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In this week’s In-Ear Insights, Katie and Chris talk through some of the considerations that Custom GPT makers and consumers should keep in mind as OpenAI’s Custom GPT Store opens for business this week. Learn what pitfalls to avoid!
Watch the video here:
Can’t see anything? Watch it on YouTube here.
Listen to the audio here:
Download the MP3 audio here.
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What follows is an AI-generated transcript. The transcript may contain errors and is not a substitute for listening to the episode.
In this week’s In-Ear Insights gonna expand on a topic that we talked about before on our live stream.
And I also talked about an impersonal newsletter about custom GPT-3.
Because for those people who have built a custom GPT with OpenAI service, you got an email last week that said, Hey, we’re launching the GPT.
Store next week, if you’re interested in sharing your custom GPT that you built in the store, you know, there’s a little laundry list of to do items.
But this means that people who have built custom GPT is like, for example, the Katy GPT that we have built, you’ll be able to offer to the public a belief for money.
So Katie, are you excited to sell access to Katie’s UPC at become a digital a synthetic influencer? Absolutely
not? Well, you know, it’s fun.
On the one hand, I’m like, Yeah, everybody needs more Katie in their life.
On the other hand, my very pragmatic brain starts thinking through all the risks involved with offering up your custom GPT to people besides yourself.
So you know, I’ll be interested to see how this plays out.
I feel like it’s going to be a mess when it first rolls out, because we don’t know how other people have structured.
They’re accustomed GP Ts, and now they’re just going to be up for use.
So yeah, I think that there’s I think it’s an interesting idea.
But I think there’s a heck of a lot of risk involved with this kind of move from OpenAI.
I agree.
So I figured what we could do is talk through five qualifying questions to ask whether you should if you’re a GPT, maker, whether you should put yours up for sale? And more importantly, if you are an end user, should you even buy one of these things? And huge surprise, the five questions are based on the five key framework.
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In this week’s In-Ear Insights, Katie and Chris talk through some of the considerations that Custom GPT makers and consumers should keep in mind as OpenAI’s Custom GPT Store opens for business this week. Learn what pitfalls to avoid!
Watch the video here:
Can’t see anything? Watch it on YouTube here.
Listen to the audio here:
Download the MP3 audio here.
[podcastsponsor]
What follows is an AI-generated transcript. The transcript may contain errors and is not a substitute for listening to the episode.
In this week’s In-Ear Insights gonna expand on a topic that we talked about before on our live stream.
And I also talked about an impersonal newsletter about custom GPT-3.
Because for those people who have built a custom GPT with OpenAI service, you got an email last week that said, Hey, we’re launching the GPT.
Store next week, if you’re interested in sharing your custom GPT that you built in the store, you know, there’s a little laundry list of to do items.
But this means that people who have built custom GPT is like, for example, the Katy GPT that we have built, you’ll be able to offer to the public a belief for money.
So Katie, are you excited to sell access to Katie’s UPC at become a digital a synthetic influencer? Absolutely
not? Well, you know, it’s fun.
On the one hand, I’m like, Yeah, everybody needs more Katie in their life.
On the other hand, my very pragmatic brain starts thinking through all the risks involved with offering up your custom GPT to people besides yourself.
So you know, I’ll be interested to see how this plays out.
I feel like it’s going to be a mess when it first rolls out, because we don’t know how other people have structured.
They’re accustomed GP Ts, and now they’re just going to be up for use.
So yeah, I think that there’s I think it’s an interesting idea.
But I think there’s a heck of a lot of risk involved with this kind of move from OpenAI.
I agree.
So I figured what we could do is talk through five qualifying questions to ask whether you should if you’re a GPT, maker, whether you should put yours up for sale? And more importantly, if you are an end user, should you even buy one of these things? And huge surprise, the five questions are based on the five key framework.

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