Overview of Popular AI Tools

The AI tools market has grown rapidly. There are now dozens of tools available for productivity — each with a different focus, strength, and price point. Knowing which tool does what prevents wasted time and helps in choosing the right assistant for each task.

This topic provides a clear, honest overview of the most widely used AI productivity tools in 2025, what each one is best at, and how they fit into everyday work.

Category 1 — General-Purpose AI Assistants

These are the all-rounder tools. They can handle a wide variety of tasks — writing, answering questions, summarising, analysing, coding, and more.

ChatGPT (OpenAI)

Best for: Writing, research, coding, question answering, brainstorming

Free plan: Yes (GPT-3.5); Paid plan (Plus) unlocks GPT-4o and image generation

Standout feature: Custom GPTs — pre-configured AI assistants built for specific tasks

Example use: Draft a cold outreach email, debug a piece of code, explain a complex concept in simple language

Claude (Anthropic)

Best for: Long documents, detailed analysis, nuanced writing, multi-step reasoning

Free plan: Yes (Claude Sonnet); Paid plan unlocks larger context and more usage

Standout feature: Handles very long documents — can read an entire book, contract, or report in one session

Example use: Summarise a 50-page research report, review a contract for key clauses, write a structured business proposal

Google Gemini

Best for: Google Workspace users — Docs, Gmail, Sheets, Drive, Slides

Free plan: Yes; Gemini Advanced available with Google One subscription

Standout feature: Deep integration with Google products — can directly access and edit Docs and Gmail

Example use: Summarise emails in Gmail, generate a report in Google Docs, create charts in Google Sheets

Microsoft Copilot

Best for: Microsoft 365 users — Word, Excel, Outlook, Teams, PowerPoint

Free plan: Basic version available; Full features require Microsoft 365 subscription

Standout feature: Works directly inside Microsoft Office apps — no switching between tools

Example use: Generate a PowerPoint from bullet points, summarise a Word document, write formulas in Excel

Category 2 — Writing and Content AI Tools

Notion AI

Best for: Note-taking, knowledge management, meeting summaries, content planning

Free plan: Notion is free; AI features are an add-on

Standout feature: AI works within existing notes and databases — no need to copy and paste content out

Example use: Summarise meeting notes, generate action items from a brainstorm, draft a blog post outline

Grammarly

Best for: Grammar checking, tone improvement, writing clarity

Free plan: Yes; Premium unlocks tone suggestions and plagiarism detection

Standout feature: Works as a browser extension — checks writing in real time across Gmail, Docs, LinkedIn, and most web apps

Example use: Fix grammar in an email, improve the clarity of a report, adjust the tone of a message from formal to friendly

Jasper

Best for: Marketing content — blog posts, social media captions, ad copy

Free plan: Free trial only; paid plans required

Standout feature: Brand voice feature — trains the AI to write in a specific company's tone and style

Example use: Write a month of social media captions, generate product descriptions, create email marketing campaigns

Category 3 — Visual and Design AI Tools

Canva AI (Magic Studio)

Best for: Social media graphics, presentations, posters, logos, videos

Free plan: Yes; Pro unlocks more AI features and templates

Standout feature: Magic Design — describe a design and Canva generates it automatically

Example use: Create a presentation from a topic description, generate a social media post graphic, remove backgrounds from photos

DALL-E / ChatGPT Image Generation

Best for: Custom AI-generated images for content, presentations, and marketing

Free plan: Limited; ChatGPT Plus includes image generation

Example use: Generate a blog header image, create a product concept illustration, design a custom icon

Category 4 — Meeting and Communication AI Tools

Otter.ai

Best for: Transcribing and summarising meetings, interviews, and voice recordings

Free plan: Yes (limited minutes per month)

Standout feature: Automatically joins Zoom, Google Meet, and Teams calls to transcribe in real time

Example use: Transcribe a client meeting, extract action items from a team call, create a summary of an interview

Fireflies.ai

Best for: Meeting recording, transcription, and searchable notes

Free plan: Yes (limited storage)

Standout feature: Searchable meeting archive — find what was said in any past meeting by keyword

Example use: Search across all past meetings for a specific decision or discussion point

Category 5 — Automation AI Tools

Zapier

Best for: Automating repetitive tasks between apps without coding

Free plan: Yes (limited automation steps)

Standout feature: Connects over 6,000 apps — if two tools are used regularly, Zapier can likely automate the connection between them

Example use: Automatically save email attachments to Google Drive, send a Slack message when a new form is submitted, add new contacts to a CRM automatically

Make (formerly Integromat)

Best for: More complex, multi-step workflow automation

Free plan: Yes

Standout feature: Visual workflow builder — drag-and-drop interface to design complex automation sequences

Quick Comparison — Which Tool for Which Task?

TaskBest Tool
Writing emails and reportsChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini (in Gmail)
Summarising long documentsClaude, ChatGPT, or Copilot
Creating presentationsCopilot (in PowerPoint) or Canva AI
Analysing spreadsheet dataCopilot (in Excel) or Gemini (in Sheets)
Transcribing meetingsOtter.ai or Fireflies.ai
Creating social media graphicsCanva AI
Automating repetitive workflowsZapier or Make
Note-taking and knowledge managementNotion AI
Improving grammar and toneGrammarly

Free vs Paid — What Is Actually Needed?

Most of the tools listed above have usable free plans. For a large proportion of everyday tasks, the free versions of ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Canva AI, Otter.ai, Zapier, and Notion AI are sufficient to get started and see significant productivity gains.

Paid plans become worthwhile when:

  • The volume of tasks exceeds the free limits
  • Integration with specific paid apps (like Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace) is needed
  • Advanced features like brand voice, larger context windows, or priority access are required

Key Takeaway

No single AI tool does everything best. The most productive approach is knowing which tool fits each task — and using a small set of tools well rather than trying to use everything at once. This course covers the most practical and widely available tools, focusing on real-world applications that apply to most types of work.

The next topic covers How AI Tools Fit Into Daily Work — practical frameworks for identifying where AI can save the most time in a typical working day.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *