What part of your job has AI already changed?
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I have been thinking a lot about how AI is quietly transforming the way we work, not replacing jobs entirely, but definitely reshaping them.
At a recent Fortune summit, the CEO of Indeed said AI can now handle over half the tasks in most roles. But no single job can be fully automated. OpenAI’s Chief People Officer even called it a “reimagination of work.”

That really stuck with me.
So here’s a question for the builders, founders, and creatives here:
What’s one part of your job that AI has already changed—or that you think won’t exist the same way a year from now?
Whether it's content creation, brainstorming, coding, outreach, or something else, I’d love to hear how you're adapting.
Let’s share and learn from each other 👇
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Replies
Well, it has changed a lot for me.
Explanation - I can ask ChatGPT if I can not understand a piece of code.
Code generation - I ask to generate me methods which I know to write but I would like to cut time
Brainstorming - I narrow down ideas
Tech stack suggestion - when I need to build something
@eljo_prifti Couldn't agree more.😄
@eljo_prifti @partick_support Haha, same here 😄
I always felt I was an editor first, writer second. I worked with some of the major media outlets to polish their writing and headlines. With AI, what I like the most is getting the initial draft and then tweaking it further per my liking.
@rohanrecommends AI as a co-writer, cool 🙌🏽
@rohanrecommends AI as secretary.
@rohanrecommends @eljo_prifti 😂😂
Being a solo maker has changed a lot.
- My fear of creating content has decreased. I can draft roughly, and AI handles the organization and execution. I only need to oversee the start and finish of the project.
- The cost and time to build a simple webpage have decreased. Previously, I used platforms like Framer and Anima after designing, but now I can design and develop simultaneously. By unifying the platforms, I've managed to reduce costs to just 10% of what they were.
- Having a conversation partner is a positive change. The longer I work alone, the harder it becomes to make decisions and choices. While AI isn't the answer, it has inspired solutions and allowed me to simulate outcomes when I make choices.
I believe that without AI, I would have given up being a solo maker. I feel fortunate to have caught the AI wave at just the right time. 🫡
@imbud1980 What’s the biggest AI-driven win you've had as a maker?
@imbud1980 the conversation partner thing is criminally underrated. More founders will discover this and business will become more competitive because entrepreneurs will become more capable.
Screenzy
Everything... I'am programming since 30 years. "By hand". I've created https://weblegal.ai in 1 month, a web legal document generator (terms of use, cookie policy, etc...) that supports 50 countries and 20 languages. It would have taken month or years to write it. Claude has written 99% of the app...
@yannougui That’s insanely impressive! 👏
So, do you see yourself building more tools with this workflow, or was this a one-time lightning strike? 😅
Screenzy
@hamza_afzal_butt I'll never go back... Claude codes better than me and faster. Some times when hit make mistakes I am able to help him to point in the right direction, this is the only advantage I have over a total beginner. But It's not just a matter of coding:it is able to integrate features than I won't ever be able. For WebLegalAI it made a form and generate a prompt able to create documents for 50 juridictions. And before starting coding anything it helps me to elaborate the full project plan. And in the end I use it for the marketing.
And my app is available in 6 UX... I've not translated anything. Stripe integration, etc... all was so so easier!
minimalist phone: creating folders
For me, personally, it is the fast pace of searching relevant resources – ideally, scientifically based :)
@busmark_w_nika Yes! Search used to be a time sink, especially for niche topics.
@busmark_w_nika @hamza_afzal_butt Searching has changed.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@hamza_afzal_butt @eljo_prifti Now, we prompt :D
@hamza_afzal_butt @busmark_w_nika are we promp engineer? 👷 😂
I 100% agree. For me it's mostly content creation. For my CTO it's coding.
What is really interesting for me is, that until recently, you'd need five or more people to get a product off the ground. Now, thanks to AI, small teams can move faster, do more, and spend less.
@laura_cornely Greattt :) What kind of product are you working on now?
I guess it depends on the seniority of your coding experience. For me, I am an AI engineer with basic understanding of full stack development. Any suggestions on how to use LLM to develop applications by myself?
@azhu_azhu Try using LLMs for prototyping APIs and UI logic. Also, tools like Replit or Vercel paired with Claude or GPT-4 can help you ship solo fast!
As a marketer, AI has changed how I work. I use it to draft newsletters, write ad copy, and repurpose content across platforms.
It saves time on the first version so I can focus more on refining the message and strategy.
I think a year from now, tasks like writing meta descriptions or basic reports will be almost fully handled by AI.
WebCurate.co
On my website, webcurate.co, I need to write product descriptions for every site I feature. AI has made this so much easier and saved me a lot of time. Now, I can focus more on the main part of the site—finding and curating great websites. It also helped me improve my emails and everyday writing, which has really made my work faster.
@hosseinyazdi a great use case. What’s your process now? Do you prompt from scratch or feed in a structure?
WebCurate.co
@hamza_afzal_butt I use a premade structure to maintain consistency between the descriptions.
Well a good question, for me AI brings too much knowledge at one place where its tough to handle things. So going forward, it might be something which is gonna be challenging.
@deepanshu_chittoria Very real concern. I havve felt that overwhelmed too. Are you using any frameworks to filter or organize that info better?