Master ChatGPT and Claude With Chain of Thought Prompting Techniques for Beginners Podcast Por  arte de portada

Master ChatGPT and Claude With Chain of Thought Prompting Techniques for Beginners

Master ChatGPT and Claude With Chain of Thought Prompting Techniques for Beginners

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**I Am GPTed**
*Theme music fades in – upbeat, quirky synth with a glitchy AI vibe. Fades under.*

Mal: Hey misfits, welcome to *I Am GPTed*, where I, Mal – your self-appointed Misfit Master of AI – dish out practical tips for wrangling ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, and whatever LLM the tech bros dream up next. No PhD required, just real talk for beginners like us who trip over our own prompts. Today, we're leveling up your AI game without the hype. Stick around – you'll walk away prompting like a pro, or at least not like that guy yelling at his toaster. Let's dive in.

First up: one killer prompting technique called **Chain of Thought**. It's like making the AI rubber-duck debug its own brain – tell it to think step by step, and watch the magic. Here's my pathetic before-and-after.

*Before – my lazy prompt:* "How do I plan a budget road trip?" AI spits out a generic list: gas, hotels, snacks. Snooze.

*After:* "Plan a budget road trip from New York to Miami. Walk me through your thought process step by step: start with total distance and costs, factor in gas prices, cheap eats, free campsites, then build a day-by-day itinerary under $500." Boom – AI breaks it down: 1,200 miles, $150 gas at $3.50/gallon, Walmart parking lots for free sleeps. Suddenly, it's a tailored plan, not a brochure. Try it – it's free therapy for dumb AI responses.

Next, a practical use case you novices overlook: **job hunting cover letters that don't suck**. Don't just beg ChatGPT for one. Feed it your resume bullets and the job description, then say: "Rewrite this as a cover letter that sounds like a human who accidentally succeeded." I used this for my last gig hunt – turned "proficient in Excel" into "I once built a spreadsheet that predicted my coffee addiction savings." Landed interviews. Who knew AI could make desperation marketable?

Common beginner mistake? Treating AI like a mind reader. You toss in "Make me a blog post," get garbage, and rage-quit. I did this for months – thought I was the prompt whisperer, ended up with AI fanfic about cats in space. Avoid it by always adding specifics: who, what, tone, length. Like, "Write a 500-word blog for busy parents on quick dinners, upbeat tone, three recipes max." Boom, usable. Admit your flaws upfront, and AI won't judge... much.

Quick exercise to build skills: Grab your phone, open Claude or Grok. Prompt: "I'm a total noob. Teach me to bake cookies by asking me three questions first, then give a step-by-step recipe based on my answers." Answer honestly – no oven? Microwave hacks. Do this daily for a week. You'll go from AI tourist to local.

Last tip: Evaluating AI output? Read it aloud. If it sounds like a robot wrote a thesaurus, it's trash. Fix by prompting: "Rewrite this to sound like a chatty uncle at a barbecue." Cuts the fluff, amps the real.

That's your misfit toolkit – go prompt wild. If this helped, subscribe to *I Am GPTed* wherever you pod. Thanks for listening! This has been a Quiet Please production – head to quietplease.ai for more. Catch you next time, or don't – I'm not your mom.

*Outro music swells – fade to glitchy end.*

*(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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