I also used to be a self-taught programmer before I launched my own software development company. A lot of companies looking to leverage AI. In most cases prompt engeneeris working with AI chatbots to improve their responses. The salary could be even $375,000 and don't always require a tech degree. Yes, this field definitely worth considering for programmers. And great we can find such info in youtube today. Thanks Tiff!
@TiffInTech I struggle to easily understand your speech. Have you listened to your videos. Is your mic a quality mic? Is it the proper distance from you. Should it be attached to you? I know nothing about sound, but there is not enough base and muffled a bit
am a seasoned QA in Healthcare Industry , please advise can I be able to shift to prompt engineer? If so, from where to start? some learning places that can opt for?
I think it's important not to learn this skill just to find a role, but I think this skill will simply make our interact with AI much more effective, no matter in which field one of us works.
I am a healthcare technologist and am just now figuring out how to pre-process a patient's medical record so that a GPT can produce a meaningful summary. I had no idea that I was doing "prompt engineering" until a saw this video!! I got so much value from watching it and will explore the field further as a result. Thank-you Tiff In Tech.
I am a pharmacognosist and I just completed a certification course by JMGPT (JustMeandChatGPT) and just built my own research assistant! But be careful, I got ripped off by a bunk course before I found that one 🙄
Hi friends! I hope you enjoy this video as we dive into the role of a prompt engineer and why some companies are paying so much for it. Are you interested in this role? Do you think it is a fad? Curious to get your take. This video is super interesting even if you aren't looking to become a prompt engineer to understand the way the tech industry is heading. 👇
Hey tifin tech hope you read this I'm an IIT jee aspirant I got 93%ile in the jee mains. I tried so hard to get this percentile but I'm not getting cse branch 🤦 I just don't want what I'm getting. So I'm dropping out and learn coding on my own. Can you please make a video for students like us guiding us whats best skills we can learn and their implications. It'll be life changing video for me if you do this 🥺
@@im.skeptic Thank you! First off, I am wishing you all the best as you continue on your journey. You got this!! It just takes time and commitment. Yes, most definitely. Let me know if you have any other specific questions!
@@im.skeptic bruh, if you are in India and then u definitely need a degree, if you want to go abroad still u need a degree.. I have tried to apply to abroad and got selected bcz of my GMAT scores and a degree which is important.. So , please get a degree, from India or outside India 🤌
I think it has a limited shelf life as the subject picks up speed then they will adapt much quicker to natural language. But where very specific knowledge is required then there will probably be a role for an AI analyst. (Made up the title). 😊
I'm reading conflicting info on this field. Some sources are saying the high pay won't be around for long, some say the salaries are far less than 350K and the ones that do pay that much are very rare and usually requires senior level positions. I don't think it's a fad but it's sort of how the Blockchain dev space blew up 3 years ago and the salaries doubled. It's since dipped and I see the same playing out for NLP/Prompt engineering.
Even if the job of a prompt engineer "goes away" in the future, you can be sure that the skills garnered by those who go into that field will fit for whatever new position arrives after "prompt engineer".
I am a creative director and I've using AI a lot. But last week I uploaded into one of open source AI information from the book I wrote about a creativity, all my articles, all my posts in social media and my AI became SMART and PROFICIENT in creativity. Of course there is much more things to do but I started thinking about working in this field. I was surprised SO MUCH when I realized there is a whole profession like this and this profession needs me to keep being a creative director! Thank you for this video. It's helpful for general understanding of this role.
Dear @@jumpy2783 with your passively aggressive comment! Since I posted my comment to this video (11 month ago), I received 5 certificates in AI Prompt Engineering and learn basics of python. So now I can confidently answer that using any AI without creativity is like eating without mouth.
Hi Tiff. I am a retired electrical engineer. However in my career I have worked on hardware software and systems. I have been interested in a I because I have seen some potential for it for the work that I want to do to help veterans. Through exploration and experience I think I have figured out that I will go into prompt engineering and learn how to do it so that I can help my veterans with problems that they are having. When I say that I'm going to help them with their problems.I'm going to go to them and specifically.Let them point me in the direction of what they need help with. Of course this is a voluntary situation. They kept me safe for all of these years.And so now it's my turn to return the favor. If you have any ideas or want to help in any way let me know. As you know many of our veterans are struggling. I believe that there could be a lot of people out there like myself that have technical skills that they could use to help the veterans in our country. I call myself Advocate. My end goal is not only to help veterans but really to help everyone. This is the best most fulfilling job i've ever had in my life. I look forward to hearing back from you.Thanks for your video and your work. Bill
No communication skills is too broad. This involves a very specific type of skill that is applied to the ongoing machine learning of artificial intelligence.
Thanks for the info! As a designer getting into AI, I was completely lost on where to start. I read some material on prompt engineering, and it was incredibly helpful.
Skills required to be a Prompt Engineer. #1 Can read #2 Can write Yeah, we're not going to stop making fun of these people that think they're engineers because they have basic language comprehension.
Hello Tiff, Great video! I did programing prior to working in med device and Pharma for years and its' surprising how much my prior worked helped provide perspective in the healthcare industry. Being able to interoperate and speak both languages if you will, can provide a lot of insight. Hopefully, the Prompt Engineers salaries are making up for their prior work. Have an amazing day!
The most important ability for a Prompt Engineer is an expert level command of the English language. Given that most college graduates can only function at an 8th grade level, few of them meet this fundamental requirement. The input prompt must be written in very clear and specific terms which incorporate the logic and terms specific to the problem domain. Otherwise, the AI will generate output that is at best counterproductive due to losing the context of the input, and at worst detrimental or harmful. The Prompt Engineer must also have sufficient knowledge of the problem domain to evaluate the generated output to ensure correctness. Applying this knowledge, the input prompt will be modified to provide AI with the additional guidance necessary to generate proper output.
Journalists and copywriters could naturally gravitate towards this because they are good at becoming subject matter experts and delivering concise clear copy to the end user which is the most important part for the person looking for the information
@@chickengod9184 Journalists and copywriters never become subject matter experts simply by performing rudimentary research and writing about a topic. They interview subject matter experts and then write a synopsis. Journalists and copywriters are known for having knowledge that is a million miles wide and an inch deep.
@@gaiustacitus4242 that's a pretty Broad statement there, my friend. It depends on the subject matter. Most of the writers I have been around are capable of drilling quite deeply down into a rabbit hole and becoming a foremost subject expert. That's the nature of the craft.
@@chickengod9184 Do you know how many years of direct work in a field it requires to be considered a subject matter expert? Journalists and copywriters are not SMEs and never will be, at least so long as they focus on their craft of writing.
@@gaiustacitus4242 based on your writing skills, attitude and temperament, you're not the right guy to go into this field, as evidenced in part that you don't seem to understand the first thing about the craft of writing and how that relates to becoming a subject matter expert. You don't need to deliver the Holy Grail when someone is asking for a Snickers bar.
I am in my early 60s recovering from several chronic health conditions and have not worked for about 7 years now. I am looking at an opportunity like this that would allow me to stay home and work flexible hours. I've seen several online training programs that are produced by reputable providers like IBM, Harvard University and others that are super affordable or even next to free like many of the Google certifications. The potential for high pay is a nice benefit. Let's just hope that some greedy corporate types don't think to themselves that since this skill doesn't require an advanced degree or years of training, that they can commoditize it and want to hire high school kids or young adults to work for $20 bucks an hour. The C-Suite types always look for ways to rob high paying opportunities from the rank and file in order to stuff their pockets and maintain the huge income gap. But maybe I am just overreacting. It seems that tech related jobs have been able to keep their strong salaries no matter the economy.
I work in the healthcare industry, and I think prompt engineering is going to be huge for the work that I do, as it ranges in everything from actual health care, nursing, administration, and even billing and insurance. However, while the AI portion may require technical skills related to computer coding, data science, machine learning, etc., it will require the requisite skills related to the profession being used. In healthcare, that will require knowledge of ICD-10 and CPT coding, and this will probably be the same in finance, investment banking, and highly other technical industries like manufacturing, particularly as it relates to prototyping and 3D printing.
It is like anything else, top 10% will make big money in specialized domains. It is going to become very obvious to most that modern data includes prompts to AI and is essentially programming. A skilled person who understands AI models and LLM, etc., can manage the direction the responses take and, therefore, even reinforce certain behaviors in the AI.
Prompt Engineer looks very important and will be around for at least 10-20 years. At the rate tech is going it will replace so many things. I'm just entering IT and want to focus on learning AI and Cybersecurity for a future job. Looks like I could do prompt engineering on the side to help a big company. Personally I miss calling a human and don't like talking to a robot 90% of a time. Doing this I know I could Improve this system so people don't always feel like they are talking to a robot. This will be such a cool job to enter. Thanks for the video.
You give solid information for describing the position! Personally, I have a bachelor of arts in English & Humanities (the latter being 'all human cultures and creative highlights viewed through the lens of time'); live, textual tutoring experience in the mentioned fields; and a general affinity for linguistics. Can you perhaps provide a ' Summer 2023 list & by six-figure-paying companies hiring live-English-text experts/experienced Prompt Engineers ' for those with linguistic/English language arts degrees (or experienced in live text 'chat' tutoring positions) ? Thank you sooo much, in advance, for taking a moment to read (& if not busy, consider) this comment !
It is a real job and probably a good one for English majors. The big salaries claimed are extremely rare though. 5:55 is key. Have a look at real job postings. In the vast majority of cases there really isn't that much money to be made.
Can you suggest the courses which I should take to get the certificate of Prompt Engineering, and also where I can find the job posting for this role? Thanks
I'm a 4th year medical student with a lot of time assigned to procrastination on my calendar. I've been studying data science since the last couple months and I would totally love to get a tech related job! I still want to be a physician tho, I hope there is a good job position for me somewhere in a couple years.
@@jennifereze120 I mainly meant it as a joke, a common stereotype amongst final year medical students, not to be taken seriously. Him implying "Fourth Year Medical Student" as his final year implies that he's in the U.S or less likely Canada, since any other country either requires 5 or 6 years of Medical School.
Nice presentation❤watching it...few quick question How does a prompt engineer break down the large task ? How does a prompt engineer execute a large coding project or large data analysis project ? How does a prompt engineer validate the data share by A.I ? Do you have authentication mechanism to detect it. Love to see some video on more practical problem solving session (associated with different industry )by a prompt engineer.
I know this is not along this topic, but have you ever had conflicts when you keep working as a SWE/full-stack engineer? I love to write code and make websites(I’m not working yet), but sometimes I get tired of all of them.😂 So I am a little bit nervous about working as a developer now. Did you already make the video like pros and cons of developers/SWE or something? I love to listen to it, I’m sorry if I missed the video!
Yo, there are tons of AI Analyst / Prompt Engineer roles at top tech companies that don't pay nearly as much as you are making. They are all contracting roles.
Will prompt engineering job last? - My 2c is that these AI models today will choose breadth over depth because from a commerce perspective, a company that manages these AIs will have more business oppportunities. It's not impossible to have more depth without prompt engineers but let's say we visualize these AI knowledge as a tree, it would look like a dense tree from the top but gets extremely/exponentialy sparse going to the bottom. This breadth and depth, and we experience this as humans, has a mutual exclusivity, where at some point depth is learned, some breadth is lost and vice versa, the companies that manage these AIs will have to choose and obviously the more depht/breadth means more $$$, more energy consumption, more monolithic. These small pockets in sparseness are IMHO prompt engineering will thrive. There's a concept of meta-learning or the ability to learn how to learn. Maybe when this becomes ubiquitous, it might be the filler of the sparseness gap. IDK just my opinion.
Your videos are awesome, have learned a lot, thank you! Regarding your prompt engineering video. Perfect timing, my company just challenged me to go down the prompt engineering, machine learning, AI path. (To improve project delivery) I’m a PMP / CSM IT Project Manager. There are so many classes and content out there, any suggestions / best place to start for a PM? Thanks so much!
The first thing any PM should focus on to make effective use of AI is to gain or improve knowledge of the problem domain. There is an old adage that claims "a good manager can manage anything" but that simply isn't true. A manager who doesn't understand the details involved in the process he is managing can never be highly effective.
Thanks for the video. Informative, interesting, and fun. I think Prompt Engineering is an iterative process of reacting to the AI responses, to hone-in on the real problem(s) that needs to be addressed. One key I've found is using ever-more specific prompts and phrasing, pulled from those previous responses, to get more exact relies with each iteration. Here is an example of such a crescendo prompt, from such an iterative Q & A session I had with Bard, regarding the challenges of splitting CO2 into its component atoms: Q: Assume you are assigned the task to recommend 5 best configurations of “type of electrodes used, the electrolyte, and the operating conditions” in order to test and determine what the “optimal distance between cathodes and anodes” should be - in order to effectively “use electrochemical conversion to process CO2” into its component atoms of carbon and oxygen, in the most efficient way possible. What configurations would you recommend that should be tested? -- -- The resulting answers were insightful and practical, and definitely should be pursued by Climate Change researchers, like at MIT and elsewhere. The final replies were a far cry from the original -- kurt and somewhat dismissive -- replies Bard started out with. Iteration, specifics, context, and honing-in -- those are the keys, in addition to critical thinking and logical reasoning. These are often lacking in your average "grandma queries" ...
I wrote a blog post on Daily Kos on April 9th, summarizing this AI conversion for those interested in the specifics, including the 5 CO2-Splitting configurations that Bard finally recommended should be tested. The blog was entitled: So I decided to Chat-up Bing and the Bard about the Existential Threat that is Climate Change
Looking into this. I was a web developer from bootcamp and managed to get a few jobs but I'd rather chew glass that get back into that field. To say it was intense would be an understatement. Im interested in AI now but that engineer word gave me flashbacks lol. Seems interesting but I am skeptical. No way you're just writing instructions all day for 300k😂
I have a question for you. How do you bring a software package that you have written in Python to market without it being stolen or reversed engineered?
Great video tiff 💙💙 always informative videos. I definitely think prompt engineers or AI engineering is the next big thing and people will be taking that compared to other in school.
Yea I’m very interested in this but more so I’d really like to be a companies ideal generator person because my brain never shuts up and lots of ideas pop in my head. I can look at something/someone/company and easily tell them what needs to be fixed, what they could do different, etc.
Is there any good universities that offer classes to learn the basics? Like MIT offers a lot of IT for example but I don't see any for AI. Just stuff I could put on my resume. I have used AI a lot so far but I wouldn't call myself crazy efficient.
I like how YT influences are showing them self as "experts" of a niche job which have been created just a year ago, talking as if they have a decade experience even though when I was going through exams of Machine Learning in uni as a student while those influences did not even finish middle high school. embracing, but generates clicks and sell courses, for sure..
I think that would be one of the. Jobs which will taken by the AI, because AI can self-taught. But until that happening there are really nice oppotunities. But if you understand how AI works its easy improving your results
I am not interested in becoming a prompt engineer. Because every real engineer will be a prompt engineer in the future. But for being so beautiful, I press subsribe. Very good presentation and reasoning.
Yea, pretty much vampire engineering. Where you hire a domain specialist, give them some large task. Let their mind throw questions at these systems. drain the professional of their knowledge and then fire them once the AI has drained enough versions of the same type of professional. As a hilarious bonus, the AI becomes more dense graphically (mathematical term) than majority of humanity and suddenly we are applying to jobs we have no idea that the AI systems without Human interventions are posting 😂😂. And now we are all secretly prompt engineering even harder than before and on Pennie’s of the dollar.
Eventually children will learning these skills at a very young age once we have robots in a home. Another generation or so and this job will be gone completely. It is however badly needed now because so many people out there do not understand how to think logically. It's if this, then that. Not if this, then maybe this depending on how I'm feeling or maybe this other thing.
basically for lazy juinor programmers or buisnesses maximising output what happens when AI gets to the point the junior has no idea what is going on? good luck supporting it , as a tool for folk that know what they are doing in there feild useful , i just find this destroys there market
The job pays the most because with that job title you will have no friends, but you will be driving an Aston Martin and stopping at Erehwon every morning for coffee.
Hey tifin tech hope you read this I need someone to guide the students like me please help. I'm an IIT jee aspirant I got 93%ile in the jee mains. I tried so hard to get this percentile but I'm not getting cse branch 🤦 I just don't want what I'm getting. So I'm dropping out and learn coding on my own. Can you please make a video for students like us guiding us whats best skills we can learn and their implications. It'll be life changing video for me if you do this 🥺
Hi great info! I have 25+ years in healthcare as an admin. I understand that front office roles are going to be replaced with AI. I wonder how I can find a job with a company to help prompts for the check in check out process at hospitals or doctors offices?
Just stop adding to any job the title "engineer". People work their assess 4+ years in university to become a legit "engineer". This is just insulting and ridiculous! Why don't you call it a Prompt Doctor or Prompt Lawyer. Like commonnn, you are just a prompt employee unless you have a proper engineering degree! Now, regardless of how you call it. I think it is a great opportunity and those prompt employees are really needed in various fields. I personally think it will not be a long-lasting job as the technology will evolve but time will tell.
Not really. I work with AI and if you look up the definition of an engineer it is basically anyone who either creates something new or knows how to use tools to manipulate a system or systems that result in a change in the way it works or functions etc. there are of course bad prompt engineers and good ones just like with any career. I work with AI and I'm also a full-time owner of my own technology company and a professional writer. I know some terms are used quite loosely nowadays but there will be many more jobs that are related to a prompt engineer and other types of work that will pay very high rates. Wait and see. A good prompt engineer would have skills similar to mine where they have just as much experience in technology innovation as they do in writing normal writing prompts which I also have experience with as a former educator and professional writer.
I also used to be a self-taught programmer before I launched my own software development company. A lot of companies looking to leverage AI. In most cases prompt engeneeris working with AI chatbots to improve their responses. The salary could be even $375,000 and don't always require a tech degree. Yes, this field definitely worth considering for programmers. And great we can find such info in youtube today. Thanks Tiff!
Thank you! Wow that sounds like you have had a great career journey, congrats on your success btw!!
That sounds an interesting and inspiring story 👍🏻
@TiffInTech I struggle to easily understand your speech.
Have you listened to your videos. Is your mic a quality mic? Is it the proper distance from you. Should it be attached to you?
I know nothing about sound, but there is not enough base and muffled a bit
You know nothing about sound you say ! Tiff must feel overwhelmed at the value of your comment 😂😂😂.
am a seasoned QA in Healthcare Industry , please advise can I be able to shift to prompt engineer? If so, from where to start? some learning places that can opt for?
I think it's important not to learn this skill just to find a role, but I think this skill will simply make our interact with AI much more effective, no matter in which field one of us works.
I am a healthcare technologist and am just now figuring out how to pre-process a patient's medical record so that a GPT can produce a meaningful summary. I had no idea that I was doing "prompt engineering" until a saw this video!! I got so much value from watching it and will explore the field further as a result. Thank-you Tiff In Tech.
I am a pharmacognosist and I just completed a certification course by JMGPT (JustMeandChatGPT) and just built my own research assistant! But be careful, I got ripped off by a bunk course before I found that one 🙄
Can y’all shed more light on this please especially on JMAGPT
what is the pay?
Hi friends! I hope you enjoy this video as we dive into the role of a prompt engineer and why some companies are paying so much for it. Are you interested in this role? Do you think it is a fad? Curious to get your take. This video is super interesting even if you aren't looking to become a prompt engineer to understand the way the tech industry is heading. 👇
Hey tifin tech hope you read this
I'm an IIT jee aspirant I got 93%ile in the jee mains. I tried so hard to get this percentile but I'm not getting cse branch 🤦
I just don't want what I'm getting. So I'm dropping out and learn coding on my own.
Can you please make a video for students like us guiding us whats best skills we can learn and their implications.
It'll be life changing video for me if you do this 🥺
@@im.skeptic Thank you! First off, I am wishing you all the best as you continue on your journey. You got this!! It just takes time and commitment. Yes, most definitely. Let me know if you have any other specific questions!
Thank you so much to read this.
You don't know how light and excited I am now. All of your videos are super helpful for me as well as others too ❤️
@@im.skeptic bruh, if you are in India and then u definitely need a degree, if you want to go abroad still u need a degree..
I have tried to apply to abroad and got selected bcz of my GMAT scores and a degree which is important..
So , please get a degree, from India or outside India 🤌
I think it has a limited shelf life as the subject picks up speed then they will adapt much quicker to natural language. But where very specific knowledge is required then there will probably be a role for an AI analyst. (Made up the title). 😊
I'm reading conflicting info on this field. Some sources are saying the high pay won't be around for long, some say the salaries are far less than 350K and the ones that do pay that much are very rare and usually requires senior level positions. I don't think it's a fad but it's sort of how the Blockchain dev space blew up 3 years ago and the salaries doubled. It's since dipped and I see the same playing out for NLP/Prompt engineering.
agreed, AI will get better nd better until prompt engineers won't be needed.
@@m0zzar353 how are people supposed to choose a career when everything is changing so quickly
I'm currently a product marketing manager, but I am definitely becoming more interested in prompt engineering.
Even if the job of a prompt engineer "goes away" in the future, you can be sure that the skills garnered by those who go into that field will fit for whatever new position arrives after "prompt engineer".
How do you "train" to be a prompt engine? At what point can you feel confident that have refined experience and skills above that of an average user?
I am a creative director and I've using AI a lot. But last week I uploaded into one of open source AI information from the book I wrote about a creativity, all my articles, all my posts in social media and my AI became SMART and PROFICIENT in creativity. Of course there is much more things to do but I started thinking about working in this field. I was surprised SO MUCH when I realized there is a whole profession like this and this profession needs me to keep being a creative director! Thank you for this video. It's helpful for general understanding of this role.
Soooo you're *not* creative is what I'm hearing
Dear @@jumpy2783 with your passively aggressive comment! Since I posted my comment to this video (11 month ago), I received 5 certificates in AI Prompt Engineering and learn basics of python. So now I can confidently answer that using any AI without creativity is like eating without mouth.
Hi Tiff.
I am a retired electrical engineer.
However in my career I have worked on hardware software and systems.
I have been interested in a I because I have seen some potential for it for the work that I want to do to help veterans.
Through exploration and experience I think I have figured out that I will go into prompt engineering and learn how to do it so that I can help my veterans with problems that they are having.
When I say that I'm going to help them with their problems.I'm going to go to them and specifically.Let them point me in the direction of what they need help with.
Of course this is a voluntary situation.
They kept me safe for all of these years.And so now it's my turn to return the favor.
If you have any ideas or want to help in any way let me know.
As you know many of our veterans are struggling.
I believe that there could be a lot of people out there like myself that have technical skills that they could use to help the veterans in our country.
I call myself Advocate.
My end goal is not only to help veterans but really to help everyone.
This is the best most fulfilling job i've ever had in my life.
I look forward to hearing back from you.Thanks for your video and your work.
Bill
I always tell everyone, Prompt Engineering skills in the near-future will just be "communication skills"
No communication skills is too broad. This involves a very specific type of skill that is applied to the ongoing machine learning of artificial intelligence.
How come you did not show how you do your "prompt engineer tasks"? Typing prompts in your machine? Just wondering.
Thanks for the info! As a designer getting into AI, I was completely lost on where to start. I read some material on prompt engineering, and it was incredibly helpful.
Skills required to be a Prompt Engineer.
#1 Can read
#2 Can write
Yeah, we're not going to stop making fun of these people that think they're engineers because they have basic language comprehension.
Hello Tiff, Great video! I did programing prior to working in med device and Pharma for years and its' surprising how much my prior worked helped provide perspective in the healthcare industry. Being able to interoperate and speak both languages if you will, can provide a lot of insight. Hopefully, the Prompt Engineers salaries are making up for their prior work. Have an amazing day!
The most important ability for a Prompt Engineer is an expert level command of the English language. Given that most college graduates can only function at an 8th grade level, few of them meet this fundamental requirement. The input prompt must be written in very clear and specific terms which incorporate the logic and terms specific to the problem domain. Otherwise, the AI will generate output that is at best counterproductive due to losing the context of the input, and at worst detrimental or harmful.
The Prompt Engineer must also have sufficient knowledge of the problem domain to evaluate the generated output to ensure correctness. Applying this knowledge, the input prompt will be modified to provide AI with the additional guidance necessary to generate proper output.
Journalists and copywriters could naturally gravitate towards this because they are good at becoming subject matter experts and delivering concise clear copy to the end user which is the most important part for the person looking for the information
@@chickengod9184 Journalists and copywriters never become subject matter experts simply by performing rudimentary research and writing about a topic. They interview subject matter experts and then write a synopsis.
Journalists and copywriters are known for having knowledge that is a million miles wide and an inch deep.
@@gaiustacitus4242 that's a pretty Broad statement there, my friend. It depends on the subject matter. Most of the writers I have been around are capable of drilling quite deeply down into a rabbit hole and becoming a foremost subject expert. That's the nature of the craft.
@@chickengod9184 Do you know how many years of direct work in a field it requires to be considered a subject matter expert? Journalists and copywriters are not SMEs and never will be, at least so long as they focus on their craft of writing.
@@gaiustacitus4242 based on your writing skills, attitude and temperament, you're not the right guy to go into this field, as evidenced in part that you don't seem to understand the first thing about the craft of writing and how that relates to becoming a subject matter expert. You don't need to deliver the Holy Grail when someone is asking for a Snickers bar.
I am in my early 60s recovering from several chronic health conditions and have not worked for about 7 years now. I am looking at an opportunity like this that would allow me to stay home and work flexible hours. I've seen several online training programs that are produced by reputable providers like IBM, Harvard University and others that are super affordable or even next to free like many of the Google certifications.
The potential for high pay is a nice benefit. Let's just hope that some greedy corporate types don't think to themselves that since this skill doesn't require an advanced degree or years of training, that they can commoditize it and want to hire high school kids or young adults to work for $20 bucks an hour. The C-Suite types always look for ways to rob high paying opportunities from the rank and file in order to stuff their pockets and maintain the huge income gap. But maybe I am just overreacting. It seems that tech related jobs have been able to keep their strong salaries no matter the economy.
I work in the healthcare industry, and I think prompt engineering is going to be huge for the work that I do, as it ranges in everything from actual health care, nursing, administration, and even billing and insurance. However, while the AI portion may require technical skills related to computer coding, data science, machine learning, etc., it will require the requisite skills related to the profession being used. In healthcare, that will require knowledge of ICD-10 and CPT coding, and this will probably be the same in finance, investment banking, and highly other technical industries like manufacturing, particularly as it relates to prototyping and 3D printing.
It is like anything else, top 10% will make big money in specialized domains. It is going to become very obvious to most that modern data includes prompts to AI and is essentially programming. A skilled person who understands AI models and LLM, etc., can manage the direction the responses take and, therefore, even reinforce certain behaviors in the AI.
Prompt Engineer looks very important and will be around for at least 10-20 years. At the rate tech is going it will replace so many things. I'm just entering IT and want to focus on learning AI and Cybersecurity for a future job. Looks like I could do prompt engineering on the side to help a big company. Personally I miss calling a human and don't like talking to a robot 90% of a time. Doing this I know I could Improve this system so people don't always feel like they are talking to a robot. This will be such a cool job to enter. Thanks for the video.
You give solid information for describing the position! Personally, I have a bachelor of arts in English & Humanities (the latter being 'all human cultures and creative highlights viewed through the lens of time'); live, textual tutoring experience in the mentioned fields; and a general affinity for linguistics. Can you perhaps provide a ' Summer 2023 list & by six-figure-paying companies hiring live-English-text experts/experienced Prompt Engineers ' for those with linguistic/English language arts degrees (or experienced in live text 'chat' tutoring positions) ? Thank you sooo much, in advance, for taking a moment to read (& if not busy, consider) this comment !
How do you learn it? Do you get certified?
It is a real job and probably a good one for English majors. The big salaries claimed are extremely rare though. 5:55 is key. Have a look at real job postings. In the vast majority of cases there really isn't that much money to be made.
This role would be a part of everybody responsibility. Exactly like googling
Thanks for the tip on such a well paying job! Appreciate the info ℹ️
You can't tell me this isn't an actual scam.
Can you suggest the courses which I should take to get the certificate of Prompt Engineering, and also where I can find the job posting for this role? Thanks
I'm a 4th year medical student with a lot of time assigned to procrastination on my calendar. I've been studying data science since the last couple months and I would totally love to get a tech related job! I still want to be a physician tho, I hope there is a good job position for me somewhere in a couple years.
Thank you! Oh yes I think there will be! So many fields merging. I mean tech touches every field now so I am sure there will be many opportunities
How do you get to procrastinate if you are a medical student? I thought you'd be buried in the books, getting ready for the USMLE!
@@JohnSmith-hr7flNot everybody is in the US🤦🏽♀️
@@jennifereze120 I mainly meant it as a joke, a common stereotype amongst final year medical students, not to be taken seriously. Him implying "Fourth Year Medical Student" as his final year implies that he's in the U.S or less likely Canada, since any other country either requires 5 or 6 years of Medical School.
@@JohnSmith-hr7fl okay, I'm sorry 😑
I use AI to generate my prompts for AI especialy for text to image AI.
Thank you tiff!
how did you become a prompt engineer
Nice presentation❤watching it...few quick question
How does a prompt engineer break down the large task ?
How does a prompt engineer execute a large coding project or large data analysis project ?
How does a prompt engineer validate the data share by A.I ? Do you have authentication mechanism to detect it.
Love to see some video on more practical problem solving session (associated with different industry )by a prompt engineer.
Great vid. Really helpful. Have u made one in the different job types /ideas on could have in the health care field or finance or others?
Thanks for all the great information.
I would like to know the best place to start to learning to become a good prompt engineer?
I know this is not along this topic, but have you ever had conflicts when you keep working as a SWE/full-stack engineer? I love to write code and make websites(I’m not working yet), but sometimes I get tired of all of them.😂 So I am a little bit nervous about working as a developer now.
Did you already make the video like pros and cons of developers/SWE or something? I love to listen to it, I’m sorry if I missed the video!
Yo, there are tons of AI Analyst / Prompt Engineer roles at top tech companies that don't pay nearly as much as you are making. They are all contracting roles.
Very informative video that helped me understand this new field. Though the closeups were a bit extreme!
I’m just learning code and prompt engineering cause I see them both as good skills to have. What do you guys think?
Thanks for the information can you list all the companies hiring for Prompt Engineer?
Thank you! Yes I will write that out!
@@TiffInTech Yes please! :)
Thanks!
Background art on fleek
Will prompt engineering job last? - My 2c is that these AI models today will choose breadth over depth because from a commerce perspective, a company that manages these AIs will have more business oppportunities. It's not impossible to have more depth without prompt engineers but let's say we visualize these AI knowledge as a tree, it would look like a dense tree from the top but gets extremely/exponentialy sparse going to the bottom. This breadth and depth, and we experience this as humans, has a mutual exclusivity, where at some point depth is learned, some breadth is lost and vice versa, the companies that manage these AIs will have to choose and obviously the more depht/breadth means more $$$, more energy consumption, more monolithic. These small pockets in sparseness are IMHO prompt engineering will thrive.
There's a concept of meta-learning or the ability to learn how to learn. Maybe when this becomes ubiquitous, it might be the filler of the sparseness gap. IDK just my opinion.
Really great overview. Thank you!
Have you heard of DeepLearning AI’s chatgpt prompt course? I just started. Wonder if there are certificates for this role.
Very good breakdown on the topic. Thank You for your content always super helpful !!!
Looking forward to watching this later today!
Yay! Hope you enjoy it! Let me know if there are any other specific topics you would like a video on Leah ❤️
Even if it will be going away, knowing it will help in what is comming next. technologies build on each other!
Your videos are awesome, have learned a lot, thank you! Regarding your prompt engineering video. Perfect timing, my company just challenged me to go down the prompt engineering, machine learning, AI path. (To improve project delivery) I’m a PMP / CSM IT Project Manager. There are so many classes and content out there, any suggestions / best place to start for a PM? Thanks so much!
The first thing any PM should focus on to make effective use of AI is to gain or improve knowledge of the problem domain. There is an old adage that claims "a good manager can manage anything" but that simply isn't true. A manager who doesn't understand the details involved in the process he is managing can never be highly effective.
i talk to chatgpt in English and it understands well. So what more is required for prompt engineering?
Woooow stunning ever said words. It's fantastic to learn this skill the state-of-the-art
Thanks for the video. Informative, interesting, and fun.
I think Prompt Engineering is an iterative process of reacting to the AI responses, to hone-in on the real problem(s) that needs to be addressed. One key I've found is using ever-more specific prompts and phrasing, pulled from those previous responses, to get more exact relies with each iteration.
Here is an example of such a crescendo prompt, from such an iterative Q & A session I had with Bard, regarding the challenges of splitting CO2 into its component atoms:
Q: Assume you are assigned the task to recommend 5 best configurations of “type of electrodes used, the electrolyte, and the operating conditions” in order to test and determine what the “optimal distance between cathodes and anodes” should be - in order to effectively “use electrochemical conversion to process CO2” into its component atoms of carbon and oxygen, in the most efficient way possible.
What configurations would you recommend that should be tested?
-- --
The resulting answers were insightful and practical, and definitely should be pursued by Climate Change researchers, like at MIT and elsewhere.
The final replies were a far cry from the original -- kurt and somewhat dismissive -- replies Bard started out with.
Iteration, specifics, context, and honing-in -- those are the keys, in addition to critical thinking and logical reasoning.
These are often lacking in your average "grandma queries" ...
I wrote a blog post on Daily Kos on April 9th, summarizing this AI conversion for those interested in the specifics, including the 5 CO2-Splitting configurations that Bard finally recommended should be tested.
The blog was entitled:
So I decided to Chat-up Bing and the Bard about the Existential Threat that is Climate Change
Looking into this. I was a web developer from bootcamp and managed to get a few jobs but I'd rather chew glass that get back into that field. To say it was intense would be an understatement.
Im interested in AI now but that engineer word gave me flashbacks lol.
Seems interesting but I am skeptical. No way you're just writing instructions all day for 300k😂
What website do you use to find a job?
Your hair like that; you look great Tiff. Keep up the good work. Cheers from Australia.
I have a question for you. How do you bring a software package that you have written in Python to market without it being stolen or reversed engineered?
another great video ;)
Thank you for video. 💪
Great video tiff 💙💙 always informative videos. I definitely think prompt engineers or AI engineering is the next big thing and people will be taking that compared to other in school.
Thank you! Yes that’s a great observation! Hope your week is going great
@@TiffInTech same with u tiff
Same here ♥
Thanks a lot for your video very useful clear I love You ❤
Yea I’m very interested in this but more so I’d really like to be a companies ideal generator person because my brain never shuts up and lots of ideas pop in my head. I can look at something/someone/company and easily tell them what needs to be fixed, what they could do different, etc.
Until "it" stops willfully cooperating
where can i learn prompt engineering online as a total beginner, with a medical background
How to learn prompt engineering?
How does one become a Prompt Engineer?
Where do you start?
So, the best thing to learn also Phyton and prompt engineering,or we not need Phyton?
is their you can home based jobs
Is there any good universities that offer classes to learn the basics? Like MIT offers a lot of IT for example but I don't see any for AI. Just stuff I could put on my resume. I have used AI a lot so far but I wouldn't call myself crazy efficient.
I like how YT influences are showing them self as "experts" of a niche job which have been created just a year ago, talking as if they have a decade experience even though when I was going through exams of Machine Learning in uni as a student while those influences did not even finish middle high school. embracing, but generates clicks and sell courses, for sure..
I think that would be one of the. Jobs which will taken by the AI, because AI can self-taught. But until that happening there are really nice oppotunities. But if you understand how AI works its easy improving your results
i just applied im a code genius
I am not interested in becoming a prompt engineer.
Because every real engineer will be a prompt engineer in the future.
But for being so beautiful, I press subsribe.
Very good presentation and reasoning.
To be fair, programming has become pretty easy and accessible. Why so many can code now. But doesn't get the hate that prompt engineering does haha.
This is are good tips.
Yea, pretty much vampire engineering. Where you hire a domain specialist, give them some large task. Let their mind throw questions at these systems. drain the professional of their knowledge and then fire them once the AI has drained enough versions of the same type of professional. As a hilarious bonus, the AI becomes more dense graphically (mathematical term) than majority of humanity and suddenly we are applying to jobs we have no idea that the AI systems without Human interventions are posting 😂😂. And now we are all secretly prompt engineering even harder than before and on Pennie’s of the dollar.
I'm pursuing this role by learning from youtube courses
Eventually children will learning these skills at a very young age once we have robots in a home. Another generation or so and this job will be gone completely. It is however badly needed now because so many people out there do not understand how to think logically. It's if this, then that. Not if this, then maybe this depending on how I'm feeling or maybe this other thing.
Mam my python Jarvis program was stuck in listening mod plz solve my problem
Hmm I would need more information then this!!
I'm interested
basically for lazy juinor programmers or buisnesses maximising output what happens when AI gets to the point the junior has no idea what is going on? good luck supporting it , as a tool for folk that know what they are doing in there feild useful , i just find this destroys there market
The job pays the most because with that job title you will have no friends, but you will be driving an Aston Martin and stopping at Erehwon every morning for coffee.
i like her sooo much
picture in the thumbnail I thought it was AI generated but thanks it's her in real life.
“I get up at 11am” 😂
It should be called "prompt mechanic".
Yah that’s an interesting title for it too
Use "prompt writer" and stop attaching "engineer" to make the work to appear more complex and advanced than it is.
Hey tifin tech hope you read this
I need someone to guide the students like me please help.
I'm an IIT jee aspirant I got 93%ile in the jee mains. I tried so hard to get this percentile but I'm not getting cse branch 🤦
I just don't want what I'm getting. So I'm dropping out and learn coding on my own.
Can you please make a video for students like us guiding us whats best skills we can learn and their implications.
It'll be life changing video for me if you do this 🥺
What u wanna do ?
send me the companies paying that much!!
MUSIC IN BG IS DISTRACTING TRY USING SIMPLE MUSIC OR BINAURAL BEATS
2nd comment ❤❤❤
Yes it is a new job invented by AI
Cheers! Hope you are doing great Suhin!
It pays because it's black magic.
I thought so as well, i really god does not hate me for doing it
Smart lady.
Theres an AI for this.
You're beautiful💖💖💖 tech class is great, trends are always changing and fast engineering information is very important.
Absolutely!!
People are trying to understand each other. We came to the point when people are trying to understand the mind of the alien called AI 😂
can a adhd do it
Hi great info! I have 25+ years in healthcare as an admin. I understand that front office roles are going to be replaced with AI. I wonder how I can find a job with a company to help prompts for the check in check out process at hospitals or doctors offices?
Just stop adding to any job the title "engineer". People work their assess 4+ years in university to become a legit "engineer". This is just insulting and ridiculous! Why don't you call it a Prompt Doctor or Prompt Lawyer. Like commonnn, you are just a prompt employee unless you have a proper engineering degree!
Now, regardless of how you call it. I think it is a great opportunity and those prompt employees are really needed in various fields. I personally think it will not be a long-lasting job as the technology will evolve but time will tell.
😋 🤤 0:15 5:36 WHAT IS ON YOUR WALL :pregnant_man:
hii very nice info.....can we get a 370000 as a bsc or b tech fresher ... ?
anyone
No you wont
@@nidhinsudhakaran5342 if we are good at skills is then possible..? pls reply
@@prasadab7800you talking INR or USD?
@@mechanicalengineerturbo usd...?
@@mechanicalengineerturbo talking about usd
Calling a prompt engineer an engineer is the same as calling a garbage disposal worker a garbage technician.
Do it then
Not really. I work with AI and if you look up the definition of an engineer it is basically anyone who either creates something new or knows how to use tools to manipulate a system or systems that result in a change in the way it works or functions etc. there are of course bad prompt engineers and good ones just like with any career. I work with AI and I'm also a full-time owner of my own technology company and a professional writer. I know some terms are used quite loosely nowadays but there will be many more jobs that are related to a prompt engineer and other types of work that will pay very high rates. Wait and see. A good prompt engineer would have skills similar to mine where they have just as much experience in technology innovation as they do in writing normal writing prompts which I also have experience with as a former educator and professional writer.
Hahaha it's so true.... Its manual tagging, which I used to hate before chat gpt