Master Chain of Thought Prompting to Get Better Results From ChatGPT and Claude
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*[Upbeat, quirky intro music fades in – think chiptune meets elevator jazz. Music swells for 10 seconds, then drops to a subtle loop.]*
Hey there, misfits and AI newbies, welcome to **I Am GPTed**, where I, Mal – the Misfit Master of AI, or just Mal for short – dish out practical tips for wrangling ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, and whatever LLM the tech bros dream up next. No fluff, no hype, just stuff that actually works for regular humans like us. I'm allergic to jargon, so if I say "prompt," I mean "tell the robot what to do." Today, in about 10 minutes, you'll learn one killer prompting trick, a sneaky everyday use case, a rookie trap I fell into – hard – and quick ways to level up your AI game. Let's dive in before I bore myself.
First up: the **Chain of Thought** prompting technique. It's like giving your AI a step-by-step GPS instead of yelling "Go there!" from the passenger seat. Tech hype says it's magic; nah, it's just making the AI think out loud, which cuts garbage outputs by forcing logic.
**Before example:** I once typed, "How do I plan a budget?" Got a wall of vague advice, like a drunk uncle at Thanksgiving.
**After:** "Plan a monthly budget for a single freelancer earning $4,000. Step 1: List income sources. Step 2: Categorize expenses like rent, food, fun. Step 3: Suggest cuts and savings goals." Boom – precise numbers, no fluff. Try it on Claude or Grok; it's gold for work reports or meal preps.
Next, a practical use case you haven't considered: **AI as your personal debate coach** for everyday arguments. Fighting with your spouse over vacation spots? Prompt: "Act as a neutral mediator. My side: Beach is relaxing. Their side: Mountains for adventure. Pros, cons, compromise." Suddenly, you're not escalating; you're winning with facts. I use this for client emails – turns "This idea sucks" into "Here's why it could work better." Novices miss this because they think AI's just for essays.
Common beginner mistake? Treating AI like a mind-reader. You dump a vague ask like "Help with my resume," and it spits mediocrity. I did this for weeks – my resume looked like a robot wrote it, because one did, poorly. Avoid it by **starting specific and iterating**. Follow up: "Make it punchier for tech sales. Add metrics from my last job." Boom, tailored gold. Give feedback like a boss: "Too formal – loosen it up."
Quick exercise to build skills: Grab Gemini or ChatGPT. Prompt: "Think step-by-step: Invent a 5-ingredient dinner using chicken, rice, whatever's in my fridge. Explain why each step works." Tweak it twice based on the output. Do this daily – 5 minutes – and you'll prompt like a pro by week's end. Everyday analogy: It's gym reps for your AI brain.
Last tip: Evaluating AI content? **Self-critique it.** Paste the output back: "Critique this [paste response]. Poke holes, suggest fixes." Watch it roast itself – hilarious and sharpens weak spots. Way better than blind trust.
That's your toolkit, misfits. Go prompt without pity.
If this sparked your inner AI wizard, **subscribe to I Am GPTed** wherever you pod. Thanks for listening!
This has been a Quiet Please production. Head to quietplease.ai to learn more and grab free resources. Catch you next time – stay misfitty!
*[Outro music swells – same quirky tune, fades out over 15 seconds. End script.]*
*(Word count: 498)*
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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