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Over the past year, the 43-year-old began using ChatGPT to help clients find fulfilling jobs and advance their careers, she told Business Insider. Evangelia LeclaireWhen used optimally, Leclaire said ChatGPT has also helped some of her clients become more productive at their jobs . AdvertisementUsing AI at work to increase productivityLeclaire recalled one client, a content marketing professional, who is now using AI to analyze data . Using ChatGPT, she helped him craft a list of his top principles for success to share on the platform. In response to these concerns, she's helped clients figure out how they can continue to add value to their employers.
Persons: , she's, Leclaire, Evangelia, ChatGPT, it's, I'd Organizations: Service, Business Locations: New York
People continue to feel stress and anger while at work, but they can't quit the jobs they hate. A career expert and psychologist say you should outline what you like about your job. If you aren't in a position to quit your job, here are some tips on how to make heading to work more bearable. AdvertisementAdvertisementYou can always voice your concerns at work — with caution"If you have managers or coworkers you trust, it can help to get support," Sorensen said. Lastly, zooming out helps put everything in perspectiveNext time you find yourself spiraling at work, Sorensen advises you to acknowledge the larger situation.
Persons: , Debbie Sorensen, Sorensen, Leclaire Organizations: Service, ACT Locations: Gallup's State, Denver
"What I imagined at 18 is a long way away from what I'm living at 28," the physics student said. "I don't know how we cannot be called a lost generation. "Pension income is a fiscal problem," said Vlassis Missios, an economist at the Greek Centre of Planning and Economic Research. For many young Greeks, finding suitable work is tough. "Even if they can't win the votes of the young people, they don't want to have them as opponents.
[1/6] A man stands next to flowers and messages for the victims of a fatal train crash, at the closed train station of Thessaloniki, Greece, March 24, 2023. REUTERS/Alexandros AvramidisTHESSALONIKI, Greece, April 4 (Reuters) - A month after 12 students at Greece's largest university were killed in a train crash, messages of grief across the campus are tinged with rage. "This crime will not be forgotten," a note on a makeshift memorial at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki reads. Fifty-seven people died in the country's deadliest rail disaster on Feb. 28, when a passenger train and a cargo train travelling on the same track collided head-on. "This sadness, this anger, we tried - as students - to turn it into a fight," said Evangelia Grigoriou, a civil engineering student.
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