AI Assistant: A fast and friendlier way to get work done online, from organizing your thoughts to writing your next draft, all in a chat interface that feels like a conversation and gets out of the way with a clean look, including a large and welcoming prompt. The app encourages users to type something, adds the option of attaching an image for additional context, and returns useful output in short order, no clutter, no ramp-up time.
What’s an AI Assistant
The AI assistant is a conversational experience that allows users to ask questions, produce content and develop daily tasks in a chat window that feels like chatting with a colleague who is available 24-7. The AI Assistant focuses on simplicity but only allows for image attachments, and not files or PDFs. Users can share screenshots or pictures to add context without having to trouble-shoot formats.
Why does an interface matter
The chat interface is something that users recognize and it reduces friction in the experience, making it clear how to generate output right away, which increases adoption and use in individual and business workflows. The large welcome tile and text box directly encourages new users to take the first step, ensuring even users who are not technical feel comfortable using the tool.
Important Features
The chat-first interface is to generate simple request in everyday language and get a simple short response, appropriate for busy schedules and quick turn-around time.
Image attachment feature: To establish context, share a screenshot or photo; image attachments indicates an issue, visualize diagrams, or even share samples; in any case, the purpose is not to share large files – it is to communicate visual context.
Benefit: Fast SEO-style draft generation
It creates blog outlines, meta tags, and social captions that are readable and can be polished – and each save at least 1-3 hours/week of writing time.
Benefit: Consistent tone in your writing
It give you output that is friendly and professional (you set it!); you will find it helpful for newsletters, product pages, or help documentation that all need a cohesive audience voice.
Benefit: Designed with privacy in mind
Besides everyone being able to read the chat, an image attachment is the only thing that is shared contact. If you limit sharing an image, your document sprawl will be on you, but is not an accidental document sprawl.
How it supports users
It saves time for research, drafting, and going from prompt to draft of document when they are already busy managing everything a solo founder or small team will do alone.
It reduces tools fatigue ideation to drafting (in a one chat window!), or even, if need be, quick Q&As, can all happen in one chat message without needing a complex onboarding process.
It supports visual problem solving using image attachments: e.g. explaining bug, a layouts, or displaying marketing mockups vs sending a large bulky file.
Practical examples
Content marketing sprint: You conjure a brief description, share just a screenshot for the landing page hero, and ask for blog angles or meta tags; the end result from the text could be a list of headlines, outlined briefs, and snippets that will get to a landing page that will fit the visuals you will, “see”.
Product support prep: You wrote a support email, attach a screenshot of the error state, and ask for a calm, sincere, user friendly RFC template (a response for consistency in replying) plus 1 page of FAQ questions with short answers for consistent replying.
UX feedback loop: As part of defining all changes on product features through a project; you ask for a screenshot along the path as part of the collaborative QA process. You ask to get your notes organized by asking for a clear, point form box-bullete list of what could be microcopy, or find 1 line for a release note before you keep shipping, all with a level of accountability in the design and momentum.
Social launch kit: You share a promo image with a prompt asking it generate threaded post one by one from the description, you also ask for alt text both restating the threaded text, and also generate suggested 2 line caption variant for instagram, ready to copy, schedule, and paste.
Tips for effective prompts
Add an image: If you expect or want to use visuals context – UI, packaging, chart or process audits; the assistance tools is even more useful for creating drafts, than if you send a entire bundle of PDF files.
Be specific: “Write 700 words with H2 headers, short paragraphs, and clear call to action” it will provide tighter drafts if the assistant was open-ended.
Set the tone/audience: ask for “friendly yet professional for small business owners,” it can help provide language support; AND you will continue to draft and structure in the thing you created and can use tenor in the plans and thoughts that come.
How to get started
- Open an AI Assistant, open and type exactly what you are trying to get drafted; then if it makes more sense to tell a better story from an image (a screenshot for example), you can always attach. The interface structure feels clear and inviting to just message on toward any of the AI Action.
- Really the only thing you can’t is an upload of a single document or a PDF – only share a screenshot or photo when you need to show, not tell.
Conclusion
If you audience appreciates speed, functionality, friendliness, and the tangible to carry out. Something as a drafts is worth testing after all. The AI Stories provides you queries interface chat on a screen and could have a good chance of making your ideas in minutes only becoming worthy of a post all in a simple experiment of a single screenshot and clear prompt.