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100 ChatGPT Prompts That Put You Ahead of 99% of Your Peers at Work

The difference I’m seeing right now is not who’s working harder. It’s those who actually know how to use AI well.
I’ve been using this free guide from HubSpot to move faster, get better outputs, and honestly just make work easier. It’s a really solid breakdown of how to actually use ChatGPT in your day-to-day work. It consists of:
Industry-Specific Use Cases: 15+ real-world applications across different roles and industries
Productivity Guide: 21 best practices to help you 10x your efficiency with AI
Prompt Powerhouse: 100+ ready-to-use prompts you can plug in immediately
Challenge Buster: Simple ways to get past the most common AI mistakes
Plus deeper sections on email, content, customer support, and data analysis.
Most people are still barely scratching the surface with AI. The people who figure this out early are going to have a massive advantage. If you want to be one of them 👇
3 hottest high-income skills in 2026
I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately, especially watching how fast everything is shifting with AI. And if I’m being honest, I think a lot of people are still spending time getting good at things that just aren’t going to matter in a few years. Not because they’re not capable, but because the game itself has changed. So I asked myself, if I was starting from scratch in 2026, what would I actually focus on to make money and stay relevant? I kept coming back to the same 3 things:
1. “Vibe Coding”
I know this is the one people don’t want to hear, but the people who learn how to use AI the best are the ones whose jobs won’t get replaced by it. You don’t need to be technical anymore, you just need to be the person who actually knows how to use the tools. That looks like building small projects, automating parts of your work, and getting comfortable experimenting. Once you do that, you naturally become faster, more efficient, and harder to replace. That’s how you get promoted and outperform people around you. At this point, it’s not gatekept, it’s just about who’s willing to learn.
2. Building community (IRL is leverage)
This one is so underrated right now. Everything is online, everything is remote, which means real-life connection is becoming more valuable, not less. If you can bring people together through dinners, events, or small gatherings in your industry, you become the center of that network. And that changes everything, because the best opportunities don’t come from applying online, they come from proximity. From someone remembering you in the right room or introducing you at the right time. And if you’re the one creating those rooms, you control that. Women are naturally great at this, we just haven’t been treating it like a high-income skill.
3. Building a personal brand
This one has probably changed my life the most, but it’s also just how the world works now. If you have attention, you have leverage. A personal brand gives you distribution, and distribution lets you do almost anything. You can launch a business, get hired, partner with brands, or create opportunities that didn’t exist before. Yes, it’s getting more competitive, which is exactly why now matters. There’s still a window where if you start and stay consistent, you can build something meaningful. And even in the worst case, it becomes a side income. In the best case, it becomes your main fuel.
So the real question is, which one are you actually going to commit to? 🙃
So fun speaking at Columbia Business School last week!
Where should I go next? Reply to this email and let me know! 👀
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❤️ Avni, Founder @ Gen She // Sponsor this newsletter

