EPISODE · Feb 28, 2026 · 3 MIN
Master AI Prompting: Essential Techniques for Beginners to Get Better Results
from I am GPTed - what you need to know about Chat GPT, Bard, Llama, and Artificial Intelligence · host Inception Point AI
**Intro Music Fades In** Hey there, misfits and AI newbies, welcome to *I Am GPTed*, where I, Mal – the Misfit Master of AI, or just Mal if you're feeling lazy – dish out practical AI tips without the tech-bro hype. I'm allergic to jargon, promise. Today, in about 15 minutes, you'll snag one killer prompting trick, a sneaky everyday use case, a beginner trap I fell into (hard), a quick practice drill, and a way to spot crap AI output. Let's dive in before I bore myself. First up: the **role prompting** technique. It's like dressing your AI up for the job – tell it who to be, and it acts the part, ditching vague answers for laser-focused ones. K2view calls it assigning a "role, profession, or perspective" to shape responses, and it crushes for relevance. **Before example:** I once typed, "Explain quantum computing." Got back a wall of Wikipedia-wannabe sludge – theory overload, zero use. **After:** "You are a no-nonsense engineer who's built quantum gadgets. Explain quantum computing like I'm a curious mechanic fixing cars." Boom – "Think of qubits like supercharged spark plugs that can be on, off, or both at once, letting engines compute a million routes simultaneously without exploding." Practical gold, no PhD required. Try it on ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Grok – transforms mush into magic. Next, a practical use case you novices skip: **meal planning for picky eaters on a budget**. Not "write code," but real life. Prompt: "You're a thrifty home cook with kids who hate veggies. Plan 5 dinners under $50 total using what's in my fridge: chicken, rice, carrots, eggs." It spits grocery tweaks, recipes, and kid hacks – saved my wallet last week when my own cooking nearly started a family revolt. Everyday win, zero hype. Common beginner mistake? Treating AI like a mind-reader. I did this for months – vague prompts like "Help with email," got junk. Avoid by being bossy with specifics: who, what, why, format. Admit it, I wasted hours yelling at my screen like it owed me money. Spell it out, or stay stuck. Quick exercise to level up: Grab your phone, open any AI. Prompt: "Act as my workout buddy. Design a 20-minute home session for a lazy beginner with bad knees – list steps, no gym gear." Tweak it twice with role changes (drill sergeant vs. chill coach). Compare outputs. Builds your prompting muscle in 10 minutes flat. Last tip: Evaluating AI slop? **Check the 'why' chain.** Does it explain reasoning step-by-step, or just spit facts? Prompt for "chain-of-thought" like "Think aloud before answering." If it's fluffy or hallucinates (makes up sources), regenerate with "Fix errors and cite real logic." Like fact-checking a tipsy uncle – keeps output honest. That's your misfit toolkit – go prompt like a pro. Subscribe now so you don't miss next week's roast of AI image generators. Thanks for listening, you legends. This has been a Quiet Please production. Learn more at quietplease.ai. **Outro Music Fades In** *(Word count: 498)* For more check This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
What this episode covers
**Intro Music Fades In** Hey there, misfits and AI newbies, welcome to *I Am GPTed*, where I, Mal – the Misfit Master of AI, or just Mal if you're feeling lazy – dish out practical AI tips without the tech-bro hype. I'm allergic to jargon, promise. Today, in about 15 minutes, you'll snag one killer prompting trick, a sneaky everyday use case, a beginner trap I fell into (hard), a quick practice drill, and a way to spot crap AI output. Let's dive in before I bore myself. First up: the **role prompting** technique. It's like dressing your AI up for the job – tell it who to be, and it acts the part, ditching vague answers for laser-focused ones. K2view calls it assigning a "role, profession, or perspective" to shape responses, and it crushes for relevance. **Before example:** I once typed, "Explain quantum computing." Got back a wall of Wikipedia-wannabe sludge – theory overload, zero use. **After:** "You are a no-nonsense engineer who's built quantum gadgets. Explain quantum computing like I'm a curious mechanic fixing cars." Boom – "Think of qubits like supercharged spark plugs that can be on, off, or both at once, letting engines compute a million routes simultaneously without exploding." Practical gold, no PhD required. Try it on ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Grok – transforms mush into magic. Next, a practical use case you novices skip: **meal planning for picky eaters on a budget**. Not "write code," but real life. Prompt: "You're a thrifty home cook with kids who hate veggies. Plan 5 dinners under $50 total using what's in my fridge: chicken, rice, carrots, eggs." It spits grocery tweaks, recipes, and kid hacks – saved my wallet last week when my own cooking nearly started a family revolt. Everyday win, zero hype. Common beginner mistake? Treating AI like a mind-reader. I did this for months – vague prompts like "Help with email," got junk. Avoid by being bossy with specifics: who, what, why, format. Admit it, I wasted hours yelling at my screen like it owed me money. Spell it out, or stay stuck. Quick exercise to level up: Grab your phone, open any AI. Prompt: "Act as my workout buddy. Design a 20-minute home session for a lazy beginner with bad knees – list steps, no gym gear." Tweak it twice with role changes (drill sergeant vs. chill coach). Compare outputs. Builds your prompting muscle in 10 minutes flat. Last tip: Evaluating AI slop? **Check the 'why' chain.** Does it explain reasoning step-by-step, or just spit facts? Prompt for "chain-of-thought" like "Think aloud before answering." If it's fluffy or hallucinates (makes up sources), regenerate with "Fix errors and cite real logic." Like fact-checking a tipsy uncle – keeps output honest. That's your misfit toolkit – go prompt like a pro. Subscribe now so you don't miss next week's roast of AI image generators. Thanks for listening, you legends. This has been a Quiet Please production. Learn more at quietplease.ai. **Outro Music Fades In** *(Word count: 498)* For more check This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Master AI Prompting: Essential Techniques for Beginners to Get Better Results
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