
A practical, honest take on using AI as a creative partner — not a content vending machine.
Let’s get this out the way:
I don’t use ChatGPT like most people do. I’m not feeding it “secret” prompts or trying to 10x my growth overnight with some AI-powered shortcut. Instead, I talk to it. Think out loud. Bounce ideas around. Ask it to help me untangle the clutter in my brain.
It’s less like using a machine… And more like working with a very fast, very calm co-worker who never gets tired — or rolls their eyes at my half-baked thoughts.
So what’s the real benefit?
It helps me think.
Not just write or generate — but think clearly.
And for someone running a small brand and juggling a million things, that’s gold.
How I Actually Use ChatGPT
1. To unpack fuzzy ideas
I often start with something like:
“Let me think out loud for a sec…”
And then I just type. No polish, no structure — just the jumble in my head.
ChatGPT takes that and reflects it back, often saying:
“Cool. Here’s what you’re really trying to say.”
It’s a mirror that helps me hear myself better.
2. To write in my own voice
I don’t want overhyped, formulaic marketing fluff. I want plain, clear, human language — like I’m talking to someone across the table.
ChatGPT helps me with that. I’ve trained it on my tone, my preferences, and how I like to show up.
Now, it helps me write like… well, me.
(You’re reading a good example of that right now.)
And here’s a little trick that makes a big difference:
One of the reasons my writing sounds so much like me is because… well, it is. I’m not typing most of this — I’m actually speaking it. I use the ChatGPT app on my Android phone, and when I start a chat, I tap the little microphone icon and just talk. That’s why the tone comes across as relaxed and natural — because I’m literally speaking, not writing.
A quick tip if you want to try this: keep each voice note under two minutes. Anything longer sometimes fails to transcribe. So I do a short burst, tap the tick to convert it to text, then hit the mic again and carry on. You can do this as many times as you like, and as long as you stay within ChatGPT’s message length limit, it works beautifully. It’s become a really easy, friction-free way to capture ideas without overthinking.
3. To move through blocks faster
When I hit a wall — with a headline, a piece of copy, a sales page — I ask:
“Can you help me shape this?”
Or: “What are three ways I could say this differently?”
It’s like whiteboarding with someone who doesn’t interrupt, doesn’t need coffee, and keeps up with your thoughts at speed.
4. To think with me — not for me
This one’s important.
I don’t ask it for the answer. I ask it to explore options, weigh trade-offs, play devil’s advocate, or help me structure what I’m trying to say. It’s collaborative. It sharpens my thinking, not replaces it.
And because of that, I stay in control of the creative process.
5. To get unstuck on tech stuff — fast
Even though it’s not “creative,” technical friction can kill momentum.
Whether it’s domain records, email setup, Notion glitches or WordPress weirdness, ChatGPT helps me:
Troubleshoot logically (without spiralling)
Translate tech jargon into plain English
Save hours I’d otherwise spend Googling or waiting for support
And again — it only works because I’m willing to think out loud, even about boring or frustrating stuff.
Because of that, ChatGPT can guide me through the fix much faster — and I can get back to work.
The Hidden Superpower: A Thinking Partner
For a small business owner doing most of it solo, there’s something surprisingly powerful about not being alone in your head.
This isn’t about automating everything. It’s about having a safe, pressure-free space to process out loud — and get feedback that’s fast, helpful, and non-judgmental.
Yes, ChatGPT generates content.
In fact, it helps me write most of mine.
But the quality of what it gives back depends entirely on the relationship I’ve built with it — how much context I give, how openly I work with it, and how I’ve trained it to understand my voice and values.
That’s what makes the difference.
So, is this “the best way” to use ChatGPT?
Honestly?
There’s no single best way. But this approach feels more human — and more you, if you’re like me:
You value clarity over hype.
You want help thinking, not just spitting out content.
You’re not trying to “game the system” — you just want to run an honest, effective brand.
If that sounds familiar, maybe try using ChatGPT as a thinking partner, not a vending machine.
You might be surprised how much more helpful — and human — it starts to feel.
