Raj Cloud Technologies

Master in Advanced AI Tools

From prompts to building with AI Agents

This course provides hands-on training in using modern AI tools for content creation, marketing, automation, and productivity. You will learn to write prompts, generate copy and visuals, build chatbots and workflows, create short videos with voiceovers, and develop simple AI-powered apps—all with no-code or low-code tools.

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07 Mar 2026

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7 PM, IST

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25+

Hours of Training

4.9/5

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Master in Advanced AI Tools

From prompts to building AI Agents

Master 24+ AI tools: From beginner to advanced with AI Agents

& Many More...

25 Hours Training. Lifetime of AI Skills

While others debate whether AI will replace jobs, this Online AI Tools Training empowers you to harness the power of Artificial Intelligence for productivity, automation, content creation, marketing, and business growth. This is not just theoretical learning — it’s a practical, hands-on AI tools course with real-world projects, live demonstrations, and step-by-step implementation.

Generate Professional AI Images

Create, refine, and produce work-ready images and videos with AI tools.

Build AI Applications

Create custom GPTs and AI tools

Automate Workflow

Connect AI tools, save hours

Master Prompt Engineering

Learn how to write prompt to get 10x better outputs from AI tools

Elevate your Professional Network

Discover Your Place Among Professionals from Leading Brands

Training Curriculum

Tools: None (conceptual). All roles

Why this matters: Set expectations, build trust in ethical Al use, and align the group on building a portfolio by the end of the program.

Real-world use case: “By the end of this program you’ll have at least 3 portfolio pieces: e.g. a mini marketing kit, an automated workflow or chatbot, and one end-to-end project (e.g. campaign + automation).”

Content outline

  • Welcome, schedule, and how sessions will run (hands-on every time).
  • What is Al in daily work: content, marketing, support, productivity (no jargon).
  • Ethical Al use: fairness, privacy, accountability, not taking content or misleading others (short, practical guidelines).
  • Portfolio mindset: what we’ll build in Sessions 9, 15, and the capstone (Session 22), and how to use it for jobs/freelance.
  • Quick poll: who does content, marketing, support, data, or productivity today?

By the end: Everyone knows the roadmap, agrees on ethical basics, and is ready to start prompt engineering next session.

Tools: ChatGPT and/or Google Al Studio (Gemini) or Claude – free tiers. All roles Marketing Content Testers

Why this matters: Good prompts = better outputs for every tool we use later (copy, summaries, images, workflows).

Real-world use case: “Turn a one-line idea into a clear blog outline and then into a short social post.”

Content outline

  • What is a prompt: role, task, context, format (simple framework).
  • Hands-on: write a bad prompt vs a good prompt; compare outputs.
  • Hands-on: “You are a marketing writer. Write a 3-bullet blog outline for [topic]. Then write one Instagram caption.”
  • Tips: be specific, give examples when needed, ask for step-by-step or bullet points.
  • Try it yourself: use your own product or service and get one outline + one caption.

By the end: Everyone has written at least 2 improved prompts and seen the difference in quality.

Tools: Google Al Studio (aistudio.google.com) – free. Testers Analysts Marketing

Why this matters: Free, powerful way to prototype ideas and get test cases, summaries, and structured text without code.

Real-world use case: “Turn one user story into 5 test cases in 2 minutes” or “Summarise a long article into 5 bullet points.”

Content outline

  • Sign up and create a new prompt in Google Al Studio.
  • Hands-on: paste a short user story → ask Gemini to generate 5 test cases (positive + negative).
  • Hands-on: paste a 500-word article → ask for a 5-bullet summary.
  • Brief note on rate limits (free tier) and when to “wait and retry”.
  • Try it yourself: use your own requirement or article and get test cases or summary.

By the end: Everyone has used Google Al Studio for at least one test-case and one summarization task.

Tools: Rytr, Canva Magic Write, or Adobe Express – free tiers. Marketing Content creators Copywriters Social media

Why this matters: Speed up emails, ad headlines, and social captions for your job or freelance.

Real-world use case: “Create a short email sequence (welcome + one follow-up) and 3 social captions for a product launch.”

Content outline

  • Pick one tool: Rytr, Canva (Magic Write), or Adobe Express; show free tier limits.
  • Hands-on: choose a template (e.g. email, social post) and generate copy from a one-line brief.
  • Hands-on: generate 3 variations of one caption; pick and tweak the best.
  • When to use which: quick social (Canva/Adobe Express), longer copy (Rytr).
  • Try it yourself: create one email and one social post for your own use case.

By the end: Each person has produced at least one email and one social caption using Al.

Tools: ChatGPT, Gemini, or Claude; NotebookLM; Fireflies.ai; Mem; Genius Sheets; Microsoft Copilot (optional). Analysts Project managers Admins Researchers

Why this matters: Cut reading time for long reports, meetings, and articles; stay organized and build reports from prompts—so you can act faster.

Real-world use case: “Summarise a long article or meeting notes into key action items; or build a report/financial model from a text prompt in Sheets; or keep notes and tasks organized with Al.”

Content outline

  • Paste long text (article or mock meeting notes) into ChatGPT/Gemini/Claude; ask for “5 bullet points + 3 action items”.
  • Hands-on: NotebookLM – go to notebooklm.google.com; create a notebook; upload 2 sources (e.g. a PDF and a Google Doc, or paste a webpage); ask 3 questions grounded in your sources (answers cite the source); use Studio to generate one output (e.g. Study guide or Briefing). Optional: try Audio Overview for a podcast-style summary. Great for researchers, analysts, and anyone preparing reports or exam prep.
  • Hands-on: Fireflies.ai – how it joins meetings and creates transcripts + action items (for PMs, admins, consultants).
  • Mem (get.mem.ai): Al-driven self-organizing workspace—gather information from diverse sources, automate routine tasks, keep individuals and teams organized. Quick demo: capture notes, link sources, let Mem surface relevant context.
  • Genius Sheets (geniussheets.us): Al-powered tool that analyses text prompts in real time inside Excel or Google Sheets-build reports and financial models from natural language. Hands-on: try one prompt (e.g. “summarise this data by region” or “create a simple P&L table”) in your workbook. Great for analysts and anyone working with spreadsheets.
  • Optional: show Copilot in Edge or Word for “summarise this page/document”.
  • Try it yourself: summarise something you needed to read this week; try Fireflies on your next call; or build one small report in Genius Sheets from a prompt.

By the end: Everyone has summarised at least two pieces of content and extracted action items once.

Tools: Canva Al, Adobe Express, Google Gemini (image), Microsoft Copilot Designer – free tiers. Designers Marketing Social media Brand

Why this matters: Create marketing visuals and social graphics without a designer.

Real-world use case: “Generate a hero image for a blog or a product-style image from a text description.”

Content outline

  • Prompting for images: subject, style, mood, simple composition.
  • Hands-on: Canva or Adobe Express – use Magic Media / text-to-image or Express Al; generate one image; refine prompt once.
  • Hands-on: Gemini or Copilot Designer – same prompt; compare outputs.
  • When to use which: Canva/Adobe Express (designs + text overlay), Gemini/Copilot (standalone images).
  • Try it yourself: create one image you could use for a real post or slide.

By the end: Everyone has generated at least 2 images and improved one prompt.

Tools: Canva (free), Adobe Express, Gamma (gamma.app). Marketing Designers Social media

Why this matters: Use Canva or Adobe Express to go from idea to finished post or ad for Instagram, Linkedin; Gamma for full presentations and pitch decks.

Real-world use case: “Create a complete Instagram post (image + caption) and a simple Linkedln graphic in Canva or Adobe Express; or a short pitch deck in Gamma from an outline.”

Content outline

  • Pick a template in Canva or Adobe Express (e.g. Instagram post); replace text with Magic Write / Express or your copy.
  • Hands-on: add or replace one element with an Al-generated image.
  • Hands-on: resize or duplicate for another format (e.g. story or LinkedIn).
  • Gamma (gamma.app): For full presentations or pitch decks – sign up (free tier); paste an outline or topic; let Gamma generate a designed deck in minutes. Optional: create one short deck from a 3-bullet outline.
  • Export and quality check (resolution, readability).
  • Try it yourself: produce one post and one alternate format for the same message; or one Gamma deck from your own topic.

By the end: Each person has one polished social post and one alternate format ready to use; optional: one Gamma deck.

Tools: ChatGPT/Gemini (brief → copy), Rytr, Canva, Adobe Express. Marketing Content Brand

Why this matters: Run a mini campaign yourself: one message, multiple formats (email, social, visual).

Real-world use case: “You have one product launch sentence. Create: 1 email subject + body, 2 social captions, 1 visual.”

Content outline

  • Start with one sentence brief; use Al to expand into key messages and tone.
  • Hands-on: generate email subject + short body (ChatGPT/Rytr) and 2 social captions.
  • Hands-on: create one visual in Canva or Adobe Express that matches the message.
  • Quick checklist: message consistent? CTA clear? Suitable for India/regional audience if relevant?
  • Try it yourself: do the same for a real or practice product/service.

By the end: Everyone has a mini campaign: one email, two captions, one visual.

Tools: Any from Sessions 2-8 (prompting, copy, Canva, Adobe Express, Gamma, images). Marketing Designers Freshers (portfolio)

Why this matters: First portfolio piece: something you can show in interviews or to a client.

Real-world use case: “Deliver a mini marketing kit: logo idea or brand visual + 1 social post + 1 email (or short PDF one-pager or Gamma pitch deck).”

Content outline

  • Choose: personal brand, local business, or fictional product.
  • Hands-on: create 1 hero/brand image, 1 social post (image + caption), 1 email or one-pager – or a short pitch deck in Gamma.app from a 3-5 slide outline.
  • Save and name files for portfolio (e.g. “Marketing Kit – [Your Name]”).
  • Optional: 5-minute share – 2-3 participants show their kit and one thing they learned.
  • Try it yourself: add one more format (e.g. story or WhatsApp status size) after the session.

By the end: Each person has a portfolio-ready mini marketing kit (3+ assets).

Tools: None new; screen-share or short presentations. All roles

Why this matters: Reinforce learning and get peer feedback before moving to video and automation.

Real-world use case: “Present your marketing kit in 3 minutes: what you made, which tools, one challenge.”

Content outline

  • Volunteers present their Session 9 kit (3 min each); others give one positive + one suggestion.
  • Recap: prompt engineering, copy tools, Canva, Adobe Express, image generation – when to use what.
  • Preview Week 3: video, voice, chatbots, automation.
  • Q&A and any catch-up for people who missed a session.

By the end: Clear picture of what’s working; everyone ready for video and automation.

Tools: None. All roles

Why this matters: Halfway through the program-clarify doubts, catch up on missed sessions, and share the step-by-step PDF for Session 10’s practice.

Real-world use case: “Get unstuck, see others’ questions, and leave ready for video, voice, and automation.”

Content outline

  • Share the step-by-step PDF guide for Session 10’s between-session practice.
  • Open Q&A: prompts, Google Al Studio, copy tools, Canva, Adobe Express, Gamma, marketing kit-anything from Sessions 1-10.
  • Quick recap: what’s coming in Sessions 12-23 (video, voice, chatbots, automation, OpenClaw, Lovable, Al for coders, integration, capstone, showcase).
  • Optional: 1-2 volunteers share one win or one challenge from the first half.

By the end: Doubts addressed; everyone has the Session 10 practice PDF and is set for the second half.

Tools: InVideo Al, Canva Video, or Adobe Express – free tiers. Video editors Content creators Marketing

Why this matters: Short videos for social or internal comms without a camera or editing skills.

Real-world use case: “Turn a 100-word script into a 30-60 second video with Al-generated visuals and/or stock.”

Content outline

  • Write or paste a short script (or use ChatGPT to generate one).
  • Hands-on: InVideo Al, Canva, or Adobe Express – create a video from text; pick template and style.
  • Add or generate visuals; trim to 30-60 seconds.
  • Export (free tier limits: resolution/watermark – mention upfront).
  • Try it yourself: make a second clip with your own script or a different style.

By the end: Everyone has created at least one short Al-assisted video.

Tools: ElevenLabs, Acoust Al or Speechify (voice); Canva or Adobe Express (subtitles); Descript (edit audio/video like a doc). Video editors Podcasters Content creators

Why this matters: Add professional voiceover and captions; ElevenLabs is widely used for high-quality synthesis and voice cloning; edit podcasts or videos by editing text (Descript).

Real-world use case: “Add an Al voiceover to a 30-second script with ElevenLabs (or Acoust Al/Speechify) and auto-generate subtitles; or edit a short clip in Descript by editing the transcript.”

Content outline

  • Hands-on: ElevenLabs – sign up (free tier); paste a short script; choose voice and language; generate and download audio. Mention voice library and optional cloning (paid).
  • Ethics (voice cloning & deepfakes): Brief note on responsible use-impersonation without consent, misuse for fraud or misinformation, and deepfakes can cause harm. Use voice cloning only with clear consent and for legitimate purposes (e.g. your own voice, authorized content); do not impersonate others or create misleading audio.
  • Hands-on: same script in Acoust Al or Speechify; compare output. When to use which: ElevenLabs for quality and variety; others for quick free options.
  • Hands-on: upload a short video (or use Session 12 output) and generate auto-captions in Canva or Adobe Express.
  • Hands-on: Descript – upload audio or video; edit by cutting/editing the transcript; add filler-word removal (great for podcasters & video editors).
  • Edit captions for accuracy; adjust placement if needed.
  • Try it yourself: add voiceover with ElevenLabs + captions to one video; or clean one short podcast clip in Descript.

By the end: Everyone has produced one voiceover and one captioned clip.

Tools: Zapier Chatbots or Tidio – free no-code chatbot options. Support Customer success Marketing (leads)

Why this matters: Automate first-line FAQs and lead capture for a website or page.

Real-world use case: “Build a simple FAQ bot that answers 3 questions and collects name/email.”

Content outline

  • Pick Zapier Chatbots or Tidio; sign up (free, no credit card where possible).
  • Hands-on: add 3 FAQ pairs (question → answer).
  • Hands-on: add a “collect lead” step (name, email).
  • Embed or share test link; test on mobile and desktop.
  • Try it yourself: add 2 more FAQs or change the welcome message.

By the end: Each person has a working FAQ chatbot they can share or embed.

Tools: Zapier, Make.com, Browse Al (browse.ai). Ops Admins Marketing ops Analysts Researchers

Why this matters: Connect apps so routine tasks happen automatically; extract and monitor data from websites with no code.

Real-world use case: “When someone submits a form, add a row to a sheet and send a confirmation email; or set up a robot to extract job listings, prices, or news from a website and get alerts.”

Content outline

  • Trigger → action: explain with one example (e.g. Google Form → Google Sheet + Gmail).
  • Hands-on: create one Zap (Zapier) or Scenario (Make.com): form submit → sheet + email (or similar). Make.com offers more steps on free tier; Zapier is very beginner-friendly.
  • Browse Al (browse.ai): No-code web automation for data extraction and monitoring from any website-set up a robot in about two minutes. Use cases: track job postings, prices, news, or competitor updates; send data to sheets or email. Hands-on: create one monitoring robot for a simple page (e.g. a list or table) and see how extracted data can feed into your workflow.
  • Test with a real submission; show where to see runs and errors.
  • Free tier limits: tasks per month (Zapier/Make); suggest one more idea (e.g. save email attachments to Drive, or monitor a site with Browse Al).
  • Try it yourself: duplicate and change one step (e.g. add Slack notification); or add a Browse Al robot for a site you care about.

By the end: Everyone has built and tested one automation.

Tools: Zapier Chatbots or Tidio; Zapier or Make.com. Support Ops Freshers (portfolio)

Why this matters: Second portfolio piece: proof you can build support or workflow automation.

Real-world use case: “Deliver either (a) a small chatbot for a real or fictional business, or (b) an automation that saves you 5 minutes a week.”

Content outline

  • Choose: chatbot (Session 14) or automation (Session 15).
  • Hands-on: build it with a clear purpose (e.g. “FAQ for X” or “Form → Sheet → Email for Y”).
  • Document: 2-3 sentences describing what it does and which tools you used.
  • Optional: share link or screen-share; 2-minute demo.
  • Try it yourself: add one more trigger or response after the session.

By the end: Each person has a second portfolio piece (chatbot or automation) with short documentation.

Tools: OpenClaw (openclaw.ai), Telegram. Freshers (portfolio) Ops Power users

Why this matters: Your own Al assistant in Telegram-self-hosted, so your data stays on your machine; always on, with persistent memory and optional reminders or automation.

Real-world use case: “Chat with your personal Al from your phone via Telegram: ask for summaries, draft messages, get reminders, or run small tasks—all through a bot you control.”

Content outline

  • What is OpenClaw: self-hosted gateway that connects Al agents to Telegram (and Discord/WhatsApp). Open-source; Node.js 22+ and an API key (e.g. Anthropic) needed for the Al-OpenClaw itself is free.
  • Hands-on: install OpenClaw (docs.openclaw.ai); create a Telegram bot via BotFather and get the token.
  • Hands-on: configure OpenClaw with your bot token and API key; run the gateway ( openclaw gateway ); pair your Telegram account.
  • Chat with your assistant in Telegram (DM or group); try a few tasks: “Summarise this in 3 bullets,” “Draft a short email for….” “Remind me in 10 minutes to…” (if reminders are enabled).
  • Brief note: data and context live on your machine; you can add skills or automation later. Optional: show Discord/WhatsApp in docs for follow-up.
  • Try it yourself: use your Telegram assistant for one real task this week; consider adding it as a portfolio piece (“Self-hosted Al assistant on Telegram”).

By the end: Everyone has a working personal Al assistant in Telegram, with pairing and at least one successful chat.

Tools: Lovable (lovable.dev), Imagica (imagica.ai). Freshers (portfolio) Product/ops Freelancers

Why this matters: Show you can go from “I want an app that does X” to a working web app or Al app without code.

Real-world use case: “Build a simple leave-request or feedback form app (Lovable); or construct an Al app from your idea with Imagica.”

Content outline

  • Lovable: sign up; explain free tier (credits, public projects). Hands-on: describe the app in 2-3 sentences (e.g. “A form with name, dates, reason; submit and show a thank-you message”). Iterate: add one field or change one label.
  • Imagica (imagica.ai): No-code Al development platform—build Al apps from your ideas. Compare with Lovable: Imagica focuses on Al-powered apps and workflows from natural language. Hands-on: try building a small Al app (e.g. a simple Q&A or summarization flow) and share the link for portfolio.
  • Share or export link for portfolio. When to use which: Lovable for forms and web Uls; Imagica for Al-centric apps.
  • Try it yourself: change the form to a different use case (e.g. contact or event registration); or extend your Imagica app with one more feature.

By the end: Everyone has built and shared one small app with Lovable and/or Imagica.

Tools: Hugging Face (huggingface.co/spaces), Ollama (ollama.com). Testers Analysts Researchers Freshers

Why this matters: Try Al models in the browser (no install) or run them locally with Ollama for privacy and no API costs.

Real-world use case: “Summarise or translate with a Space; run Llama or Gemma on your laptop for private, offline use.”

Content outline

  • Hugging Face Spaces: Go to Spaces; pick a popular Space (e.g. summarization or translation). Paste text; get result; note first-load time (20-30 s). Try a second Space (e.g. sentiment or image caption). When to use: quick experiments, no API key.
  • Ollama: Download from ollama.com (Mac/Windows/Linux). In terminal: ollama run llama3.2 Or ollama run gemma2 ; chat in the terminal. Explain: data stays on your machine, no API key, good for sensitive or offline work. System needs: 8GB+ RAM for smaller models.
  • Compare: when to use cloud (Spaces, ChatGPT) VS local (Ollama) – privacy, cost, offline.
  • Try it yourself: use one Space for a real task; if you have the hardware, run one Ollama model and ask it one question.

By the end: Everyone has used at least 2 Hugging Face Spaces; optional: run one model in Ollama.

Tools: Cursor (cursor.com), GitHub Copilot (github.com/features/copilot). Developers Testers Freshers (code)

Why this matters: GitHub Copilot is an Al-powered programming assistant that accelerates coding so you can tackle larger issues and maintain your workflow; Cursor offers similar power in an Al-first IDE.

Real-world use case: “Describe what you want in plain English; get code, tests, or a fix. Use Al to speed up scripts, test cases, or a small feature.”

Content outline

  • What is Al-assisted coding: inline suggestions, chat in the IDE, edit by instruction. GitHub Copilot (VS Code, JetBrains, etc.): accelerates coding, helps tackle larger issues, keeps you in flow. Cursor: Al-first IDE with similar completions and chat. Both for refactor, tests, docs.
  • Hands-on (Cursor or Copilot): install/sign up (free tier or trial); open a small file or new project.
  • Ask for code: “Write a Python function that takes a list and returns only even numbers” or “Add a test for this function.” Accept/compose suggestions; run the result.
  • Refactor and debug: select code → “add error handling” or “explain this”; use Al to fix a simple bug or add comments.
  • Role-specific: testers – “generate 3 test cases for this API”; analysts – “write a short script to read this CSV and sum column X.”
  • Try it yourself: use your own snippet or script and get one generation (function, test, or fix) from the Al.

By the end: Everyone who codes has used Cursor or Copilot for at least one generation (code, test, or refactor).

Tools: Any from the program (ChatGPT/Gemini, Canva, Adobe Express, InVideo, Zapier/Make, Browse Al, Mem, Genius Sheets, OpenClaw, Lovable, Imagica, Cursor/Copilot). All roles Marketing Content

Why this matters: Real campaigns and projects use several tools in a pipeline.

Real-world use case: “From one brief: generate copy → create visual → draft video script → (optional) trigger an automation when someone signs up.”

Content outline

  • Walk through one end-to-end example: brief → copy (ChatGPT) → image (Canva/Adobe Express) → short video (InVideo/Canva/Adobe Express) → optional form + Zapier.
  • Hands-on: in small groups or individually, run the same pipeline with a different brief.
  • Discuss: where to store assets, how to name files, what to document for portfolio.
  • Try it yourself: run one full pipeline for a real or practice campaign after the session.

By the end: Everyone has seen and practiced one full pipeline across text, image, video, and optionally automation.

Tools: Any from the program (prompts, copy, Canva, Adobe Express, Gamma, video/voice, chatbots, automation, Browse Al, Mem, Genius Sheets, OpenClaw, Lovable, Imagica, Cursor/GitHub Copilot, Hugging Face, etc.). All roles Freshers (portfolio)

Why this matters: One project that ties the whole course together-content, design, automation or app, and (if you code) Al-assisted code-so you can show it in interviews or to clients.

Real-world use case: “Pick one of the 4 Al agent capstone projects-Job Finder, Stock Portfolio, Linkedin Post Generator, or Personal News-build an MVP, record a demo video, and create a short presentation; then submit for the final showcase.”

Content outline

  • Capstone scope: leverage everything from the course-prompts, LLMS (ChatGPT/Gemini/Claude), automation (Zapier/Make, Browse Al), Mem, Genius Sheets, OpenClaw/Telegram, Lovable, Imagica, Cursor/GitHub Copilot, and APls where applicable-to build one Al agent with a clear goal and audience. You can scope to an MVP (e.g. one job board, manual uploads, or a subset of features) so it’s achievable in the program timeline.
  • Here are the 4 capstone projects—pick one and submit. Each is an Al agent you can show in interviews. Deliverables: a working solution (or MVP), a 1-2 minute demo video, and a short presentation (Gamma deck).
  • Project 1 – Job Finder Agent: Build an Al agent that scans job boards (e.g. LinkedIn, Naukri, Indeed), matches openings to a user’s resume or skills profile, and delivers personalized recommendations with application tips. Include: resume/skills parsing (e.g. via LLM or simple NLP), daily job alerts via email/Slack (Zapier/Make), and filters for location (e.g. Bengaluru), salary, and remote options. Use job APls, Browse Al (no-code web extraction/monitoring from job pages), or scraping where allowed; LLMs for matching and summarization; simple web Ul (Lovable or Imagica) or Telegram (OpenClaw) for user input. Demo video: show a profile input and sample recommendations; Gamma deck: problem, architecture, tools, and how you’d scale it.
  • Project 2 – Stock Portfolio Agent: Create an Al agent that tracks a user’s stock portfolio (e.g. via Zerodha or Angel One APls, or manual/CSV upload for MVP), provides performance analysis, risk assessment, and buy/sell-style insights based on market trends. Features: portfolio upload/import, visualizations like P&L charts or summary tables (e.g. with Genius Sheets for report/financial model from prompts inside Excel/Google Sheets), alerts for price drops or news (email/Slack), and basic trend summaries using historical data. Integrate financial APIs (e.g. Yahoo Finance) where possible, LLMs for insights and plain-English summaries, and support Indian/US markets with optional low-expense ETF suggestions. Demo video: show portfolio input and sample output; Gamma deck: problem, data flow, tools, and disclaimers (not financial advice).
  • Project 3 – LinkedIn Post Generator Agent: Develop an Al agent that generates engaging Linkedin posts tailored to a user’s professional profile, industry (e.g. Al, product management), and goals (networking, thought leadership). Features: topic brainstorming from recent news/trends (LLM), post drafting with hooks, emojis, and hashtags (prompt engineering), image suggestions via DALL-E, Canva, or Adobe Express/Gemini, and A/B variants for optimization. Use ChatGPT/Gemini/Claude for drafting, optional LinkedIn API or manual scheduling, and tone customization (professional, casual). Demo video: show input (profile + topic) and generated post(s); Gamma deck: problem, prompt strategy, tools, and sample outputs.
  • Project 4 – Personal News Agent: Build an Al agent that curates a daily personalized news digest from sources (e.g. Google News, Reuters, TechCrunch), filtered by user interests (e.g. GenAl, B2B marketing, travel). Include: summarization of top stories (LLM), sentiment or relevance scoring, and delivery via email, WhatsApp, or a simple app/Telegram. Features: user preference onboarding, source prioritization, and optional Q&A on articles. Use RSS feeds or news APIs plus LLMs for concise, bias-aware summaries; Zapier/Make or OpenClaw for scheduling and delivery; Mem to keep organized and surface relevant context from diverse sources. Optionally use Browse Al to monitor specific news or listing pages. Demo video: show preferences and a sample digest; Gamma deck: problem, pipeline, tools, and how you’d add more sources.
  • Hands-on: pick one Al agent project, build an MVP using the integration approach from Session 21 (LLMs, automation, Browse Al, Mem, Genius Sheets, Lovable/Imagica/OpenClaw/Telegram, Cursor/Copilot as needed); write 4-5 sentences: what the agent does, which tools you used, who it’s for. Submit: working solution (or MVP) + demo video link + Gamma deck (or PDF).
  • Save all links and files in one folder; name it “Capstone – [Your Name]”.
  • Between-session practice: finish or extend the capstone (one more deliverable or tool) before the final showcase.

By the end: Each person has chosen one of the 4 Al agent projects, started building an MVP, and knows what to submit (solution + demo video + Gamma deck).

Tools: None new; optional: LinkedIn, Google Drive or Notion for portfolio. All roles

Why this matters: Turn the 3 portfolio pieces into employability: resume bullets, portfolio page, and next learning steps.

Real-world use case: “Add 2-3 resume bullets and one portfolio link you can share in interviews or with clients.”

Content outline

  • 3-4 volunteers: 5-minute showcase of their best project (e.g. Session 9 marketing kit,16 chatbot/automation, 17 OpenClaw, or 22 capstone).
  • How to describe what you built: “Used [tools] to [outcome] for [audience/purpose].”
  • Resume: 2-3 bullet examples (e.g. “Built FAQ chatbot with Zapier; reduced support time by X%” or “Created Al-assisted marketing kit: copy, visuals, short video”).
  • Portfolio: one simple option (Google Drive folder with descriptions, or Notion page, or Linkedln post with links).
  • Next steps: deeper prompt engineering, paid tiers when needed, freelancing platforms (e.g. Upwork, Fiverr, Internshala for gigs and internships), more automation (Make vs Zapier), exploring Cursor/IDE Al if they code.
  • Program feedback and Q&A. By the end: Everyone has at least 2 resume bullets and one shareable portfolio link; clear next steps for upskilling.

Upon completing this training

What you’ll learn Upon completing this training

Training Instructed By:

Mr.Sreekanth Reddy

AI Product leader with 11+ years of experience

A seasoned AI Product leader with 11+ years of experience in building and scaling global B2B SaaS products, from early-stage start-ups to large multinational corporations. Has led AI-driven innovations in AI/ML, Generative AI, and AI Agents, delivering high-impact solutions for enterprise marketing, sales, and customer engagement. Specializing in architecting enterprise-scale AI systems and agents, no-code/low-code platforms and automation at scale. Known for practical, real-world training that has mentored hundreds of product managers, freshers, and non-technical professionals into job-ready AI specialists around the globe. Approved trainer by Raj Cloud Technologies.

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday

Master in Advanced 24+ AI Tools

Live Session Timing: 7:00 PM, IST

Fees: 17,699/-

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Master in Advanced AI Tools

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