How to Use AI Tools to Save Time Every Day
Slug: use-ai-tools-save-time-dailyPillar: Technology > AI ToolsKeyword: how to use AI tools to save time every dayExcerpt: AI tools can handle dozens of time-consuming daily tasks. Here's how to start using them practically, even if you're not a tech expert.Publish Date: 2026-05-28
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AI Tools Are No Longer Just for Tech People
In 2026, AI assistants have moved well beyond early chatbot novelty. Millions of people now use AI tools daily to draft emails, summarise documents, plan meals, manage schedules, and even help with creative projects — all without any technical knowledge. If you're not using AI to save time yet, you're leaving hours on the table every week.
This guide walks through the most practical, real-world applications — no jargon, no coding required.
Email Drafting and Inbox Management
Writing emails is one of the biggest time drains in most people's working days. AI can handle first drafts in seconds.
Tools like ChatGPT, Claude, Google Gemini, and Microsoft Copilot (built into Outlook) can take a rough note — "tell Sarah the meeting is moved to Thursday, apologise for the change" — and turn it into a polished, professionally toned email in seconds. You review and send.
For email management, tools like Superhuman's AI features or Spark Mail's AI assistant can summarise long email threads, flag priority messages, and draft replies directly from your inbox. This alone can save 30–60 minutes daily for people with busy inboxes.
Summarising Documents and Articles
Need to read a 40-page report? A lengthy news article? Meeting notes from a call you missed? AI can summarise any text in seconds.
Simply paste the text into Claude, ChatGPT, or Gemini and ask: "Summarise this in five bullet points" or "What are the three most important takeaways?" You get the key information without reading the whole document.
For PDFs, tools like ChatPDF or the file upload features in Claude and Gemini let you upload a document directly and ask questions about it. "What does this contract say about cancellation?" or "Are there any deadlines mentioned in this report?" — answered instantly.
Planning and Scheduling
AI is remarkably useful for planning tasks that usually require thinking through multiple variables at once.
- Meal planning: "Give me five high-protein dinners using chicken, rice, and the vegetables I have: broccoli, spinach, and peppers. Include shopping list." Done in 10 seconds.
- Weekly schedule planning: "I have these meetings: [list]. I need to exercise three times, write a report by Thursday, and call my parents. Help me plan my week." AI will suggest a realistic schedule.
- Travel itineraries: "I have three days in Lisbon with a moderate budget. Create a detailed day-by-day itinerary including restaurants and transport tips." What used to take hours of research takes minutes.
Writing and Content Help
Whether you need to write a complaint letter, a LinkedIn post, a birthday message, a job application cover letter, or a report for work, AI can produce a strong first draft in seconds based on a few sentences of context.
The key is to give it specifics: "Write a cover letter for a marketing manager role at a sustainable fashion brand. My experience is five years in social media and two years managing campaigns. I'm passionate about ethical fashion."
AI won't write the perfect final version every time — but getting a solid draft you can edit in 5 minutes beats staring at a blank page for 30 minutes every time.
Research and Information Lookup
Instead of running five different searches and reading multiple websites, ask AI tools with web access (like Perplexity, Gemini with web search, or ChatGPT with Browse) a direct question: "What are the current mortgage rates in the UK?" or "What's the best antivirus software in 2026 according to independent reviews?"
You get a synthesised answer with sources in one place. This works best for factual, evergreen questions rather than highly specific or real-time data.
Getting Started Without Feeling Overwhelmed
Start with just one use case. Pick the area that wastes the most of your time — email drafting, summarising reports, or meal planning — and use an AI tool exclusively for that for one week. Once it becomes natural, add another use case.
The most accessible starting tools are:
- Claude (claude.ai) — Excellent for long documents, analysis, and nuanced writing
- ChatGPT (chatgpt.com) — Versatile, great plugins ecosystem
- Google Gemini (gemini.google.com) — Deeply integrated with Google Workspace (Gmail, Docs, Drive)
- Microsoft Copilot — Built into Office 365 for Word, Excel, Outlook users
All have free tiers that are genuinely useful. Paid plans unlock faster responses, larger file sizes, and more advanced features.
For more practical tech guides, visit our Technology hub.
FAQ
Is AI safe to use for personal and work documents?
Most reputable AI tools have privacy controls, but you should avoid entering sensitive personal data (passwords, national insurance numbers, financial account details) into any AI tool. For work documents, check your organisation's policy — some have approved tools or forbid certain AI services.
Do I need to pay for AI tools to get real value?
Free tiers of Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini are genuinely capable for most everyday tasks. Paid plans (typically £15–20/month) are worth it if you're using AI heavily for work, need file uploads, or want faster response times.
Will AI replace my job?
AI is far more likely to change how you do your job than to replace it entirely. People who learn to use AI tools effectively will have a significant productivity advantage. Think of it as a very capable assistant — it needs direction, editing, and judgement, all of which remain human skills.
Can AI make mistakes?
Yes. AI tools can "hallucinate" — generate plausible-sounding but incorrect information. Always verify facts from AI with a reliable source, especially for medical, legal, or financial matters.
What's the fastest way to get better AI results?
Be specific. Instead of "write me an email," say "write a professional but warm email to a client explaining a 2-week project delay due to supplier issues, and reassure them the quality won't be affected." More context always produces better output.










