When to use Gemini vs. Notebook LM

When it comes to webinars, you can strategically leverage both Gemini and NotebookLM to achieve your goals of creating recaps and getting insights from the source materials like transcripts, chats, and the presentation.


When to Leverage Gemini

You should leverage Gemini for tasks that require direct content generation, rephrasing, summarization, and quick, concise answers.

  • Recaps: Gemini is excellent for drafting engaging and concise recaps by providing the raw content like an anonymized transcript and presentation. Ask Gemini to:
    • Summarize key discussions or presentations into paragraphs or bullet points.
    • Rephrase technical information into more accessible language.
    • Draft compelling introductions, conclusions, or social media posts for the recap.
    • Generate discussion questions for future engagement.
  • Concise Insights: For quick insights, Gemini can:
    • Extract specific answers to questions or highlight key pain points that were discussed.
    • Summarize the core takeaways of a long discussion into a few sentences.
    • Help you rephrase existing text to be more impactful or for a specific audience (e.g., leadership).
  • Ad-hoc Queries: If you have a specific question about the content (e.g., “What was the main concern about Feature X?”), Gemini can quickly process the text and give you a direct answer.

When to Leverage NotebookLM

You should leverage NotebookLM for tasks that require deep analysis, synthesizing information across multiple documents, identifying themes, and maintaining a structured knowledge base for ongoing internal reference.

  • Collecting Insights for Leadership Teams: NotebookLM excels here because you can upload all your materials for multiple sessions over time. It can then help you:
    • Identify recurring themes and pain points across several webinars on related topics (e.g., common challenges mentioned across all sessions, not just one).
    • Synthesize customer feedback from various sources to create a comprehensive view of customer needs or sentiment.
    • Track evolving insights over time by adding new documents to the same notebook.
    • Generate structured summaries that pull out key insights, trends, and actionable takeaways for a summary brief.
    • “Chat with your sources”: You can ask NotebookLM open-ended questions like “What are the common challenges attendees face with X?” and it will pull relevant passages from all your uploaded documents.
  • Structured Knowledge Base: Use it to build an organized repository of all your webinar content. This makes it easy to revisit past discussions, find specific information, and build a long-term resource for your team and leadership.
  • Preparing for Strategic Discussions: If you need to brief leadership on customer sentiment or knowledge gaps related to any topic, NotebookLM can help you consolidate evidence and arguments from various sessions into a cohesive narrative.

Combined Workflow

  1. Preparation (Gemini/Manual): Initially use Gemini for quick tasks like pulling initial summaries from individual documents or drafting quick recaps for social media.
  2. Deep Dive & Synthesis (NotebookLM): Upload all raw materials into NotebookLM. Use it to conduct deeper analysis, compare insights across multiple sessions, and identify overarching themes for internal leadership summaries.
  3. Final Output (Gemini/Manual): Once you’ve synthesized the insights in NotebookLM, you can then use Gemini to help draft the final, polished leadership brief or internal report based on those aggregated insights.

I used Gemini to help shape this post so I could spend less time writing—and more time putting these concepts into practice as a community manager. See Smarter Community Management: From Prompt to Practice.

Prompt: When should I leverage Gemini and when should I leverage Notebook LM? I create external-facing recaps and also would like to collect insights from webinars to share internally with leadership teams. I upload the transcript, chat, and presentation.

Why Gemini: I preferred the Gemini response over the other AI tools since it understandably had more insight into itself and NotebookLM as Google products.

Smarter Community Management: From Prompts to Practice

Inspired by Hilary Gridley’s Making AI a Habit, I’ve started using AI tools like ChatGPT and Gemini to explore ideas on community management and work through different angels before putting them into practice. Like with any tool, AI works best when paired with critical thinking – much like trying on four shirts in a dressing room and walking out with the one that fits.

In each post, I’ll share which tool(s) I used, my preference, and the actual prompts that guided me. I’ll always refine the AI’s output so that it’s helpful and actionable.

Essentially, this series is my AI personal toolkit for community management. So let’s get started!

Recap: Automation and AI in Online Communities (Community Roundtable)

This recap is from Community Roundtable’s Community Conversations podcast on “Automation and AI in Online Communities”


My takeaways

Use cases for using AI in the Autodesk Community:

  • Filter through data to create themes of what they’re hearing in the community
  • Language translations for localized content
  • Repetitive jobs (administrative and operational) to focus on relationship-building in their community

On community evangelism:

  • Awareness efforts to amplify what’s in it for customers
  • Add value proposition in messaging
  • Look at the ones who are evangelizing – strong with customer engagement and getting them in the community, speaking at events, writing about it. It’s a team effort.
    • Grassroots vs. marketing campaign

Notes to self

  • Look into using AI to filter through data to find common discussion themes
  • Look into community evangelism program ideas

Mastering ChatGPT: Top Tips from Wired Magazine

Part of my Thought Follower series:

Here are my 5 ChatGPT takeaway tips from Wired Magazine’s 17 Tips to Take Your ChatGPT Prompts to the Next Level written by David Nield:

  1. Get a response for your intended audience
    Takeway: Use prompts tailored to your audience like “explain quantum physics as if you were talking to a 12-year old”
  2. Create prompts for other AI engines
    Takeaway: You can ask the chatbot to add more detail to sentences, role-play as another AI tool and refine answers as you add more information.
  3. Explain difficult concepts
    Takeaway: Copy and paste text from different sources and ask Chat GPT to explain it to you
  4. Ask for feedback on writing
    Takeway: Paste your text and ask ChatGPT if your title is effective or to check your spelling, grammar, tone, readability, and more.
  5. Potent prompts – specificity and refining
    Takeaway: Detail and specificity is important when generating prompts and helps you get a better response. Additionally, giving ChatGPT a starting point lets it finish it off – and you can always refine the response.

My Action Items

  1. Use ChatGPT for article titles and editing
    While I may not agree with every suggestion, it’s like having a personal writing tutor.
  2. Write specific and detailed prompts
    Quality prompts result in quality responses.
  3. Consider my audience
    Ensures my content is relevant and engaging.