Master the Act As Plus Constraints Prompting Technique to Get Better AI Results episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 5, 2026 · 5 MIN

Master the Act As Plus Constraints Prompting Technique to Get Better AI 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 – something that sounds like a robot trying to be cool and almost pulling it off.] Hey, it’s Mal, the Misfit Master of AI, and this is “I Am GPTed” – the show where we turn ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, and whatever else Silicon Valley spits out… into something actually useful for your real life. Let’s get you **one** practical AI skill today, not a PhD in buzzwords. --- First up: one prompting technique that instantly upgrades your results. I call it: **“Act As + Constraints.”** That’s it. No TED Talk, no framework with a trademark symbol. You do two things: 1. Tell the AI who to act as. 2. Tell it how you want the answer shaped. Here’s the “before” version most people use: > “Help me write a budget.” Congrats, you just asked for a textbook. Now the “after” version: > “Act as a friendly financial coach for a total beginner. > Help me create a simple monthly budget in 5 bullet points, using plain language, for someone who always forgets to track spending.” Same task, completely different output. Suddenly it sounds like help, not homework. Use this with ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok – they all behave better when you give them a role and limits. --- Now, a **practical use case** you probably haven’t tried: Using AI as your **calendar and priorities translator**. Not scheduling. Translating chaos. Example: > “Act as my personal prioritization coach. Here are my tasks for this week: [paste your mess]. > Group them into ‘Must Do’, ‘Should Do’, and ‘Could Do’, with one sentence why each is in that category. Keep it under 300 words.” Suddenly your nightmare to‑do list becomes a simple plan. Great for work, life, or that side project you’ve been “totally starting soon.” --- Let’s talk **beginner mistake** – my favorite topic, because I’ve made all of them. The big one: **one-and-done prompts.** You type something, get a mediocre answer, and think, “AI is overrated.” I used to do this constantly. I’d ask: > “Explain AI to me.” It would spit out a bland Wikipedia clone, and I’d just… close the tab and judge it silently. What I *should* have done is treat it like a conversation: > “Explain AI to me as if I’m smart but not technical. Use a real‑world analogy, keep it under 200 words.” Then: > “Great. Now give me a version I can explain to a 10‑year‑old in 3 sentences.” The mistake is thinking the first answer is the final answer. Don’t do that. I did. It was dumb. We’ve learned. We move on. --- Here’s a **simple exercise** to build your AI interaction skills. Sometime today, pick one small thing you need help with. Not your life purpose. Something tiny: - An email - A message - A short plan - A description - A quick explanation Then run this three‑step mini‑workout with *any* AI: 1. First prompt: “Act as a helpful assistant. Do X for me: [describe task]. Keep it under 150 words.” 2. Second prompt, after it answers: “Now improve this by making it clearer and more concise. Keep the main ideas, lose the fluff.” 3. Third prompt: “Now rewrite this for [your audience: my boss / my friend / a client / a teenager], and keep the tone [formal / casual / friendly].” That’s it. Three rounds. You’ll see how much better it gets when *you* steer. --- Finally, a **tip for evaluating and improving AI-generated content** so you don’t accidentally sound like a malfunctioning robot. Use what I call the **“Would I say this out loud?” test.** 1. Read the AI’s answer out loud. 2. If you cringe, it needs work. 3. Tell the AI exactly what’s wrong: - “This sounds too formal. Make it more conversational.” - “Shorten this by 50% and keep only the most important points.” - “Remove buzzwords and explain it like you would to a friend over coffee.” Treat every AI response as a **first draft**, not sacred scripture. You’re the editor. The model is the overeager intern. --- Alright, that’s it for today’s episode of “I Am GPTed” with Mal, your misfit guide to making AI actually do something useful. If this helped you even a little, **subscribe to the podcast** so you don’t miss future episodes. **Thanks for listening**, seriously – you could’ve spent this time scrolling, and you chose to upgrade your brain instead. This has been a **Quiet Please** production. To learn more, head over to **quietplease dot ai**. [Outro music fades out, pretending it’s cooler than it is.] For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ and for some great deals go to https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

[Intro music fades in – something that sounds like a robot trying to be cool and almost pulling it off.] Hey, it’s Mal, the Misfit Master of AI, and this is “I Am GPTed” – the show where we turn ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, and whatever else Silicon Valley spits out… into something actually useful for your real life. Let’s get you **one** practical AI skill today, not a PhD in buzzwords. --- First up: one prompting technique that instantly upgrades your results. I call it: **“Act As + Constraints.”** That’s it. No TED Talk, no framework with a trademark symbol. You do two things: 1. Tell the AI who to act as. 2. Tell it how you want the answer shaped. Here’s the “before” version most people use: > “Help me write a budget.” Congrats, you just asked for a textbook. Now the “after” version: > “Act as a friendly financial coach for a total beginner. > Help me create a simple monthly budget in 5 bullet points, using plain language, for someone who always forgets to track spending.” Same task, completely different output. Suddenly it sounds like help, not homework. Use this with ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok – they all behave better when you give them a role and limits. --- Now, a **practical use case** you probably haven’t tried: Using AI as your **calendar and priorities translator**. Not scheduling. Translating chaos. Example: > “Act as my personal prioritization coach. Here are my tasks for this week: [paste your mess]. > Group them into ‘Must Do’, ‘Should Do’, and ‘Could Do’, with one sentence why each is in that category. Keep it under 300 words.” Suddenly your nightmare to‑do list becomes a simple plan. Great for work, life, or that side project you’ve been “totally starting soon.” --- Let’s talk **beginner mistake** – my favorite topic, because I’ve made all of them. The big one: **one-and-done prompts.** You type something, get a mediocre answer, and think, “AI is overrated.” I used to do this constantly. I’d ask: > “Explain AI to me.” It would spit out a bland Wikipedia clone, and I’d just… close the tab and judge it silently. What I *should* have done is treat it like a conversation: > “Explain AI to me as if I’m smart but not technical. Use a real‑world analogy, keep it under 200 words.” Then: > “Great. Now give me a version I can explain to a 10‑year‑old in 3 sentences.” The mistake is thinking the first answer is the final answer. Don’t do that. I did. It was dumb. We’ve learned. We move on. --- Here’s a **simple exercise** to build your AI interaction skills. Sometime today, pick one small thing you need help with. Not your life purpose. Something tiny: - An email - A message - A short plan - A description - A quick explanation Then run this three‑step mini‑workout with *any* AI: 1. First prompt: “Act as a helpful assistant. Do X for me: [describe task]. Keep it under 150 words.” 2. Second prompt, after it answers: “Now improve this by making it clearer and more concise. Keep the main ideas, lose the fluff.” 3. Third prompt: “Now rewrite this for [your audience: my boss / my friend / a client / a teenager], and keep the tone [formal / casual / friendly].” That’s it. Three rounds. You’ll see how much better it gets when *you* steer. --- Finally, a **tip for evaluating and improving AI-generated content** so you don’t accidentally sound like a malfunctioning robot. Use what I call the **“Would I say this out loud?” test.** 1. Read the AI’s answer out loud. 2. If you cringe, it needs work. 3. Tell the AI exactly what’s wrong: - “This sounds too formal. Make it more conversational.” - “Shorten this by 50% and keep only the most important points.” - “Remove buzzwords and explain it like you would to a friend over coffee.” Treat every AI response as a **first draft**, not sacred scripture. You’re the editor. The model is the overeager intern. --- Alright, that’s it for today’s episode of “I Am GPTed” with Mal, your misfit guide to making AI actually do something useful. If this helped you even a little, **subscribe to the podcast** so you don’t miss future episodes. **Thanks for listening**, seriously – you could’ve spent this time scrolling, and you chose to upgrade your brain instead. This has been a **Quiet Please** production. To learn more, head over to **quietplease dot ai**. [Outro music fades out, pretending it’s cooler than it is.] For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ and for some great deals go to https://amzn.to/4nidg0P

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Master the Act As Plus Constraints Prompting Technique to Get Better AI Results

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[Intro music fades in – something that sounds like a robot trying to be cool and almost pulling it off.] Hey, it’s Mal, the Misfit Master of AI, and this is “I Am GPTed” – the show where we turn ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, and whatever else...

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