
By Stantin Siebritz
How to Choose the Right Model Without Falling for the Hype
There is a mistake people keep making in the AI conversation: treating every large language model as though it is supposed to do everything equally well.
It is the same logic as hiring one person to be your lawyer, designer, accountant, software engineer, photographer, and strategist, then acting surprised when the results are uneven. AI does not work like that. The better question is not, Which AI is best? The better question is, Which AI is best for this job?
That distinction matters now more than ever, because the model market has matured. We are no longer in the era where one general-purpose chatbot automatically leads every category. We are now in the era of specialist strength.
For coding and automation, the current strongest practical choice is OpenAI Codex running GPT-5.4. This is where the evidence is clear: OpenAI positions GPT-5.4 as its recommended model for most Codex tasks, with stronger reasoning and better performance on serious software engineering benchmarks. In plain English, if the job is code, debugging, scripting, or agentic development work, this is the tool you want at the desk.
For design work, particularly mockups, prototypes, one-pagers, and presentation-style layout generation, Claude Design stands out. Anthropic has clearly leaned into design as a category, and it shows. This is less about raw intelligence and more about taste, structure, and the ability to produce visually coherent outputs that feel closer to what a product team or creative lead would actually use.
For image generation and editing, Google’s Nano Banana 2 is one of the most compelling choices right now. Where it shines is not just in making pretty pictures, but in the details that frustrate most users: following instructions properly, keeping characters or objects consistent across outputs, and rendering text more reliably. That makes it especially useful for social content, promotional graphics, and iterative visual work.
For the average person, though, the real question is usually much more practical: What do I use every day?
Here are the seven use cases that matter most:
- Writing emails, reports, and proposals — GPT-5.4
Still the strongest all-rounder for polished written work. - Coding and automation — OpenAI Codex with GPT-5.4
Best suited for serious software tasks. - Design concepts, mockups, and slides — Claude Design
Best for visual layout and prototype-style generation. - Image creation and edits — Nano Banana 2
Best for strong visual outputs with better consistency. - Reading long PDFs and summarising complex documents — Gemini 3.1 Pro
Excellent for large context and document-heavy workloads. - Spreadsheet and office productivity work — Claude Sonet 4.6 or GPT-5.4
Strong for structured business tasks and workbook support. - Deep analysis and multi-step reasoning — Claude Opus 4.7
Ideal when the task is to think through a hard problem, not just answer quickly.
The takeaway is simple: stop asking AI to be a mythical one-size-fits-all genius. Use the right model the way you would use the right specialist.
Because in this phase of AI, the winner is not the person with access to the most models.
It is the person who knows which model to call into the room.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or professional advice. Readers should not rely on this content as the sole basis for making investment decisions and are encouraged to seek independent professional advice before acting on any information contained herein.
*Stantin Siebritz, Managing Director of New Creation Solutions, and a Namibian Artificial Intelligence Specialist






