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Between interviews, I'm sharing my unfiltered takes on AI and business—starting with why most AI education is setting you up for failure.
In This Episode:
[00:00] Why tool-centric AI education is completely stupid [00:30] Point 1: AI tools change, AI principles don't [01:41] Point 2: You're getting mediocre results with zero barrier to entry [02:27] Point 3: Your confusion is their business model [03:04] Point 4: Speed without judgment is professional malpractice [04:04] Point 5: Pattern recognition isn't education [05:00] Point 6: Tool education creates technicians, not artisans [05:42] Point 7: AI tools are context agnostic (and that's not good) [06:55] Point 8: You become a brand ambassador for tools that limit you [07:52] What's the alternative to tool-centric AI education? [08:30] Coming next: AI glazing—the topic no one talks about
The Core Argument:
Every week there's a new AI tool. Every time that happens, another tool goes into the AI landfill. Tool-focused AI education has a shelf life of six months or less. You're memorizing tool-specific tricks instead of learning transferable principles. When the next tool launches, you start from scratch.
Eight Problems With Tool-Centric AI Education:
Tools change, principles don't - Learning MidJourney never taught you Nano Banana. Learning Nano Banana won't teach you the next generation. You're building on sand.
Zero barrier to entry means mediocre results - Everyone has access to the same tools. You're paying for knowledge freely available in documentation. Being great at AutoCAD never made someone the best interior designer. Being great at one AI tool won't make your business better.
Confusion is the business model - AI educators profit from your anxiety. Every tool launch creates marketing opportunity: "You're falling behind. Your competitors are learning this now." It's subscription revenue disguised as education.
Speed without judgment is malpractice - Tool education emphasizes "do it faster, save time, work like a team of four." This trains you to optimize for output volume rather than quality. Speed doesn't always win.
Pattern recognition isn't learning - You memorize recipes without understanding cooking. When the recipe fails in new context, you're lost. When tools change pricing, interface, or capabilities, you're back to square one. You were trained to follow steps, not make decisions.
Creates technicians, not artisans - It's easier to record screen tutorials showing button clicks than teach decision-making frameworks. Knowing how to use a tool doesn't make you an expert. I can swing a hammer, but you don't want me as your carpenter.
Context agnostic education for infinite context problems - Generic "how to use ChatGPT for interior design" courses can't account for your specific client base, market position, design philosophy, or business model. Success is measured by "did you learn the interface?" not "did this improve your business?"
You become a brand ambassador - Once you've invested time and money learning ChatGPT, you resist switching to Claude even if it's objectively better. The education creates switching costs that benefit vendors but limit your flexibility. You're stuck.
The Alternative:
Learning how to think with AI, not just click buttons. Understanding what your specific business needs, what your clients actually value, and how to get AI to understand your unique context—not generic context, but your approach, your markets, your clients. That's not a tool tutorial. That's a completely different type of AI education.
Next Episode: AI glazing—the AI topic almost no one talks about.
Resources:
Interior DesignHer Podcast - https://www.interiordesignher.com/podcast
Subscribe for more unfiltered takes on AI and business
Leave a review to help the algorithm show this to more people
By Interior DesignHerBetween interviews, I'm sharing my unfiltered takes on AI and business—starting with why most AI education is setting you up for failure.
In This Episode:
[00:00] Why tool-centric AI education is completely stupid [00:30] Point 1: AI tools change, AI principles don't [01:41] Point 2: You're getting mediocre results with zero barrier to entry [02:27] Point 3: Your confusion is their business model [03:04] Point 4: Speed without judgment is professional malpractice [04:04] Point 5: Pattern recognition isn't education [05:00] Point 6: Tool education creates technicians, not artisans [05:42] Point 7: AI tools are context agnostic (and that's not good) [06:55] Point 8: You become a brand ambassador for tools that limit you [07:52] What's the alternative to tool-centric AI education? [08:30] Coming next: AI glazing—the topic no one talks about
The Core Argument:
Every week there's a new AI tool. Every time that happens, another tool goes into the AI landfill. Tool-focused AI education has a shelf life of six months or less. You're memorizing tool-specific tricks instead of learning transferable principles. When the next tool launches, you start from scratch.
Eight Problems With Tool-Centric AI Education:
Tools change, principles don't - Learning MidJourney never taught you Nano Banana. Learning Nano Banana won't teach you the next generation. You're building on sand.
Zero barrier to entry means mediocre results - Everyone has access to the same tools. You're paying for knowledge freely available in documentation. Being great at AutoCAD never made someone the best interior designer. Being great at one AI tool won't make your business better.
Confusion is the business model - AI educators profit from your anxiety. Every tool launch creates marketing opportunity: "You're falling behind. Your competitors are learning this now." It's subscription revenue disguised as education.
Speed without judgment is malpractice - Tool education emphasizes "do it faster, save time, work like a team of four." This trains you to optimize for output volume rather than quality. Speed doesn't always win.
Pattern recognition isn't learning - You memorize recipes without understanding cooking. When the recipe fails in new context, you're lost. When tools change pricing, interface, or capabilities, you're back to square one. You were trained to follow steps, not make decisions.
Creates technicians, not artisans - It's easier to record screen tutorials showing button clicks than teach decision-making frameworks. Knowing how to use a tool doesn't make you an expert. I can swing a hammer, but you don't want me as your carpenter.
Context agnostic education for infinite context problems - Generic "how to use ChatGPT for interior design" courses can't account for your specific client base, market position, design philosophy, or business model. Success is measured by "did you learn the interface?" not "did this improve your business?"
You become a brand ambassador - Once you've invested time and money learning ChatGPT, you resist switching to Claude even if it's objectively better. The education creates switching costs that benefit vendors but limit your flexibility. You're stuck.
The Alternative:
Learning how to think with AI, not just click buttons. Understanding what your specific business needs, what your clients actually value, and how to get AI to understand your unique context—not generic context, but your approach, your markets, your clients. That's not a tool tutorial. That's a completely different type of AI education.
Next Episode: AI glazing—the AI topic almost no one talks about.
Resources:
Interior DesignHer Podcast - https://www.interiordesignher.com/podcast
Subscribe for more unfiltered takes on AI and business
Leave a review to help the algorithm show this to more people