Navigating the AI Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Generative AI Tools
This guide breaks down the key types of generative AI tools you should know (and when to use them) to cut through hype and actually get things done.
What You’ll Learn
Understanding the AI Landscape: From Broad Buckets to Functional Areas
The AI world buzzes with hype and endless tools. You don’t need every one. You just need the ones that serve your needs well.
Here’s a clear way to break it down:
- LLMs (Large Language Models): Tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, or Copilot that handle writing, brainstorming, summarizing—you name it.
- Purpose‑Built Tools: Designed for one job—like image generators, voice-over makers, or video creators. They usually run on LLMs, but with focused training and interfaces.
- Integrated AI: Built into tools you already use—think Canva, Word, Zoom. Easy to use, but sometimes more of a bonus feature than a full solution.
Next, think about AI by what function you need. Most people use general LLMs, custom AIs, RAG systems, agents, or creative tools. Each serves a different need—let’s dig into each one.
General Purpose LLMs: Your AI Swiss Army Knife
LLMs are the generalists. You can ask them to write, draft, edit, brainstorm… and they’ll deliver. Fast.
Best Practices:
- Use paid versions: You’ll get better performance, fewer limits, and the latest updates.
- Be specific: Don’t just say “write an article.” Say “write a 500‑word article for small business owners about using Instagram Reels.”
- Try modes or presets: Some tools have brainstorming, studying, or agent modes that give you a quick boost.
- Watch for hallucinations: LLMs can invent details. Review outputs. They’re not perfect.
Custom AIs: Tailoring AI for Specific Needs
Custom AIs are like assistants that already know your preferences, tone, and go-to formats. In ChatGPT, they’re often called Custom GPTs.
Why custom models matter:
- They keep your voice constant, no need for reminders each time.
- They speed up repetitive tasks, think product descriptions, outlines, or emails.
- Teams can scale better, everyone gets consistent results.
- You stay in control, you can refine and tweak over time.
Pro Tip: If you find yourself re‑typing long instructions repeatedly, it’s time to turn that into a custom AI.
RAG Systems: Ensuring AI Sticks to Your Information
RAG (Retrieval‑Augmented Generation) tools only pull from your content, nothing else. That’s your PDFs, website copy, training docs, etc.
Ideal use cases:
- Repurpose your materials, like turning webinar transcripts into blog posts.
- Build accurate help desk bots that answer only from your official documentation.
- Summarize training material without adding mistakes.
This keeps outputs true to your voice and avoids random or inaccurate additions.
Agentic AI: Automating Complex Tasks and Connecting Systems
Agentic AI acts like a smart intern. You give it a goal, and it figures out the rest across steps and tools.
- Zapier AI: Reads your Zoom transcript, drafts summary emails, then sends them automatically.
- ChatGPT Agent Mode: Brings structure and autonomy to complex goals like planning trips.
- Relevance AI / CRA Agents: Specialized assistants (e.g., social media managers, marketing hubs) that learn over time.
Use agents when you want AI to do more than write. They can actually act and connect.
Creative and Fit‑for‑Purpose AI Tools: Specializing for Visuals and Audio
Text is only one side of AI. Visual and audio tools help you create presentations, voiceovers, videos, and branded images.
Tools worth exploring:
- Leonardo or Cling: Generate high-quality images or videos with character consistency.
- Adobe Firefly: Great at enhancing or transforming existing visuals.
- Synthesia: Create video avatars for quick presentations or training.
- 11 Labs: Generate realistic voiceover audio, and translate it too.
Start with something simple like ChatGPT Sora, then level up as your needs grow.
Here’s a practical, step‑by‑step way to choose the right AI tool:
- Start with a general-purpose LLM as it handles about 70% of tasks.
- If you need consistency, go to a custom AI.
- If you need strict accuracy from your own data, use a RAG system.
- If you want automation and multi-step execution, try agentic AI.
- If you’re creating visuals or audio, use creative/fit‑for‑purpose tools.
- Still not getting what you need? Look for a tool built specifically for your task.
Big idea: Pick the right tool for the outcome you want. If it’s not working, don’t force it. Try another tool, not a workaround.
Want to deepen your AI skills? Explore our Artificial Intelligence Training Courses.
Krista Neher is a bestselling author, international speaker, and CEO of Boot Camp Digital, with 20+ years of digital marketing experience. She has worked with Meta, Nike, and Google and has been featured in The New York Times and CNN.