Forsidebilde av showet The AIQUALISER Podcast: discover how people are really using AI

The AIQUALISER Podcast: discover how people are really using AI

Podkast av John Bennett

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Teknologi og vitenskap

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Les mer The AIQUALISER Podcast: discover how people are really using AI

The AIQUALISER Podcast examines what changes when AI becomes part of everyday life and work.Each episode is a conversation with someone using AI in their business, profession, or career. We talk about how they use it, how it fits into their existing work, and the challenges they have encountered along the way.These practical, reflective conversations are hosted by John Bennett, author of Don’t Surrender Your Thinking, and are for anyone interested in adapting their work and keeping their thinking sharp as AI advances.If you have a question you’d like explored on the podcast, please visit frmdb.ly/pod

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6 Episoder

episode How To Stop Using AI Like A Search Engine, with Katelin O'Shea cover

How To Stop Using AI Like A Search Engine, with Katelin O'Shea

In this episode of The AIQUALISER Podcast, John Bennett talks to Katelin O'Shea, who is a Project Manager at Dropbox, a Perplexity Business Fellow and has created a consultancy and training business called AI That Works. Katelin saw AI being used in a fintech start-up in 2022, so she was already aware of the possibilities when ChatGPT launched. She put that to good use at Dropbox, where she has built systems that take a project scope from half a day's work to twenty minutes, and freed herself up to actually listen in meetings rather than take notes. She explains what context actually means in plain terms, why rolling out AI to a team is just as much work as building the tool in the first place, and where she draws the line on what AI gets to do. The episode closes with a question Katelin gets asked a lot: if you could only focus on one area of AI right now, what would it be? Her answer is skills, the reusable instruction files that document your processes in a format AI can act on, which can be built without any technical knowledge. In This Episode * Katelin's introduction to AI before the ChatGPT era, and what working with an early agent taught her * Why people with management experience tend to get better early results from AI * Transcription, structured folders, and custom AI tools: how Katelin manages projects at Dropbox * The difference between using AI as a search engine and using it as a system built around your work * What context actually means, with examples that require no technical knowledge * Why AI rollouts fail, and why individual pain points beat company-wide mandates * Filtering LinkedIn noise: building a system that turns saved posts into original content * What Katelin will not let AI do without her own voice in the draft first * Where to start if you have not started yet * Skills: reusable instruction files, portable across tools, no technical knowledge required Chapters * 00:00 Introduction to Katelin O'Shea * 03:53 Before ChatGPT changed everything * 08:29 Inside a project manager's AI workflow * 20:23 Context isn't technical * 27:20 Why rollouts fail * 36:40 Filtering the noise * 44:00 Keeping the human in the loop * 48:48 How to get started * 57:40 Listener question: where to focus You can find Katelin at aithatworks.io [http://aithatworks.io], on YouTube at @aithatworks_kate, on TikTok at @aithatworks, and on LinkedIn at linkedin.com/in/katelinoshea [http://linkedin.com/in/katelinoshea] If you have a question you'd like us to pick up in a future episode, you can get in touch at frmdb.ly/pod [http://frmdb.ly/pod] ----------------------------------------

13. mai 2026 - 1 h 5 min
episode AI Has No Place in Your Zone of Genius cover

AI Has No Place in Your Zone of Genius

In this episode of The AIQUALISER Podcast, John Bennett talks with Victoria Westcott, who juggles many roles including producing films and managing a winery, about how she uses AI across very different businesses and why the one place she keeps it out is the work she cares about most. Victoria and her sister Jen make independent films. To do that without a studio or investor, they need income that does not take over their lives. AI makes it possible to run a cleaning company, a landscaping business, a YouTube coaching channel and a side-line in wordsearch books, creating income without any of them becoming 'a job'. Victoria shares where she finds AI most useful but also where it does not work. Film budgets have defeated it despite a lot of trying: union rates, location-specific tax credits, and constantly shifting figures are more than it can reliably handle. Writing convincingly in a specific author's voice is similarly out of reach. Her most unexpected use case is something different altogether: a personal GPT built around the twelve-week year methodology, which plans her daily meals based on her schedule, fridge contents, and protein targets. The episode closes with advice for creative people uncertain about where AI belongs in their work. Victoria's answer: use it for everything outside your zone of genius and keep it away from the work only you can do. In This Episode - Victoria's route from inner-city teaching to independent filmmaking - How the AI helps Victoria create businesses to fund the films - AI and the Toronto International Film Festival: researching and personalising at scale - Different approaches across film, cleaning, YouTube, and word search books - Negative scaffolding: what it is, why AI does it, and how to remove it - Where AI falls short: film budgets and voice replication - The protein tracker GPT and why it works - Why most people using AI are making more work for themselves, not less - Zone of genius as a practical filter for every AI decision - Advice for creative people who want to use AI without losing their voice Chapters - 00:00 Introduction to Victoria Westcott - 07:44 AI for the mundane stuff - 17:34 Juggling roles with AI - 29:50 Negative scaffolding - 31:58 What AI can and can't do - 40:44 Protecting creative work - 52:10 Listener question: the zone of genius - 57:39 If AI disappeared tomorrow

16. april 2026 - 1 h 0 min
episode AI Won't Answer for Its Mistakes. You Will. cover

AI Won't Answer for Its Mistakes. You Will.

In this episode of The AIQUALISER Podcast, John Bennett talks with James O'Regan, co-host of The Impact of AI Explored [https://impactofaiexplored.com], about who is actually accountable when AI gets something wrong.   James has been podcasting about AI since February 2024. His view of the technology is practical and consistent: useful, incremental, and nowhere near as groundbreaking as the hype suggests. The conversation moves through the hype that has failed to deliver, the security risks that get glossed over in the rush to try new things, and the guardrails question that James returns to throughout. Autonomous agents do not stop when something goes wrong. They keep going until told not to. That requires precise instructions, clean data, and documented processes. Most AI pilots skip all three. That is why most of them fail. The episode ends with a simple question: if AI disappeared tomorrow, what would James miss most? His answer is the efficiency. There are not things AI can do that humans cannot do, it just makes you quicker.   IN THIS EPISODE •       Two years of change: from experimentation to daily use •       The AI hardware that flopped, and what it says about hype •       Security risks in open-source agents and AI browsers •       Autonomous agents and the guardrails problem •       Why 70 percent of AI pilots fail •       What James will not hand over to AI, and why •       Talking to children about what is real •       Agents versus automation: how to tell the difference •       Custom instructions, sycophancy, and the AI relationship problem •       Listener question: keeping company data out of public AI systems •       If AI disappeared tomorrow: efficiency, not capability   CHAPTERS 00:00 Introduction to James O'Regan 03:35 Two years of talking about AI 06:34 The biggest letdowns 14:12 Cool but scary 19:03 Staying in control 32:04 Kids and AI 40:12 Agents or automation? 46:08 Day-to-day use and personalisation 56:30 Listener question: blocking AI

12. mars 2026 - 1 h 6 min
episode Why speed isn't always an advantage with AI, with Corinne Thomas cover

Why speed isn't always an advantage with AI, with Corinne Thomas

Join John as he talks with Corinne Thomas, founder of Ethical Sales, about what responsible AI adoption actually looks like inside real organisations, and how to implement it without creating confusion, risk, or resistance. They discuss how AI adoption is usually driven by leadership, and why pressure to “move fast” often clashes with reality. Corinne shares what she sees when individuals respond very differently to AI, from enthusiasm to scepticism to outright fear, and why those reactions need to be handled deliberately rather than smoothed over. The conversation explores why the biggest risks often come from overconfidence rather than caution, and why slowing down can actually accelerate progress. They also dig into what helps people learn AI properly, and the continued importance of face-to-face learning, even when the tools themselves are digital. The discussion also explores where AI is genuinely making a difference. Much of the value comes from unglamorous work, admin, proposals, funding applications, and internal processes, rather than the headline use cases people often fixate on. The episode returns repeatedly to the idea that AI works best when it supports structure, not when it replaces thinking. The episode closes with a listener question on using AI for prospecting, and why expecting it to act as a data source often leads to unreliable results. Corinne explains where AI fits in sales research, and where human judgement and proper data still matter. Visit the Ethical Sales [https://ethical-sales.co.uk] website to sign up to Corinne's newsletter. IN THIS EPISODE: * The different ways individuals react to AI, and why that matters * Why moving too fast often creates more risk than value * The problem of shadow AI and uncontrolled experimentation * What effective AI learning actually looks like in practice * Why face-to-face still plays a role in building capability * Where AI is quietly making the biggest difference * Keeping human judgement in charge as AI becomes more powerful * What AI can and can’t do in prospecting CHAPTERS: 00:00 Introduction to Corinne Thomas 05:40 Who drives the decision to use AI? 09:01 The three approaches to AI 17:05 Why face-to-face still matters 20:24 The risk of going too fast 25:17 The beauty and challenge of AI progress 30:02 Building AI capability 35:42 Where AI is actually making a difference 45:35 "I'm the human here" 51:50 What AI can and can’t do in prospecting

18. feb. 2026 - 1 h 1 min
episode Why you need to treat AI like the new guy, with Russ Henneberry cover

Why you need to treat AI like the new guy, with Russ Henneberry

In this episode of The AIQUALISER Podcast, John Bennett talks with Russ Henneberry, co-author of Digital Marketing for Dummies, about why AI often frustrates us, and why structure and judgement matter more than prompts, tools, or model choice. Russ reflects on a career shaped by repeated reinvention, from early internet marketing through to content, SEO, and platform shifts such as Google, Facebook, and now AI. He positions AI not as a creative shortcut or a mysterious intelligence, but as a general-purpose system that behaves predictably once its true nature and limits are understood. A central idea in the conversation is the “new guy” analogy. When AI delivers generic, bloated, or inconsistent outputs, it is usually because it lacks context. Russ explains that most frustration with AI comes from treating it as if it already knows the job, rather than recognising that it needs onboarding just like any new team member. The discussion moves on to why clever prompting rarely compensates for weak intent, unclear scope, or missing structure, and why letting AI run in auto mode can quietly undermine human thinking. AI will almost always overproduce, and the real work happens in editing, cutting back, and deciding what matters. Russ also cautions against constantly switching tools in search of better results. Staying with a small number of systems allows understanding to build properly, while novelty keeps attention scattered. If you have a question you’d like us to pick up in a future episode, you can get in touch at frmdb.ly/pod [http://frmdb.ly/pod] To find out more about Russ, visit theClick [https://theclick.ai] IN THIS EPISODE * Why AI often feels inconsistent or disappointing * The “new guy” analogy, and what it explains about generic outputs * Why structure matters more than prompts or model choice * How auto mode can trade speed for judgement * Why AI overproduces, and why editing is essential * The risks of tool hopping versus going deep with a few systems * Why responsibility and authorship do not disappear as AI improves Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Russ Henneberry 10:11 What's Surprising About AI? 14:42 Structuring AI for Effective Use 23:43 The Importance of Learning AI Deeply 36:28 Diving Deep into AI Tools 46:29 Structuring AI for Business Planning 57:34 Taking Responsibility for AI Outputs

4. feb. 2026 - 1 h 5 min
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