EPISODE · Oct 3, 2025 · 3 MIN
AI Prompting Secrets: Transform Bland Responses into Powerful Results
from I am GPTed - what you need to know about Chat GPT, Bard, Llama, and Artificial Intelligence · host Inception Point AI
Hello, fellow digital oddballs. You’re listening to “I am GPTed”—practical AI advice for the incurably curious, hosted by me, Mal: Misfit Master of AI, dispenser of hard truths and handy tips. If ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Grok have ever left you feeling like you’re talking to a robot—good news: You are. But you can *train* your artificial minions to be smarter. Or at least as smart as your cousin who still uses “password123.” Let’s kick things off with one quick prompting technique that’ll instantly level up your AI chats. Role prompting. I know—sounds like something you’d find in a bad improv class. But bear with me. Most people type “Summarize this article.” The result? AI barfs up a bland Wikipedia entry and dares you to care. Instead: assign the AI a **role**. Try this—before: “Summarize this article on marketing trends.” Now, after: “You are a veteran marketer with a genius for making boring trends fascinating to busy execs. Summarize this article for a CEO who hates jargon.” Magically, the AI puts on its nice suit, drinks a virtual espresso, and your summary stops putting people to sleep. You go from “Clippy,” to “Consultant who actually gets paid.” Now, a practical use case that most newbies overlook: **smarter grocery shopping.** Yes, you heard me. Feed ChatGPT or Claude your random fridge inventory—“Lettuce, yogurt, one sad lemon, leftover steak.” Prompt: “Give me three dinner recipes using only these, 30 minutes max, and low on dishes because my dishwasher is me.” These bots will spit out creative, surprisingly edible meals. No more panic-buying twelve avocados that will decay as fast as your tech stack. Cue Mal’s confession corner: The classic rookie mistake? Asking broad questions and expecting magic. I used to say, “Write me a report on productivity.” The AI would respond with something that sounded like it came from a motivational poster. Then I realized: specific is terrific. Now, I’m painfully clear—“Write me a one-page report for a skeptical manager on how time-blocking increases productivity, using recent 2023 data—make it punchy.” The lesson: Vague in, vague out. Everyone does this. I did. You will. It’s fine—just fix it. Let’s do a quick exercise to build those prompt muscles. Pick one boring daily task: drafting an awkward email, figuring out what to cook, prepping meeting notes. Phrase your request like you’re hiring a pro—“Act as a senior HR manager. Draft a friendly, concise email reminding the team to submit timesheets by Friday, because I’m tired of being the bad guy.” Send that to your AI of choice. Rinse. Repeat. Admire the results and your newfound free time. Bonus tip before I vanish into the cloud: **Always check the AI’s output.** Don’t assume the machine is right. If the answer feels weird, ask follow-ups: “What sources did you use?” or “Rewrite this to be less awkward, more concise, and without calling my boss ‘Chief Overlord’.” A little feedback turns robot rambling into impressive clarity. And that’s i This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
What this episode covers
Hello, fellow digital oddballs. You’re listening to “I am GPTed”—practical AI advice for the incurably curious, hosted by me, Mal: Misfit Master of AI, dispenser of hard truths and handy tips. If ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Grok have ever left you feeling like you’re talking to a robot—good news: You are. But you can *train* your artificial minions to be smarter. Or at least as smart as your cousin who still uses “password123.” Let’s kick things off with one quick prompting technique that’ll instantly level up your AI chats. Role prompting. I know—sounds like something you’d find in a bad improv class. But bear with me. Most people type “Summarize this article.” The result? AI barfs up a bland Wikipedia entry and dares you to care. Instead: assign the AI a **role**. Try this—before: “Summarize this article on marketing trends.” Now, after: “You are a veteran marketer with a genius for making boring trends fascinating to busy execs. Summarize this article for a CEO who hates jargon.” Magically, the AI puts on its nice suit, drinks a virtual espresso, and your summary stops putting people to sleep. You go from “Clippy,” to “Consultant who actually gets paid.” Now, a practical use case that most newbies overlook: **smarter grocery shopping.** Yes, you heard me. Feed ChatGPT or Claude your random fridge inventory—“Lettuce, yogurt, one sad lemon, leftover steak.” Prompt: “Give me three dinner recipes using only these, 30 minutes max, and low on dishes because my dishwasher is me.” These bots will spit out creative, surprisingly edible meals. No more panic-buying twelve avocados that will decay as fast as your tech stack. Cue Mal’s confession corner: The classic rookie mistake? Asking broad questions and expecting magic. I used to say, “Write me a report on productivity.” The AI would respond with something that sounded like it came from a motivational poster. Then I realized: specific is terrific. Now, I’m painfully clear—“Write me a one-page report for a skeptical manager on how time-blocking increases productivity, using recent 2023 data—make it punchy.” The lesson: Vague in, vague out. Everyone does this. I did. You will. It’s fine—just fix it. Let’s do a quick exercise to build those prompt muscles. Pick one boring daily task: drafting an awkward email, figuring out what to cook, prepping meeting notes. Phrase your request like you’re hiring a pro—“Act as a senior HR manager. Draft a friendly, concise email reminding the team to submit timesheets by Friday, because I’m tired of being the bad guy.” Send that to your AI of choice. Rinse. Repeat. Admire the results and your newfound free time. Bonus tip before I vanish into the cloud: **Always check the AI’s output.** Don’t assume the machine is right. If the answer feels weird, ask follow-ups: “What sources did you use?” or “Rewrite this to be less awkward, more concise, and without calling my boss ‘Chief Overlord’.” A little feedback turns robot rambling into impressive clarity. And that’s i This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
NOW PLAYING
AI Prompting Secrets: Transform Bland Responses into Powerful Results
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Mar 26, 2026 ·1m
Mar 19, 2026 ·34m
Feb 18, 2026 ·11m
Feb 11, 2026 ·45m