Suno, custom Copilot prompt, and how to write user stories using GenAI?!
Generative AI update of 07/06/2024
Welcome to the GenAI update. Discover the latest innovations, trends, and insights in the world of Generative AI. While our clients have heard about the capabilities of GenAI, many are still exploring how to fully utilize this cutting-edge technique. Join us as we showcase real use cases that successfully leveraged GenAI and explore how you can harness its potential for your own projects!
Suno is here, and it's changing the music industry 🎵
Say hello to Suno, but don't tell your favorite music producer! AI-music startup Suno raised 125 million dollars in investments. Suno is the newest innovation that can create music across various genres in real time.
Simply input a prompt and Suno will generate a song with vocals, a drop, and in any style you request.
The intro song of the news flash was created with Suno. We used: Can you make an intro song for a news program called the IG&H genAI newsletter, the vocals should be clear sounding."
You can try for yourself! A free account will give you credits for 5 songs per day.
Click here to generate your music with Suno!
Tip of the week
You probably have seen that the possibilities in Copilot are endless. But did you know that you can customize Copilot based on your needs? Here's a tip on how to create your own custom Copilot:
Whenever you find that a prompt gives you the result you wanted, just save it to your notes (Microsoft Loop, for instance).
Click the Copilot button in Edge to open Copilot.
Copy the saved prompt from the note and paste it into the Copilot chat.
Now you are ready to continue chatting with your personalized Copilot.
GenAI in practice: writing user stories
In delivery projects, user stories are the fundamental output of analysis: business requirements and development solutions meet in this form of documentation. The human effort should be focused on making sure the user stories are thorough and concise. The common structure of user stories helps in this respect. That same structure also makes this a good application for generative AI.
How can this GenAI technique be used for your clients?
Find the common structure: define the structure your user stories should adhere to (e.g. open questions, card, context, acceptance criteria, functional requirements)
Make CoPilot ask the right questions: classify the stories you often write into categories. For each, include the specific components in your instructions
Validate and improve: The output by Copilot will (most likely) not be completely accurate for your task, yet it will form a good base. Carefully specify and/or condense where needed.
Save instructions: If the prompt is successful, save it and improve it for further user stories.
As the GenAI field evolves rapidly, there’s always something new to explore. Want to learn more? Reach out to one of our GenAI experts—we’re here to help!
Kind regards,
The IG&H Junior GenAI Community




