Master AI Prompting: Stop Asking Like a Robot and Get Better Results
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**[INTRO MUSIC: Upbeat, slightly quirky tech vibe - 0:15]**
Hey, it's Mal—The Misfit Master of AI, and welcome back to "I Am GPTed," the podcast where we talk to ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, and basically every AI that'll listen to us ramble. Today's episode: "Stop Asking Like a Robot." Because apparently, the way you phrase things actually matters. Who knew, right? Me. I knew. After face-planting into bad prompts about a thousand times.
**[MUSIC FADES]**
Let's start with something that changed the game for me: **context prompting**. It's the difference between asking an AI to do your laundry and actually telling it how, when, and why.
Here's the before: "Give me a workout routine."
Pretty vague, right? You'll get some generic burpee-fest that might be designed for a 25-year-old CrossFit enthusiast, not your actual life. Now, the after: "I have 20 minutes three times a week, I work at a desk, my knees aren't great, and I just want to not feel like a potato. What should I do?"
Boom. Suddenly the AI understands your actual world. It's like the difference between asking for directions versus telling someone you can't handle hills and need coffee shops along the way.
**[TRANSITION]**
Here's something most people don't realize: AI is *stupid good* at meal planning when you actually need it. Not the Instagram salad bowl stuff—I mean "I have these random ingredients, I'm tired, and I need to eat in 15 minutes." Tell ChatGPT your constraints, and it'll actually solve your problem instead of suggesting you make sourdough from scratch.
**[TRANSITION]**
Now, the biggest beginner mistake I see—and I've absolutely done this—is treating AI like a vending machine. You drop in a question and expect a perfect answer. But here's the thing: AI is more like a coworker who needs clear direction. You wouldn't ask your colleague "fix the project." You'd say "we need X, Y, and Z by Thursday because of A reason, and here's what we've tried."
I learned this the hard way when I asked Claude to "improve my writing." Got back something technically correct but completely soulless. Then I reframed it: "Make this punchy and sarcastic, like I'm talking to someone smarter than me but not pretending to be." Night and day difference.
**[TRANSITION]**
Let's practice something right now—try this exercise when you're done listening: Take something you actually need help with. Write your first prompt. Then rewrite it three times, adding one more constraint each time. Deadline. Audience. Format. Tone. Notice how the answers get *uselessly better*? That's iteration, and it's the actual secret sauce.
**[TRANSITION]**
Last thing: after the AI gives you something, don't just copy-paste it into your life. Read it. Ask yourself: Does this *actually* sound like me? Is it solving my real problem or the problem the AI *thought* I had? Edit it. Make it yours. The AI did 70 percent of the heavy lifting—you're just making sure it's not nonsense.
**[CLOSING MUSIC BEGINS - 0:10]**
Thanks for listening to "I Am GPTed." Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts so you never miss an episode. This has been a Quiet Please production. Learn more at quietplease dot ai.
Catch you next time.
**[MUSIC OUT]**
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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