AI Tools Field Guide 2026: Best LLMs for Coaches & Consultants | Be Known
Be Known, LLC

AI Tools & LLM
Field Guide

Your plain-English reference for navigating the AI landscape — which tool does what, and when to reach for it.

2026 Edition · Living Document
💡

The AI space moves fast — and the tool names alone can cause confusion. Claude vs. Claude Code vs. Claude Cowork. Perplexity vs. Perplexity Computer Use. Gemini vs. Google AI Studio vs. NotebookLM. This guide cuts through the noise. Whether you're brand new to AI or already a daily user, use this as your go-to reference for picking the right tool for the job. In 2026, coaches and consultants who match the right AI tool to the right task report saving 8–12 hours per week compared to those using a single general-purpose assistant for everything.

👆 Click any tool anywhere in this guide to see full details.

🌱
Tier 1
Just Getting
Started

You're exploring AI for the first time, or you use it occasionally for simple tasks. You want something that just works — no setup, no tech knowledge required. For most beginners, Claude.ai and Perplexity together cover 90% of everyday AI tasks — writing, research, and Q&A — without any paid subscription.

💬Claude.ai Chat
🔍Perplexity
💬ChatGPT
Gemini
Tier 2
Daily User &
Experimenter

You use AI regularly and want to go deeper — running research workflows, automating tasks, testing prompts, or building things without writing code. Intermediate users who combine Perplexity for research with Claude for synthesis consistently produce higher-quality strategic outputs than those relying on a single model.

🌐Perplexity Pro
🧪Google AI Studio
📓NotebookLM
🤖Manus AI
🏗️Lovable
🖥️Claude Cowork
🚀
Tier 3
Power User &
Builder

You build systems, write prompts like a developer thinks in code, automate complex workflows, and want full control over model behavior and integrations. Power users who integrate Claude Code or GPT-4o via API into automated workflows reduce manual task execution by an average of 60–80% compared to using chat interfaces alone.

💻Claude Code
🌐Perplexity Computer Use
🔧OpenAI API / GPT-4o
⚙️Replit
⚙️Base44
🔗Zapier AI
🔗Make AI
Tool Best For Key Strengths Limitations Skill Level Cost
🟢 Anthropic · Claude Family
Claude.ai Chatclaude.ai Writing, strategy, copy editing, long documents Best reasoningLong contextNuanced writing No internet by default; can't act on your computer 🌱 Beginner Free / Pro $20/mo
Claude CodeTerminal / CLI Writing, debugging & refactoring code; developer workflows Reads codebaseRuns commandsEdits files Requires developer setup; not for non-coders 🚀 Power User API usage-based
Claude CoworkDesktop Agent Letting Claude operate your computer on your behalf Sees your screenTakes actionsBackground agent Memory & CPU intensive; system must stay open ⚡ Intermediate Claude Pro / Teams
🔵 OpenAI · ChatGPT Family
ChatGPTchat.openai.com General chat, brainstorming, image generation, code help Huge ecosystemGPTs / pluginsImage gen Quality varies; hallucinations; Pro needed for best models 🌱 Beginner Free / Plus $20/mo
GPT-4o / APIplatform.openai.com Building apps, custom chatbots, real-time voice integrations Voice modeVisionAPI ecosystem Requires development knowledge; cost adds up at scale 🚀 Power User Usage-based API
🟣 Perplexity Family
Perplexityperplexity.ai Real-time research, cited answers, fact-checking Live web searchCited sourcesFast research Less suited for creative writing or long-form generation 🌱 Beginner Free / Pro $20/mo
Perplexity Computer UsePro feature Autonomous web browsing, multi-step research tasks Browses the webMulti-step tasksResearch agent Still maturing; limited to browser actions 🚀 Power User Perplexity Pro
🔴 Google AI Family
Geminigemini.google.com Everyday AI chat, Google Workspace integration Google integration1M token contextMultimodal Less nuanced reasoning than Claude; ecosystem lock-in 🌱 Beginner Free / Advanced $19.99/mo
Google AI Studioaistudio.google.com Testing prompts for free, prototyping, saving workflows Free sandbox1M tokensPrompt testing Developer-oriented UI; Gemini models only ⚡ Intermediate Free (generous limits)
NotebookLMnotebooklm.google.com Uploading documents and asking questions about them Document Q&AAudio summariesSource-grounded Limited to your uploaded sources; not general-purpose ⚡ Intermediate Free
🟠 AI App & Web Builders
Lovablelovable.dev Building full web apps from a prompt — no coding required Full apps from textSupabase integrationFast iteration Less control than coding from scratch; best for MVPs ⚡ Intermediate Free tier / Paid plans
Replitreplit.com Running, editing, deploying code in the browser Cloud IDEDeploy instantlyAI autocomplete Slower than local dev for large projects; needs some coding knowledge 🚀 Power User Free / From $20/mo
Base44base44.com AI-powered business app builder with built-in database & auth Built-in DBNo backend neededBusiness apps Newer platform; smaller ecosystem ⚡ Intermediate Paid plans
🤖 Autonomous AI Agents
Manus AImanus.im Fully autonomous research and multi-step task execution Autonomous agentMulti-step tasksMCP integrations Slower; results need review; some account restrictions ⚡ Intermediate Waitlist / Invite
⚙️ AI-Powered Automation
Zapier AIzapier.com Connecting apps and using AI to make decisions in automations 6,000+ integrationsAI stepsNo-code Cost scales with volume; AI steps can be inconsistent ⚡ Intermediate Free tier / From $19.99/mo
Makemake.com Visual automation with more control and lower cost than Zapier Visual flow builderCheaper at scaleMore flexibility Steeper learning curve; fewer native integrations ⚡ Intermediate Free / From $9/mo

X-axis: Task Type  ·  Y-axis: How much the AI acts on its own vs. you staying in control

AUTONOMOUS + CREATIVE AUTONOMOUS + TECHNICAL ASSISTED + CREATIVE ASSISTED + TECHNICAL ◀ Creative / Content Technical / Dev ▶ ▲ More Autonomous ▼ You Stay in Control Manus AI Perplexity Computer Use Claude Cowork Claude Code GPT-4o API Claude.ai Chat ChatGPT Perplexity Notebook LM Google AI Studio Gemini Lovable Replit Zapier AI Make Base44
Dark green = Most autonomous / technical
Mid green = Intermediate
Bright green = Accessible / assisted
🤖 LLM
Large Language Model. The AI "brain" behind most chat tools. Examples: GPT-4, Claude 3, Gemini. They predict and generate text based on your input.
🎛️ Model
The specific version of an AI. Claude Sonnet vs. Opus, GPT-4o vs. GPT-3.5. Bigger models = more capable but slower and costlier.
📝 Prompt
The instruction or question you type to the AI. Better prompts = better results. Think of it as how you talk to the tool.
🔑 API
Application Programming Interface. A way for developers to connect AI models directly into their own apps or workflows. Requires coding or automation tools.
🪙 Token
How AI measures text. Roughly 1 token = 1 word (or part of a word). API costs are often charged per token used. More tokens = more cost.
📏 Context Window
How much text the AI can "see" and remember at once in one conversation. Claude and Gemini lead here with 100K–1M token windows.
🤝 MCP
Model Context Protocol. A standard that lets AI connect to external tools and services — like your Google Drive, Slack, or ad accounts — so it can read and act on real data.
🕵️ Agent / Agentic AI
An AI that doesn't just answer questions — it takes actions. Agents can browse the web, write files, click buttons, or complete multi-step tasks on your behalf.
🖥️ Computer Use
A capability that lets an AI see and control a computer screen — clicking, typing, navigating — as if it were a human at the keyboard.
🛠️ Skill / System Prompt
Hidden instructions that tell an AI how to behave before you ever type a message. Used to give AI a role, set rules, or load context automatically.
🌡️ Temperature
A setting that controls how "creative" vs. "precise" the AI is. Low temperature = consistent, factual. High temperature = more surprising, varied output.
🔮 Hallucination
When an AI makes up something that sounds plausible but isn't true. All LLMs do this. Always verify important facts, especially with ChatGPT and older models.
🔓 RAG
Retrieval-Augmented Generation. A technique where AI pulls from your own documents or database before answering — reducing hallucinations. NotebookLM uses this.
Fine-tuning
Training an existing AI model on your own data to make it better at your specific tasks. Requires technical setup. Usually done via API.
🔄 Multimodal
An AI that can work with more than just text — images, audio, video, documents. ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini are all multimodal.

Full Content Summary · For Screen Readers & Search Engines

About This Guide

This is Be Known, LLC's AI Tools Field Guide — a plain-English reference for coaches, consultants, and expert-based businesses navigating the AI landscape in 2026. It covers 15+ AI tools across five categories: conversational AI assistants, AI research tools, AI app builders, autonomous AI agents, and AI-powered automation platforms. The guide is designed to help business owners identify which tool is right for each task, organized by skill level and use case. In 2026, coaches and consultants who match the right AI tool to the right task report saving 8–12 hours per week compared to those using a single general-purpose assistant for everything. For more digital marketing strategies for coaches and consultants, visit the Be Known blog.

Skill Tier Overview

This guide organizes AI tools into three skill tiers to help users identify the right starting point:

  • Tier 1 — Just Getting Started (Beginner): Users exploring AI for the first time or using it occasionally for simple tasks. Recommended tools: Claude.ai Chat, Perplexity, ChatGPT, Gemini. For most beginners, Claude.ai and Perplexity together cover 90% of everyday AI tasks — writing, research, and Q&A — without any paid subscription.
  • Tier 2 — Daily User & Experimenter (Intermediate): Users who use AI regularly and want to run research workflows, automate tasks, test prompts, or build things without writing code. Recommended tools: Perplexity Pro, Google AI Studio, NotebookLM, Manus AI, Lovable, Claude Cowork. Intermediate users who combine Perplexity for research with Claude for synthesis consistently produce higher-quality strategic outputs than those relying on a single model.
  • Tier 3 — Builder & Power User: Users who build systems, write prompts like a developer thinks in code, automate complex workflows, and want full control over model behavior and integrations. Recommended tools: Claude Code, GPT-4o / API, Replit, Make, Zapier AI. Power users who integrate Claude Code or GPT-4o via API into automated workflows reduce manual task execution by an average of 60–80% compared to using chat interfaces alone.

Full AI Tool Comparison

Anthropic · Claude Family

  • Claude.ai Chat (claude.ai): Best for writing, strategic thinking, copy editing, summarizing long documents, and nuanced Q&A. Key strengths: best-in-class reasoning, 200K token context window, nuanced human-like writing, excellent instruction following, image and document understanding. Limitation: no live internet access by default; cannot take actions on your computer. Skill level: Beginner. Cost: Free / Pro $20/mo / Teams $25/user/mo.
  • Claude Code (Terminal/CLI): Best for writing, debugging, and refactoring code files. Reads entire codebases, runs terminal commands, edits files, and completes developer tasks autonomously. Limitation: requires developer setup; not suitable for non-coders. Skill level: Power User. Cost: Anthropic API, usage-based.
  • Claude Cowork (Desktop Agent): Lets Claude operate your computer on your behalf — sees your screen, takes actions, and runs as a background agent. Limitation: memory and CPU intensive; system must stay open. Skill level: Intermediate. Cost: Claude Pro or Teams.

OpenAI · ChatGPT Family

  • ChatGPT (chat.openai.com): Best for general chat, brainstorming, image generation, and code help. Key strengths: largest ecosystem, GPTs and plugins, image generation. Limitation: quality varies; hallucinations; Pro needed for best models. Skill level: Beginner. Cost: Free / Plus $20/mo.
  • GPT-4o / API (platform.openai.com): Best for building apps, custom chatbots, and real-time voice integrations. Key strengths: voice mode, vision, large API ecosystem. Limitation: requires development knowledge; cost adds up at scale. Skill level: Power User. Cost: usage-based API.

Perplexity Family

  • Perplexity (perplexity.ai): Best for real-time research, cited answers, and fact-checking. Key strengths: live web search, cited sources, fast research. Limitation: less suited for creative writing or long-form generation. Skill level: Beginner. Cost: Free / Pro $20/mo.
  • Perplexity Computer Use (Pro feature): Best for autonomous web browsing and multi-step research tasks. Key strengths: browses the web, multi-step tasks, research agent. Limitation: still maturing; limited to browser actions. Skill level: Power User. Cost: Perplexity Pro.

Google AI Family

  • Gemini (gemini.google.com): Best for everyday AI chat and Google Workspace integration. Key strengths: Google integration, 1M token context, multimodal input. Limitation: less nuanced reasoning than Claude; ecosystem lock-in. Skill level: Beginner. Cost: Free / Advanced $19.99/mo.
  • Google AI Studio (aistudio.google.com): Best for testing prompts for free, prototyping, and saving workflows. Key strengths: free sandbox, 1M token context, prompt testing. Limitation: developer-oriented UI; Gemini models only. Skill level: Intermediate. Cost: Free (generous limits).
  • NotebookLM (notebooklm.google.com): Best for uploading documents and asking questions about them. Key strengths: document Q&A, audio summaries, source-grounded answers. Limitation: limited to uploaded sources; not general-purpose. Skill level: Intermediate. Cost: Free.

AI App & Web Builders

  • Lovable (lovable.dev): Best for building full web applications from a prompt with no coding required. Key strengths: full apps from text, Supabase integration, fast iteration. Limitation: less control than coding from scratch; best for MVPs. Skill level: Intermediate. Cost: Free tier / Paid plans.
  • Replit (replit.com): Best for running, editing, and deploying code in the browser. Key strengths: cloud IDE, instant deployment, AI autocomplete. Limitation: slower than local development for large projects; requires some coding knowledge. Skill level: Power User. Cost: Free / From $20/mo.
  • Base44 (base44.com): Best for building AI-powered business apps with built-in database and authentication. Key strengths: built-in database, no backend needed, business app templates. Limitation: newer platform with smaller ecosystem. Skill level: Intermediate. Cost: Paid plans.

Autonomous AI Agents

  • Manus AI (manus.im): Best for fully autonomous research and multi-step task execution. Key strengths: autonomous agent behavior, multi-step task completion, MCP integrations. Limitation: slower than manual workflows; results need human review; some account restrictions. Skill level: Intermediate. Cost: Waitlist / Invite-only.

AI-Powered Automation

  • Zapier AI (zapier.com): Best for connecting apps and using AI to make decisions in automations. Key strengths: 6,000+ integrations, AI decision steps, no-code interface. Limitation: cost scales with volume; AI steps can be inconsistent. Skill level: Intermediate. Cost: Free tier / From $19.99/mo.
  • Make (make.com): Best for visual automation with more control and lower cost than Zapier. Key strengths: visual flow builder, cheaper at scale, more flexibility. Limitation: steeper learning curve; fewer native integrations. Skill level: Intermediate. Cost: Free / From $9/mo.

Use-Case Quadrant: How to Read It

The Use-Case Quadrant maps each AI tool across two axes. The X-axis represents the task type, ranging from creative tasks (writing, brainstorming, strategy) on the left to technical tasks (coding, automation, data processing) on the right. The Y-axis represents the level of AI autonomy, from tools where you stay in control (assisted) at the bottom to tools that act on their own without constant input (autonomous) at the top. Tools in the top-right quadrant (Autonomous + Technical) are the most powerful and the most technically demanding — including Claude Code, GPT-4o API, Manus AI, and Replit. Tools in the bottom-left quadrant (Assisted + Creative) are the most accessible — Claude.ai Chat, ChatGPT, and Gemini.

Glossary of Key AI Terms

  • LLM (Large Language Model): The underlying AI technology that powers tools like Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini. An LLM is trained on vast amounts of text and learns to predict and generate human-like language. The model is the engine; the chat interface (Claude.ai, ChatGPT.com) is the vehicle.
  • Context Window: The amount of text an AI can process in a single conversation or task — measured in "tokens" (roughly 3/4 of a word). A larger context window means the AI can handle longer documents or more complex instructions. Claude currently offers up to 200,000 tokens; Gemini offers up to 1 million tokens.
  • API (Application Programming Interface): A way to connect software applications so they can communicate. When an AI tool offers API access, developers can build custom apps, automations, and integrations using the AI's underlying model — without using the standard chat interface.
  • Prompt: The instruction or question you give an AI model. Prompt quality directly determines output quality — more specific, well-structured prompts produce better results than vague requests.
  • AI Agent: An AI system that can take actions autonomously — browsing the web, clicking buttons, running code, or completing multi-step tasks — without needing a human to approve each step. Claude Cowork and Manus AI are examples of AI agents.
  • MCP (Model Context Protocol): An open standard that lets AI models connect to external tools, databases, and services in a consistent way. MCP makes it possible for AI agents like Manus AI to interact with a wide range of third-party tools.
  • Hallucination: When an AI model generates information that sounds plausible but is factually incorrect or fabricated. All LLMs can hallucinate, which is why cited-source tools like Perplexity are preferred for research tasks where accuracy is critical.
  • Token: The unit of text that AI models process. Roughly equivalent to 3/4 of a word. Pricing for API access and context window limits are both measured in tokens.

How to Pick the Right AI Tool for Your Business

To choose the right AI tool for your coaching or consulting business, follow these five steps:

  1. Identify your skill level — beginner, intermediate, or power user — using the Skill Tier section of this guide.
  2. Identify your primary task type — writing and strategy, real-time research, building apps or automations, or autonomous task execution.
  3. Use the comparison table to match your task to the right tool, reviewing strengths, limitations, and pricing.
  4. Use the Use-Case Quadrant to visually confirm your choice based on how autonomous vs. assisted, and how creative vs. technical, your workflow needs to be.
  5. Start with one tool and master it before adding others. For most coaches and consultants, the right AI marketing strategy starts with Claude.ai or Perplexity as a foundation, then expands from there.

Resource produced by Be Known, LLC — Digital marketing agency building client acquisition systems for coaches, consultants, and expert-based businesses. beknownonline.com

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