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5 Surprisingly Simple Ways to Use Generative Artificial Intelligence at Work

Colorful, AI-generated illustration of of books and resources about AINot too long ago, generative artificial intelligence (AI) might鈥檝e sounded like something out of a sci-fi movie. Now it鈥檚 here, and it鈥檚 ready to help you write emails, schedule meetings and even create presentations.

In a recent , Technology Transformation Specialist Shannon Glennon shared tips and use cases for faculty and staff who may be curious, but cautious, about incorporating generative AI tools into their day-to-day workflows.

Here are five easy ways to start using generative AI to work smarter, not harder鈥攏o technology degree required.

1. Compose Emails With Professionalism and Poise

Whether you’re reaching out to a colleague or following up with a student, like Microsoft Copilot can help you draft professional, polished emails in seconds.

鈥淪tart with what you鈥檙e looking to create,鈥 Glennon says. 鈥淏e specific, provide context and don鈥檛 be afraid to refine your prompt if you don鈥檛 get the results you鈥檙e looking for.鈥

Pro tip: Try sharing a few of your past emails with the AI tool you鈥檙e using so it can learn your tone and style.

2. Let AI Be Your Personal Assistant

Tired of the back-and-forth of scheduling meetings? With a Microsoft Copilot Work license (ask your IT team for more details), Copilot can easily check Outlook calendars, propose time slots and even send invites since the tool is part of the Microsoft 365 suite. This creates more time for you to focus on other important tasks.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like having a scheduling sidekick who鈥檚 always hyper-attuned to your team鈥檚 availability,鈥 says Glennon.

3. Create Docs, Decks and Forms in a Flash

Need a PowerPoint for an upcoming presentation or a form to collect student feedback? Copilot can help you generate PowerPoint presentations, Word documents, Excel sheets, Microsoft Forms and more.

鈥淵ou can create a presentation from scratch or summarize a meeting transcript into a Word doc for future reference鈥攊t鈥檚 all about saving time,鈥 Glennon says.

Pro tip: With a Microsoft Copilot Work license, obtaining meeting transcripts will be easier when you use Teams instead of Zoom, due to integration across M365 apps.

4. Summarize Longer, More Complex Source Material Into Concise Bullet Points

Want to capture the gist of the University鈥檚 but you’re stretched for time to read 5,000-plus words? AI can help you summarize long texts (think: research papers, academic articles, policies, reports) into concise, digestible summaries. You can even have fun with it: Try having a document summarized in the style of your favorite baseball announcer or Yoda.

Pro-tip: AI is still known to return incorrect information and hallucinate occasionally, so always check its work.

5. Add Some Visual Flair

Need an image for a presentation or social media post? AI tools can generate custom visuals in seconds鈥攏o design skills required.

鈥淎I-generated images are great for making your content pop,鈥 Glennon says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an easy way to add visual interest to reports and presentations.鈥

Ready to give it a try? Just remember that any University-owned data should only be entered after logging in to ,聽using your syr.edu or g.syr.edu credentials.

As Glennon put it: 鈥淕enerative AI isn鈥檛 just a trend, it鈥檚 a tool. And like any tool, it鈥檚 all about how you use it.鈥

Bonus: Stay in the Loop With ITS Resources

You can subscribe to the for periodic tips, demos and updates. Don鈥檛 forget to check out the or register for an upcoming session:

  • Aug. 12: Orange Access: Modernizing Identity Management