Audience
Who this course is for
Working Well With AI is designed to be useful to anyone who uses AI regularly for real work — not just developers, not just technical users, and not just beginners.
Primary audience
These are the people who will get the most out of this course immediately:
Product managers
People who write briefs, summarize research, communicate priorities, and translate work between stakeholders.
Marketers
People who write copy, plan campaigns, develop messaging, or maintain voice and brand consistency across content.
Operations and technical coordinators
People who communicate processes, maintain documentation, coordinate across teams, and handle cross-functional communication.
Support and documentation teams
People who write help content, simplify complex topics for users, and maintain internal and external knowledge bases.
Project leads and team managers
People who summarize, align, delegate, and communicate decisions up and across an organization.
Founders and internal stakeholders
People who write a lot of different things across different contexts and need speed without sacrificing quality.
Secondary audience
These learners will also find the course valuable:
Junior developers
People who are growing into planning, documentation, spec writing, and communication work alongside implementation.
Mid-level developers
People who want to use AI more effectively for outlining, explaining, summarizing, and higher-level thinking rather than just code generation.
Technical implementers who communicate cross-functionally
People who work on hardware-adjacent, systems-level, or infrastructure work and need stronger communication skills.
Who this course is not for
This course is not for people who want:
- Code generation tricks and technical prompt engineering
- AI tool reviews and comparisons
- Step-by-step guides to specific AI platforms
- Advanced workflows for LLM developers
Those are all legitimate topics. They are just not what this course teaches.
A note on accessibility
The course is written to be accessible to non-developers without being too basic for developers. Examples lean toward communication and planning work rather than code-heavy scenarios, but the principles apply regardless of role.
If you write things, plan things, explain things, or communicate things at work — this course is for you.