🏴‍☠️ Master AI Prompts for Better Answers

Your Prompts Need Context

Most users blame the tool when the output is mediocre, but the real issue usually lies between the keyboard and the chair.

It is easy to get frustrated when ChatGPT gives you a generic response, but we often forget to give it the necessary guidance to succeed. I just saw this incredible post from an AI professional that breaks down exactly why this happens and how to fix it by mastering the levels of prompting. The expert mapped out a clear progression from beginner to advanced prompting that instantly clarifies why your results might feel lackluster.

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The Mechanics of Better Outputs
The core philosophy shared by this innovator is that an AI model works like a very literal intern. If you give vague instructions, you get vague work. The transition from “Beginner” to “Advanced” isn’t about learning complex syntax or coding; it is about stacking specific layers of information: Task, Context, and Format, to guide the model’s reasoning. By systematically adding these layers, you reduce the AI’s need to guess your intent, which drastically reduces hallucinations and generic fluff.

Level 1: The Beginner Trap
The “Beginner” level is where most people start and unfortunately stay. The author defines this simply as the “Task” layer. You tell the AI what to do without any extra details. For example, asking for “10 video ideas on productivity.” While this gets an answer, the creator notes it will be the most generic version possible because the AI has no constraints. It is useful for quick questions, but terrible for nuanced work. The template is basic: Do the following task: [insert the exact task clearly here].

Level 2: Adding Context
The “Skilled” level introduces the critical layer of “Context.” This savvy professional explains that adding background details significantly improves output quality. Instead of just asking for ideas, you specify the audience, boundaries, or exclusions. In the example provided, the prompt shifts to listing ideas for “college students with short attention spans.” This forces the AI to filter its vast knowledge base and tailor the tone to be faster and punchier. The template evolves to include specific boundaries: Do the following task: [insert task]. Use this context while completing it: [insert background, boundaries, audience, exclusions].

Level 3: Controlling the Output
The “Advanced” level completes the trifecta by adding “Output Format.” The post’s author highlights this as the step that turns raw text into usable data. You aren’t just asking for the content; you are dictating the structure, whether that is a table, a code block, or a bulleted list. This saves you significant manual formatting time later. By controlling the presentation, you ensure the AI delivers the information exactly how you need to use it.

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Prompt of the Day
Here is the exact Level 3 example prompt provided by the expert that combines task, context, and format:

Do the following task: list 10 productivity video ideas. Use this context: beginners with busy schedules. Present them in a table with idea name and one line description.

Nuance and Challenges

While these three levels are powerful, the original poster hints at even deeper levels of mastery in their full visual guide. It is also worth noting that as you move to Level 3, your prompts become longer and require more thought upfront. The trade-off is that you spend more time writing the prompt to spend less time editing the result. I think this investment is absolutely worth it for complex tasks!

Credits to Adam Biddlecombe