Understand the pressure.
Plain-English pages for people who feel behind, unsure, or overloaded by workplace AI.
Resources
Searchable guides, prompts, safety checks, workflows, and anonymous editorial notes for office workers learning AI without chasing every tool.
Plain-English pages for people who feel behind, unsure, or overloaded by workplace AI.
Simple boundaries before using AI with emails, documents, meetings, or workplace data.
Prompts, workflows, and checking routines that keep human judgement in the loop.
Resource map
These pages are grouped for people and search engines. Each guide can stand alone, but they also point readers back to the private check.
Start here
The pressure people feel when AI changes work faster than training explains it.
ReframeA calm explanation for workers who feel unsupported rather than incapable.
JudgementA confidence anchor for keeping human responsibility in AI-assisted work.
Self-checkA beginner-friendly way to judge what sort of AI task fits your current confidence.
Keeping upA durable approach for staying calm when AI products change every week.
Keeping upFocus on durable habits instead of trying to track every new AI feature.
Tool choiceA practical filter for choosing tools by task rather than hype.
ProgressA simple way to notice what changed after a period of low-risk practice.
Safe AI use
The first safety boundary for office workers using AI tools.
ChecklistA practical pre-flight check before putting work material into AI.
VisibilityA plain-English guide to data visibility, policy uncertainty, and safer assumptions.
BoundariesWhat to consider before using AI in monitored workplace environments.
Workplace rulesQuestions to ask before using AI when training, tools, and boundaries are vague.
Shadow AIA calmer safety reset for workers using AI quietly because the rules are unclear.
JudgementHow to keep human responsibility in the loop.
Red flagsPractical warning signs before you rely on an AI output.
Checking and quality
Check facts, dates, names, links, tone, and missing assumptions.
SafetyA practical review routine for facts, dates, names, numbers, policy, and context.
QualityA filter for avoiding polished but weak AI-generated work.
SpreadsheetUse AI to inspect spreadsheet logic without blindly trusting the result.
MemoryReview what AI tools may remember, reuse, or infer from your work patterns.
First workflows
Choose a safe starter task that builds confidence without exposing sensitive data.
Task choiceDecide whether a task is suitable before opening an AI tool.
DocumentsUse AI for summaries without leaking sensitive context.
MeetingsUse AI to clarify goals, questions, and risks before a meeting.
PlanningA wide-to-narrow workflow for turning messy thinking into practical next steps.
Workflow depthMove from shallow prompts to richer, repeatable AI workflows.
ProcessTurn a repeated task into a small AI-assisted operating procedure.
PracticeA calm weekly rhythm for building one reusable habit at a time.
Prompt library
Improve a low-risk email while keeping facts and judgement under your control.
WritingPrompts for emails, summaries, tone shifts, and follow-up notes.
MeetingsTurn meeting notes into structured actions without inventing decisions.
Manager updatePrepare a clearer update for a manager without oversharing sensitive context.
RepairFix weak prompts by clarifying role, task, context, process, and output.
Team and role change
Separate tasks AI might change from judgement your workplace still needs.
TrainingFilter generic AI training into what matters for your actual job.
ConversationUseful language for managers, peers, and teams navigating AI adoption.
Work modelUnderstand when AI should draft, assist, compare, or stay out of the decision.
Work modeMatch your confidence level to a safe way of working with AI.
Anonymous editorial