t just advocate for AI exploration—he models it. From training staff on GPTs to walking the halls and testing ideas live, he treats leadership as a practice of visible experimentation and continuous learning.AI relationships can’t replace real connection—but they can confuse it — Whether it's logging meals with a bot or losing a personalized Enneagram coach to a reset, Thompson highlights the emotional pull of AI and the dangers of relying on digital companions over human ones. Staying socially connected, especially through “third spaces,” is more important than ever.LinkedIn: Nicholas Thompson | LinkedIn The Atlantic: World Edition - The Atlantic Website: Home - Nicholas Thompson X: nxthompson (@nxthompson) Strava: Cycling & Biking App - Tracker, Trails, Training & More | Strava Caitlin Flanagan – Sex Without Women: Article:SexWithoutWomen-TheAtlantic 00:00 Introduction to Nicholas Thompson 00:11 Navigating the Information Overload 01:10 Daily Tech Insights and Tools 02:10 Using AI for Content Creation 04:39 AI as a Personal Trainer 08:02 Emotional Connections with AI 12:12 The Risks of AI Relationships 16:17 Preparing for AGI and Cognitive Offloading 30:26 AI's Impact on Leadership 31:10 Navigating AI Competitors 32:01 Internal AI Strategies 32:49 Ethical Considerations in AI Usage 34:07 AI in Journalism and Writing 36:32 Practical AI Applications 40:27 Balancing AI and Human Skills 49:27 Future of AI in Media 53:50 Final Thoughts and Reflections 📜 Read the transcript for this episode: Transcript of What AI Can't Replace – How The Atlantic Deals with Disruption |   For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelinJeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley   Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.

    1 h y 1 min
  8. Prompting for Originality: How Devin McNulty Is AI-Enabling His Workshop Business

    29 ABR

    Prompting for Originality: How Devin McNulty Is AI-Enabling His Workshop Business

    In this episode, Devin McNulty, founder of Funmentum Labs and creator of Funware, shares how he’s turning fun into a serious engine for creative work. After 15 years of running workshops for Fortune 500s, Devin built an AI-powered facilitation tool that helps hybrid teams generate better ideas—without needing a pro in the room. We explore how he treats AI like a co-facilitator, not a thought partner, and what it means to “pre-train” AI the way you'd brief a human. Devin also unpacks how to turn creative intuition into scalable software—and why levity, timing, and rough ideas can unlock big breakthroughs. A smart listen for anyone building tools, workshops, or teams that need to think more boldly. Key Takeaways: Fun Is a Strategic Tool—Not a Distraction – Devin challenges the assumption that “fun” and “serious work” are at odds. His facilitation method uses play to unlock alignment, compress timelines, and spark better ideas—especially in rooms that normally resist creative approaches.AI Can Facilitate, Not Just Assist – Most teams use AI as a solo tool or sidekick. Devin flips the script—designing AI to act like a group facilitator. Funware injects prompts, rephrases challenges, and even drops well-timed bad ideas to shift group dynamics and drive progress.Pre-training Your AI Is Like Prepping a Human Teammate – One of Devin’s biggest insights: treat your AI agents like collaborators. Build them with clear intent, layer in prompting strategy, and fine-tune them for the moment they’ll be used—just like you’d brief a co-facilitator before a workshop.Productizing Yourself Is the New Playbook – Devin’s journey is a case study in AI-first entrepreneurship—turning deep craft into software. His advice? Start with your workflow, atomize it into repeatable components, and build tools that deliver value with the push of a button.Website: Funmentum™ Labs LinkedIn: Devin McNulty | LinkedIn 00:00 Intro to Funmentum Labs & Funware 00:38 Why Fun Is a Powerful Work Strategy 01:41 Overcoming Skepticism in Serious Workplaces 02:27 Techniques to Engage Resistant Teams 06:32 Can AI Be Funny? Humor in Corporate Settings 08:03 How Funware Uses AI to Drive Group Creativity 11:43 Automating Workshops with AI-Powered Prompts 14:04 Devin’s Path from Facilitator to AI Builder 16:21 Advanced Prompting Techniques in Funware 28:34 Creative Prompting: Logos, Personas & Play 30:04 Exercises to Push Beyond Obvious Ideas 31:35 How AI Unlocks Group Innovation 36:55 Pre-Training AI for Better Collaboration 43:35 Using AI as Muse, Challenger & Focuser 48:46 Final Thoughts 📜 Read the transcript for this episode: Transcript of Prompting for Originality: How Devin McNulty Is AI-Enabling His Workshop Business |   For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelinJeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley   Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.

    56 min

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Beyond the Prompt dives deep into the world of AI and its expanding impact on business and daily work. Hosted by Jeremy Utley of Stanford's d.school, alongside Henrik Werdelin, an entrepreneur known for starting BarkBox, prehype and other startups, each episode features conversations with innovators and leaders to uncover pragmatic stories of how organizations leverage AI to accelerate success. Learn creative strategies and actionable tactics you can apply right away as AI capabilities advance exponentially.

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