Ammaar Reshi, who works as a product design manager at the financial tech company Brex, used ChatGPT and Midjourney to write and illustrate a children's book titled Alice and Sparkle in 72 hours.
Streaming companies like Netflix and content creators on YouTube and TikTok spend hefty sums on voice dubbers, who help them translate their content into more languages and reach a global audience.
Henry Williams, a freelance writer based in London, used the bot to generate a marketing article. To his "horror," he said ChatGPT put together a 600-word article in less than 30 seconds.
"ChatGPT can write better cover letters and résumés than almost any person," said Brianne Kimmel, a venture capitalist who founded the firm Worklife Ventures.
Jordan Poblete, a corporate strategist with a penchant for movie-making, is using ChatGPT and Dall-E 2 to put together a pitch for an independent movie.
That opens up a host of lucrative side hustles for people who don't have direct experience coding in languages like JavaScript or Python.
Aspiring graphic designers and seasoned ones alike are now using these tools to quickly generate images for presentations, pitches, and marketing campaigns.