The difference between useless AI output and genuinely helpful work is almost always the prompt. AI tools like Claude and ChatGPT are only as good as what you give them. Here is a simple framework anyone can use.
The four parts of a great prompt
- Context — who you are, your business, and the situation.
- Task — exactly what you want done, in plain language.
- Format — how you want the answer (a list, an email, a table, a certain length).
- Example — a sample of a good result, if you have one.
Give all four and the quality jumps immediately.
Common mistakes
- Being vague — “write a marketing email” gives generic filler. Say who it is for and what it should achieve.
- No context — the AI cannot read your mind or your business. Tell it.
- Accepting the first draft — treat it as a starting point and refine.
- One giant prompt — break complex tasks into steps.
Refine in conversation
You do not need the perfect prompt first time. Ask for a draft, then say what to change. AI is a conversation, not a vending machine. This applies whether you use Claude or ChatGPT.
Save your best prompts
When a prompt works well, save it. A small library of proven prompts keeps quality consistent across your team.
Frequently asked questions
Do longer prompts work better?
Usually, up to a point. Detail and context help; rambling does not. Be specific, not long-winded.
Should I tell the AI what role to play?
Yes. “Act as a sales copywriter” or “as a cautious analyst” shapes the output usefully.
Can I reuse prompts across tools?
Mostly yes. The same principles work for Claude, ChatGPT and Gemini.
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