About this workshop
Who is teaching, what to expect.
A short page so you know what you are walking into.
Who is teaching
Nelson R. Lemieux III, Principal Consultant at Lemieux Consulting LLC. I work with small-to-mid-size businesses on practical uses of technology, including AI. The main site is consultlemieux.com.
I am delivering this workshop for the Urban League of Louisiana workforce development programs. The material is built for ULLA participants. No off-the-shelf slide deck, no generic AI hype.
Who this is for
People early in their working lives. First job, second job, first job in a new field. A mix of people who use AI daily already and people who have never opened it. That's the room we designed for.
You do not need technical experience. You do not need a resume yet. You do need an email you can check during the session and a laptop if you have one.
What to expect on the day
You will sit for a while and talk for a while. Most of the time you will be at your own laptop, writing prompts, reading outputs, and arguing with them out loud with the person next to you. That is the part of the day that sticks.
I will be wrong about things. When a prompt produces a bad answer, we look at what went wrong, why, and how to catch it next time. AI will sometimes get this wrong. Always verify before you send it to a recruiter or hiring manager.
There are two short breaks. The room will have coffee. I will stay late for anyone who wants to keep working on something they did not finish.
What to expect this site to do
- Show you the workshop material before, during, and after.
- Give you a prompt playground and a shared timer on the live page.
- Save your own work to your own browser only. Nothing leaves your device.
- Hand you a PDF prompt library at the end you can keep and share.
Privacy, plainly
This site has no analytics, no cookies, no logins, and no third-party scripts. I do not know that you visited. Everything you type into the activities and the live playground stays in your browser.
There is one exception: the live page's shared countdown timer. When the facilitator starts a timer, three numbers get stored on a server (end time, duration, and when it was last updated). No information about any visitor is stored.
I made these choices on purpose. The people in the room include job seekers, returning citizens, and people whose privacy deserves more than a default.
Follow-up after the workshop: info@consultlemieux.com.