Cowork vs. the rest
Quick recap
You met the three Claude interfaces earlier in the bootcamp: Chat for short questions, Cowork for longer pieces of actual work, and Claude Code for writing code. Same model under the hood; the difference is what each one is built around.
Why Cowork is the personal productivity tool
Cowork is the one place where everything you need for desk work lines up at once. It is not that Cowork has access to data the others don’t. Chat and Code both have connectors too. The difference is that Cowork is built for doing the work, not for asking a question. Five things combine to make it the right tool for personal productivity:
- Connectors across all your tools. Calendar, email, Slack, Drive, Notion, Jira. Cowork can read across them in a single task. The next course is about wiring these up; it is where most personal productivity actually lives.
- Same access as you. What you can see in Slack and email, Cowork can see. Same private channels, same DMs, same draft docs. That is what makes the output rich; it is also why the responsibility for what gets sent on stays with you.
- Files in a folder. Point Cowork at a folder on your laptop and it can read what is in it, write new files alongside, and use that folder as the working space for the task.
- A safe sandbox. Cowork runs in an isolated virtual machine. Unlike Claude Code, it cannot reach out and run things on your computer; it only touches the folders you give it. You can let it loose on real work without thinking through what could break.
- An interface built for desk work. Long-running tasks, projects that bundle context, scheduled jobs running in the background, all in one place and all shaped for the task in front of you. Chat is built around a conversation; Cowork is built around a task that produces something.
No single one of these is the unlock. The combination is.

When Chat is still the right tool
For a two-minute question, use Chat. That is the line you met earlier in the bootcamp, and it still holds. Reformulating a sentence, asking for a definition, brainstorming a name, debugging a one-liner. Chat is faster because there is no setup. The rest of the time, when there is actual work to do, open Cowork.
Reflect
- Think about the last five Claude conversations you had. How many were genuine two-minute questions, and how many were trying to be Cowork-shaped tasks but stayed in Chat?
- What is one task you do every week that touches at least three of your tools (email, calendar, Slack, Notion, Drive, Jira)? That is your candidate first Cowork use case for the rest of this track.
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