Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates’ daughter Phoebe Gates has gained a lot an attention recently with the launch of an ecommerce app. Phoebe co-founded the e-commerce app Phia with her former Stander roommate Sohpia Kianni. Now, Phoebe has shared a clever ChatGPT hack which she uses daily. Gates revealed that she uses OpenAI’s popular chatbot to create viral video content. In recent podcast appearance Phoebe Gates and her business partner Kianni shared that they use ‘reverse engineering’ technique with ChatGPT to understand and replicate the success of popular online videos.
Bill Gates daughter shares the ChatGPT hack s
Phoebe Gates and Sophia Kianni recently appeared on The Burnouts podcast where they shared their approach towards digital marketing for their e-commerce app Phia. Gates and Kianni revealed that they have designed a browser extension which they use to compare clothing prices across 40,000 retail stores. Their methodology uses studying high-performing videos on social media platforms Instagram and TikTok. After this, they make an Excel sheet of all of the videos mentioning their key highlights such as the compelling “hook,” the engaging “middle,” and the effective “ending.”After this they use the ChatGPT ‘hack’. Kianni revealed that they use the chatbot to transcribe the viral videos. ChatGPT then analyses these transcripts and try to find out the underlying patterns which help the videos to become viral. Once done Gates and Kianni use this analysis and feed their own descriptions of Phia into ChatGPT, prompting the chatbot to create scripts that mimic the structure of the already viral videos. “You should not be starting anything from scratch. The internet exists for a reason,” Kianni emphasized.Phoebe Gates also affirmed her reliance on AI, stating, “I use AI almost every single day, and it supercharges me.”
How Bill Gates and Melinda Gates reacted to Phoebe Gates’ startup
Phoebe Gates is the youngest child of Microsoft founder Bill Gates and his ex-wife, Melinda French Gates.When she told her father that she and Ms. Kianni wanted to get into the e-commerce space, his reaction, he said, was “Wow, a lot of people have tried, and there’s some big guys in there.” However, he was reportedly worried she might ask for money. In an interview published by the New York Times, soon after Phia’s web browser and app went live, Bill Gates said: “I thought, ‘Oh boy, she’s going to come and ask.”“I would have kept her on a short leash and be doing business reviews, which I would have found tricky,” the businessman explained of his hesitance. “And I probably would have been overly nice but wondered if it was the right thing to do.”