Summary
Was this newsletter forwarded to you?Sign upto get it in your inbox.Help us scale the only subscription you need to stay at the edge of AI. Exploreopen roles at Every.I operate on the baseline assumption that I’m about to be fired at all times. It doesn’t matter how many managers tell me I’m doing great or how many positive performance reviews I receive, every piece of feedback gets filtered throughmy self-doubt.I had asked AIabout my careerbefore, but never about my job performance. So when I finally did, I didn’t expect to believe its answer anymore than I believed when a human said I was doing okay.It started as routineyear-end planningat Every in mid-December.Kate Lee, our editor in chief, asked me to put together 2026 goals based on the performance of my articles. My entire career, I’d been told to use numbers to show results—in performance reviews, in job interviews—but I’d never had the data fluency to do that.Yet when I fed the fourth quarter numbers on my articles to Claude and ChatGPT and started to see proof that my work was making an impact in terms of driving traffic and sheer output, some dormant part of my brain activated like a sleeper agent, and suddenly I was three hours deep in spreadsheets.AI helped me do something I’d never managed on my own: believe I’m good at my job. If AI can democratize business intelligence for someone with my particular brand of professional self-loathing, it can probably help you understand your own value, too. Here’s how I ran the analysis.Yearly review gave me proof of my performanceStep one of my AI analysis: manually exporting data from Every’s content management system into Google Sheets like it was 2009. Not exactly the future we were promised, but a necessary evil.I uploaded the spreadsheets to Claude with this prompt...Become apaid subscriber to Everyto unlock this piece and learn about:The exact prompt Katie used to turn raw data into proof of performanceWhat happened when she ran the same data through a second AI to prove the first one wrongThe AI’s response when asked point-blank: “Does this mean I’m good at my job?SubscribeClick hereto read the full postWant the full text of all articles in RSS?Become a subscriber, orlearn more.Book information
Genre
Business and Economics