The AI-First Professional: Stop "Using" AI. Start Building an AI System
Inside: 3 practical frameworks you can use on Monday morning
Few people use AI to fundamentally change how they work. It’s about knowing where to start and having a framework to turn experiments into habits. AI can free you up to do more valuable work, expand your skill set and get more done in less time. “Use AI more” isn’t a strategy, it’s vague advice leading to a dead end.
Find concrete, measurable value from AI in your workflow. Save time on things that drain you so you have more capacity for work that energizes you. Find ways to move faster, think clearer and remove friction from your day.
AI isn’t one-size-fits-all. The value is in discovering what works for your specific job, your specific bottlenecks, your specific workflow.
To avoid being lost in the noise of generic “Use ChatGPT” articles, you must focus on the behavioral shift rather than just a list of tools. People are tired of prompt packs, they want sustainable thinking frameworks..
Social media and newsletters are saturated with “Top 10 AI Tools for Marketing,” and “How to write better prompts.” What people need is the psychology of being AI-first. How to shift from being a “creator” to a “director.” Few creators address the workflow transition for non-technical roles.
AI can’t replace your expertise, your contextual knowledge or your voice. Let’s take a look at three ways you can integrate AI into your workflow using these irreplaceable human skills to solve universal pain points.
1. The Zero Draft Rule
The most expensive part of your day is the first 15 minutes of any task. Staring at a blinking cursor drains your cognitive battery. You battle blank page anxiety before typing a single word.
With AI, you can implement the Zero Draft Rule. As an AI-First professional, you never start from zero. Your job is no longer to originate the first draft, your job is to edit a zero draft.
A Zero Draft is not a first draft. A first draft is something you might show a trusted colleague. A Zero Draft is messy, generic and structure-heavy and AI creates it in seconds.
When you stare at a blank page, you’re trying to do two difficult things at once:
Structure: Determine the logic and flow
Content: Create the actual insights and words
This is cognitive overload. By asking AI for a Zero Draft, you outsource the structure. This frees up your brain to focus entirely on the content. The nuance, the tone and the strategy.
How to apply this in your workflow
Next time you need to write a project brief, a difficult email or a strategy doc, do not open a blank document. Open your AI tool and just brain dump or word vomit (if you prefer!):
I need to write a proposal for [ project ]. Here are my random messy thoughts: [ insert bullet points, voice memo transcript or rough notes ]. Please organize this into a coherent structure with headers.You now have something on the table. Is it perfect? No. Is it generic? Probably. But it is there.
Now, you switch modes. You stop being the writer and become the editor-in-chief. You are no longer paralyzed by creating, you are energized by correcting. Correcting a bad paragraph is easier than conjuring truth from thin air.
The AI provides the skeleton. You provide the soul.
2. Vibe Checking
AI is a crowd-pleaser. It is trained on the average of the internet. Unsupervised, AI produces average work. It will give you a C+ draft every single time. Technically correct but grammatically bland and often tone-deaf.
If you aren’t writing the words from scratch, your new role is Quality Assurance. I call this Vibe Checking. Vibe checking is the ability to look at an AI-generated output and instantly diagnose: Does this sound like a human? Does this sound like me?
Your seniority and experience shine here. A junior employee might accept the AI’s output as “good enough” because they don’t know better. You know the history of the client, the specific pet peeves of your boss and the nuance of your brand’s voice. The AI does not.
The 3-Point Vibe Check Inspection
Before you hit send on anything generated by AI, you must run it through this mental filter:
The Hallucination Check (Fact vs. Fiction):
AI is a confident liar. It will invent statistics, dates and even policy details to make a sentence flow better.
The Rule: If it states a fact, verify it. If it cites a number, double-check the source.
The Robot Check (Tone & Syntax):
Look for the dead giveaways of AI writing: words like “delve,” “tapestry,” “landscape,” or sentences that all have the exact same length.
The Fix: Break up the rhythm. Insert a short sentence. Add a contraction (change “do not” to “don’t”). Inject a personal anecdote or an idiom.
The Context Check (The ‘Us’ Factor):
Does this answer the actual problem, or just the surface problem? For example, you asked AI to write an apology email to a client. The AI writes a generic “We are sorry for the inconvenience.”
The Vibe Check: You know this client hates corporate speak. You delete the AI’s sentence and replace it with: “I dropped the ball on this, and I’m fixing it today.”
AI provides the logic. You provide the intuition.
3. Build a Context Cheat Sheet
Most people treat every interaction with AI like a first date. They start from scratch, introducing themselves and their goals every single time. This is exhausting and it’s why your results often feel generic. If you don’t tell the AI who you are it defaults to a helpful-but-boring corporate assistant.
The solution to this is a Context Cheat Sheet. Think of an AI tool as a highly skilled intern who joined your company five minutes ago. They have excellent grammar and infinite knowledge but they know nothing about you, your boss or your company culture.
Instead of re-explaining your job every time, create a single Context Cheat Sheet. A simple Notes or Word doc that lives on your desktop.
What goes in the file?
The file is a clear description of your reality. Your Context Cheat Sheet should include three distinct blocks:
The Who Am I Block:
Role: “I am a Senior Project Manager at a mid-sized construction firm.”
Goal: “My goal is to communicate clearly and briefly to busy stakeholders who don’t read long emails.”
Stakeholders: “I report to the VP of Operations (who loves data) and the Site Lead (who loves bullet points).”
The Voice & Tone Block:
Paste 3 examples of your best writing.
Add specific constraints: “Do not use buzzwords like ‘synergy’ or ‘game-changer’. Keep sentences under 20 words where possible. Use an active voice.”
The Formatting Block:
“Always format outputs using Markdown.”
“Use bolding for key terms.”
“Never give me a conclusion paragraph unless I ask for it.”
How to use it
This is the AI-First workflow in action.
Step 1: Open your AI tool.
Step 2: If you use ChatGPT or Claude the file can serve as instructions in a Project. Or if you use Gemini you can create a custom Gem.
Step 3: Start prompting.
By doing this, you instantly upgrade the AI’s IQ regarding your specific job. You stop getting generic advice and start getting tailored consulting.
Move from playing with AI. To building a system with AI.
A single misconception drives AI anxiety: believing your value relies on the prompt.
For years, we have conflated working hard with generating output. We felt productive because we spent three hours writing a report. But in an AI-First world, the math has changed.
Becoming an AI-First professional isn’t about learning Python or understanding neural networks. It is a fundamental shift in your job description:
Yesterday: You were paid to stare at blank pages and fill them.
Today: You’re paid to have a vision, provide the context and enforce the quality standard.
The Zero Draft Rule saves you from the blank page. Vibe Checking ensures the output has a soul. Your Context Cheat Sheet ensures the AI knows the mission.
This transition allows you to escape the grunt work trap. By handing the repetitive 80% of tasks to your AI intern, you reclaim the mental energy needed for the strategic 20%. The relationships, the complex problem solving and the creative leaps that no algorithm can replicate.
The tools are already here. The only thing missing is your decision to stop working harder and start working smarter.




Great read! This post reminds me of how creative working with AI actually is, if you know how to use it. Like, REALLY use it.🩷🦩