Everyone's obsessing over chat GPT and almost nobody is using Gemini and notebook LM to build a real edge. That's a huge mistake. After 20 years as a CEO and board member helping build billion-dollar companies, one thing is clear to me. The edge is never the tool. It's the system you build. That's why mastering Google's AI tools like Gemini and notebook LM matters a lot. In this video, I'll show you how to build a four-part human intelligence system so effectively it almost feels unfair. So you can learn faster, think clearer, and build an advantage that puts you ahead of 99% of the people in the room. So let's get started. But before we get to the system, we need to understand a framework that separates the top 1% in how they use AI. An MIT Media Lab study found that people relying on AI for writing showed the weakest brain connectivity and recall. This is machine fog. When it comes to AI, most people are building on sand. No blueprint, no foundation, no floors. What you need instead is a strong intelligence architecture that's built on a bedrock. Four floors, four different jobs. The ground floor is your grounding. AI has a dangerous habit. It can sound convincing without being accurate. It's like a brilliant lawyer who argues beautifully while fabricating the evidence. This is where Google's notebook LM comes handy because it works only from the material you give it. Your documents, your notes, your transcripts, your data. Notebook LM does not give you just a response. It gives you the receipt. You can upload a 500-page textbook, the last 6 months of your meeting transcripts, or that entire pile of PDFs waiting on your desktop. It will take all of it. And then you can investigate, ask questions, find patterns. Instead of artificial incompetence, you are now anchored in reality. The next floor is your frontier model, Gemini in this case. This is where you move from evidence to exploration. You know, Gemini can hold an enormous amount of data and context as well. You can feed in 2 million tokens to its active memory all at once. That's nearly the entire Harry Potter series plus the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy, and there's some space left. So you can feed it a decade of your company's financial history and thousands of customer call transcripts, and it will still identify the hidden patterns a human eye would take months to spot. It doesn't just find that needle in the haystack, it understands the entire harvesting season. Now, the next floor is your specialist. You know, when you start with AI, it always feels like you're talking to a complete random stranger you just met at a train station. She has no context about you, what you want, who you are, and that's why Gemini has gems to fix that. They are your experts who remember who they are and who you are. You can build a gem that's your finance advisor, a writing partner, or a health coach. They remember and they're always ready. And now the top floor is tools. This is where your execution lives, your workspace. This is where intelligence escapes the prompt window and enters your actual work. Drafting emails, building decks, summarizing meetings, updating documents, and moving the work forward. So those are the four floors. Notebook LM grounds you in evidence. Gemini helps you explore with clarity and massive context. Gems give you that staff of specialists, and workspace turns insights into tangible work. And just understanding the blueprints of these four floors already puts you ahead of everyone else still digging holes in the sand. Now, let's build it one floor at a time. The biggest learning myth is that mastery comes from consuming more information. More books, more courses, more content, but that's not how our brain learns. Back in high school and college, I constantly struggled with learning and retention. I was not a very good student. >> >> Things changed later when I started understanding how memory works. Working memory is tiny. Try to shove a 500-page textbook through it and you're trying to squeeze an entire mountain through a straw. Real learning happens when the material gets moved into long-term memory. Apps like notebook LM change the speed and shape of that process. Here's how. The brain moves information into long-term memory through two modes, focus mode and diffuse mode. So once you load the material into notebook LM, focus mode is where you actively investigate it. Follow the breadcrumbs, find the patterns. But the real aha moment happens when you leave the desk. Your diffused mode. Notebook LM lets you turn your research and your reports into interactive podcasts or debates. You can listen to it while you are taking a walk, or on your commute, or when you're in the kitchen. And you can even jump in anytime you want and ask questions to steer the podcast hosts, which are just AI agents, in real time. So you can turn your dead zone into a learning zone. What's the action item? When do you use notebook LM? Three situations. When you're drowning in material, when you want precision and close enough is not good enough, and when you want knowledge to move across formats. Audio, video, a deck, flashcards, infographics. >> >> Notebook LM lets you learn in the format your brain prefers. But once you have that foundation, you need an engine powerful enough to do something with it. For that, we have to move up to the next floor. Gemini can hold a huge amount of context in one session. PDFs, videos, audio, images, diagrams, code, and data. All of that gives you three real advantages. First, Gemini learns from your past chats. It starts to understand your preferences, your goals, your tone, the way you think. Second, it can read and generate content in many formats. Interactive docs, audio, charts, images, video, even music nowadays. And third, it can do deep research inside the prompt. Understand the question, plan the research, search the web, evaluate the findings, and return a report with citations. That's a powerful engine. But raw capacity alone is not enough. If you cannot steer it, all that power only gets you lost faster. This is where AIM comes in. This is one micro framework that I've shared before. A is for actor. Don't just ask Gemini for an answer, tell the model who it's acting as. So you could say, Gemini, you're the world's most sought-after resume editor and business writer. I is for input. Give it the context it needs. Don't just say, "Hey, fix my resume." Feed it your resume, the job description, interview notes, other resumes, company research. M is for mission. You can be precise about the outcome you want. Give AI a clear mission. Like, "Give me five specific ways to improve clarity and impact of my resume and make sure I increase my odds of getting an interview at Nvidia for this product marketing role." Now is time to build a team of specialists. For that, let's move to the next floor. Your staff is waiting for you. The problem with AI is that it can be very generic. That's why you need a staff of specialists. And for that, you create a gem. Give it a role, a tone, a clear objective, and a knowledge base. And now it remembers everything. Not just across one chat, but across the entire arc of your work. If Gemini is your general-purpose reasoning engine, gems are your specialists that you can build around your recurring themes. Like a writing coach, a coding partner, a research analyst, a brand consultant, a chief of staff, a devil's advocate. Some even build a BFF or a romantic partner. I haven't built that. You're changing the game. Remember, gems are not folders because folders organize information. Gems organize behavior. It's a much bigger idea. A folder remembers where your files are. A gem remembers who you are, what you care about, and how you think. And yes, you can feed any gem any source material, including the notebooks you built in notebook LM when you were on the ground floor. Remember? And suddenly, instead of organizing documents, you're organizing expertise. Now you're building a staff of expert agents who never start from zero and who never go to sleep. The last problem is fragmentation. Too many tools, too many tabs, too many disconnected islands of work. You need a single workhorse. Research suggests that when you are context switching while working, it can eat up as much as 40% of your productivity time. We've all felt it, right? Our work is scattered across too many places. We write in one place, store it in second, analyze in third, share it in fourth. There's no connecting thread that hold it all together. That's what makes Gemini inside Google Workspace extremely useful. Gemini is no longer a genie trapped in chat window. Your Docs, your Gmail, Drive, Calendar, Sheets, even the meetings, they stop acting like isolated islands and start behaving like one single connected environment. And this helps you relieve three big work pressures: friction, focus, and flavor. First, friction. Imagine you're applying for a job. Your story is scattered everywhere: in your resume, in your job description, old interview notes, contact list, company research, old recruiter emails. But now you can go to Google Drive and just ask AI, "What are the biggest gaps in my fit? What do I do next?" You're no longer stuck in a file cabinet. You can now refine and reconstruct your entire story. Second, focus. Last week, I was running late for a virtual meeting. We were using Google Meet, and I joined it 5 minutes late. As soon as I joined, Google Meet AI asked if I wanted to catch up. I clicked yes, and it showed me three bullet points of what I had missed. I did not have to interrupt the room and make everybody rewind. I thought it was brilliant. Everyone stayed focused. And third, flavor. Now, this one matters way more than we realize. Because AI can now learn from the files in your Drive, it can start to understand the entire history of what you've generated. It can see how you write and how you think. It's no longer about AI writing for you, it's about AI writing with you. So that is your human intelligence system, an architecture that you build with four floors, four different jobs. But here's why all of this actually matters at a deeper level. AI will eliminate some jobs, for sure. It will create many new ones, and it'll reshape almost all of them. Now, I don't think AI is replacing us, because every job has two functions: mechanics and meaning. AI may change the mechanics. It does not automatically change or eliminate the meaning. That's what humans are for. So this human intelligence system that we talked about here is not just about building your edge. It's also about building yourself. You can use it to create something real, something beautiful, something constructive. Your worth is not a number that has to keep growing to prove that you matter. You were born with it. To borrow from Maya Angelou, >> >> you alone are enough. If this video helped you, please subscribe. >> >> I'll see you next week. Thank you. And I love you.
Subscribe to my newsletter → https://www.sandeepswadia.com/newsletter Most people are using AI wrong. They're outsourcing their thinking and their brains are paying the price. An MIT Media Lab study found that people who rely on AI for writing show weaker brain connectivity and recall. The tool isn't the problem. The system is. In this video, I break down the four-part human intelligence architecture I use with Google's AI ecosystem — NotebookLM, Gemini, Gems, and Gemini in Google Workspace — to think more clearly, not less.