
Speak AI: The Language, Minus the Jargon
Stop nodding along in meetings. In about an hour you'll actually understand the words everyone's throwing around — and be able to use them correctly.

AI doesn't reward speed. It rewards judgment.
Practical, no-hype walkthroughs of which AI tools matter, how to apply them at work, and how to build AI-powered features into the things you already own. Designed for working professionals, founders, and career switchers who want skills they can use Monday morning.
AI fluency for working adults — taught by practitioners who actually ship.
📚 Working adults · Career switchers · Builders
Stop nodding along in meetings. In about an hour you'll actually understand the words everyone's throwing around — and be able to use them correctly.

A no-hype reality check: the tasks AI is genuinely great at, the ones it quietly fails, and how to tell them apart before you rely on it.

The difference between people who get junk from AI and people who get gold isn't talent — it's that they direct it instead of searching it. This is that skill.

Which one should you actually use, and is the paid version worth it? A straight, unsponsored answer for a busy person.

Turn the writing that eats your day into minutes — while it still sounds like you, not a robot.

Get your email and meeting time back — AI does the triage, the notes, and the follow-ups, you do the thinking.

Brain-dump the mess, let AI shape it into something you'd be proud to send. The skill that makes you look twice as organized.

Long reports, contracts, threads, and PDFs — get the real gist in minutes, with the important details intact.

Decent-looking slides, images, and simple graphics — without a design bone in your body.

Stop fearing the spreadsheet. Let AI write the formulas, find the story in the data, and explain it in plain English.

The skill almost no course teaches and every employer quietly wants: catching the confident mistakes before they cost you.

What you can and can't paste into AI — so you get the benefits without getting yourself (or your company) in trouble.

The stuff nobody explains: who owns AI work, what's safe to use, the rules at your job, and whether you should disclose that you used AI.

Set up the repetitive tasks to do themselves. No programming — just clicking and connecting.

Create a custom AI that already knows your job, your style, and your rules — so you stop re-explaining yourself every time.

Wire your tools together so information flows on its own — the skill that genuinely shows up in job postings as 'workflow automation.'

Don't list 'ChatGPT' as a skill — that's amateur. Learn what hiring managers actually want to see, and prove it.

Most résumés are filtered by software before a human ever looks. Learn to get past the robot and tailor fast.

Walk in rehearsed, not rattled. Run realistic mock interviews and get honest feedback before it counts.

A clean little website that makes you look hireable — built in an afternoon, no coding.

Marketing, admin, sales, ops, customer service, HR — learn to map everything you've built to the specific work you do.

The straight-talk episode. What you could build or earn with these skills — and the honest truth about what it really takes.

Before you quit anything or spend a dollar — learn to validate an idea fast, the way that saves people from expensive mistakes.

Not 'sell prompts' (that race is over) — sell the real, in-demand thing: building useful AI work for people who'll pay for it.

Already run something, or about to? Put AI to work across the whole operation — marketing, admin, customers, and your own time.

Stop using AI to type faster — start using it to think better. Pressure-test ideas, find angles you'd miss, and surface real opportunities.

The leap that separates dabblers from pros — turn one-off prompts into repeatable systems that work while you sleep. Still no coding.

Everyone's hyping 'agents.' Here's the honest version — what they really are, when NOT to build one, and how to ship a narrow one that works.

Feed an AI your documents, notes, and know-how, and get an assistant that answers from YOUR world — the on-ramp to 'RAG,' in plain English.

Yes, you can build a working app without being a programmer. Learn to do it without the 'fix-one-break-ten' crash everyone hits.

No get-rich promises. The real path: package the skills from this academy into something a specific person will actually pay for.
Half of your industry is panicking about AI. The other half is quietly using it to do the work of three people. Which half wins the next decade is being decided right now, on people's lunch breaks.
Your experience is the moat. AI is the multiplier. The two together — career judgment plus the ability to direct AI — is the most valuable professional combination of the next ten years.
We don't teach "prompt engineering" or "use ChatGPT better." We teach how to build with AI as a tool inside your real workflow — automations, agents, integrations, and the judgment to know what's worth automating in the first place.
For teams & enterprise rollouts →Every course produces a real output — an automation you actually use, an agent that does your busywork, a workflow you ship to your team. Not theory you forget by Wednesday.
Taught by working practitioners — founders, builders, senior operators. People who use AI daily in their own work, not consultants writing about it from the outside.
Short, direct answers. More? Reply to your enrolment confirmation or visit the full FAQ →
About two to four hours. Every lesson is short and dense. You can finish a course in a weekend if you push.
No course can. But the skills we teach — framing problems, designing solutions, judging output — are the ones AI cannot replace. That's as close to future-proof as it gets.
Yes. Our curriculum is designed for working adults, not engineers. Some courses are highly technical; many are not. Pick the right starting course and the rest follows.
Probably. The Enterprise track is built for L&D budgets. Forward /academy/enterprise to your manager.
Yes. Co-branded under the AICS Academy imprint. Forthcoming with subscriptions.