Updated
Updated · Tom's Guide · Apr 28
Amanda Caswell uses five ChatGPT agents to automate tasks and cut workload in half
Updated
Updated · Tom's Guide · Apr 28

Amanda Caswell uses five ChatGPT agents to automate tasks and cut workload in half

3 articles · Updated · Tom's Guide · Apr 28
  • Over one week, Caswell deployed five specialized ChatGPT agents for email triage, research, brainstorming, scheduling, and decision-making, saving an estimated 7-10 hours and improving daily focus.
  • By integrating AI into her workflow, Caswell reclaimed time previously lost to repetitive tasks, enabling greater creativity and higher-level decision-making while still requiring occasional human oversight for nuanced judgments.
  • Caswell's experiment demonstrates Naval Ravikant's 'leverage' principle, highlighting how AI agents can empower individuals to achieve more without additional staff, though human input remains essential for certain complex tasks.
If AI saves 10 hours a week, what is the true cost of setting up and supervising these agents?
By outsourcing small decisions to AI, are we at risk of weakening our own judgment and intuition?
When AI automates daily tasks, does human work just become the job of supervising artificial intelligence?
Is 'permissionless leverage' creating a new productivity gap between AI-savvy workers and everyone else?
With most enterprise AIs failing evaluation, how can we trust personal 'robot armies' with our sensitive data?
As AI freezes entry-level hiring, what new career paths will replace traditional junior roles?