If you had a Time Machine to go back in 2014, what AI tool would you take back to become successful?
Purvam Joshi
14 replies
I would personally take Midjourney too boost the content engine! Facebook was on Peak! would create the biggest distribution channel with AI image generation!
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Alexander Galitsky@ag94
Id go back to 90s
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I would definitely take back an AI-powered marketing tool for personalized ad targeting. It could’ve made a big impact on reaching the right audience more effectively.
@matthew__baker what kind of marketing tool you are using right now for such tasks?
I'd bring back GPT-3 from OpenAI for sure! Having advanced language models like that in 2014 would be game-changing. You could automate content creation, power chatbots way ahead of their time, and enable all sorts of AI-driven apps and services years before anyone else. Talk about a massive competitive edge!
ChatGPT all the way! Creating content, answering questions, automating tasks - it would have been a game changer back in 2014. Imagine having that AI capability years before anyone else. You could revolutionize so many industries and gain a massive edge over the competition by leveraging AI before it became mainstream. Sign me up for that!
If I had a time machine to go back to 2014, I'd take OpenAI’s GPT models to revolutionise content creation, automation, and customer service, gaining a massive early edge in AI-driven industries!
@nitesh_jamod Content Engines on roll
I would bring along a tool like Canva’s AI design features. It would have been great for creating eye-catching visuals easily and quickly back in the day.
@rose_linda the perfect answer of my discussion...canva has really made our life easy ...just click click and showcase🙌🏻✨
A tool that could predict audience reactions and preferences would have been incredibly helpful.
@salamatu_abdullahi Good one mate. :)
Back then, creating high-quality content was key, and this would've saved me tons of time brainstorming blog posts, website copy, and social media captions. Consistent, engaging content was the secret sauce to early success.