ChatGPT AI: Essential Prompt Engineering Techniques | Hugo Garza | Skillshare
Search

Playback Speed


1.0x


  • 0.5x
  • 0.75x
  • 1x (Normal)
  • 1.25x
  • 1.5x
  • 1.75x
  • 2x

ChatGPT AI: Essential Prompt Engineering Techniques

teacher avatar Hugo Garza, Content Creator

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      introduction to section - What is prompt engineering

      2:00

    • 2.

      Prompt Priming and Shot Priming

      6:50

    • 3.

      Iterative prompting

      3:19

    • 4.

      Chain of thought Prompting

      2:36

    • 5.

      Tabular format

      4:41

    • 6.

      Ask before answer

      2:48

    • 7.

      Fill in the blank prompting

      2:05

    • 8.

      Perspective prompting

      2:32

    • 9.

      Constructive Critic Framework

      1:44

    • 10.

      Comparative prompting

      1:10

    • 11.

      RGC Prompting

      2:16

    • 12.

      Act as….

      2:36

    • 13.

      4th Grader technique

      2:14

    • 14.

      Sentiment Analysis

      1:40

    • 15.

      Knowledge Extraction

      2:04

    • 16.

      Brainwriting

      2:32

    • 17.

      Reverse brainstorming

      3:14

    • 18.

      Mind mapping

      2:05

    • 19.

      Assumptions

      2:13

    • 20.

      Swot analysis

      1:49

    • 21.

      Scamper

      2:05

    • 22.

      Six thinking hats

      3:01

    • 23.

      Worst possible idea

      2:31

    • 24.

      Triggerwords

      1:58

    • 25.

      Questioning

      1:56

    • 26.

      Scenarios

      2:34

    • 27.

      Analogy thinking

      1:48

    • 28.

      Idea spurring

      2:35

    • 29.

      Concept Fan

      2:32

    • 30.

      Headline writing

      2:00

    • 31.

      Brainstorming journey

      2:29

    • 32.

      Outside perspectives

      2:19

    • 33.

      Prompt Creator Prompt

      5:02

    • 34.

      Emoji Converter

      1:34

    • 35.

      Prompt Perfect Prompt Generator

      5:37

    • 36.

      FusionAI Prompt Generator

      2:50

    • 37.

      WebUtility Prompt Generator

      2:50

  • --
  • Beginner level
  • Intermediate level
  • Advanced level
  • All levels

Community Generated

The level is determined by a majority opinion of students who have reviewed this class. The teacher's recommendation is shown until at least 5 student responses are collected.

47

Students

1

Project

About This Class

Unlock the full potential of AI interactions with our comprehensive course, "ChatGPT AI: Essential Prompt Engineering Techniques." Designed for both beginners and experienced users, this course provides in-depth knowledge and practical skills to master prompt engineering with ChatGPT. Learn to craft precise, effective prompts and elevate your AI communication to a professional level.

What You Will Learn:

Introduction to Prompt Engineering:

  • Understand the fundamentals of prompt engineering and its significance in AI interactions.

Core Techniques:

  • Prompt Priming and Shot Priming: Learn the art of setting context and priming your AI for optimal responses.
  • Iterative Prompting: Master the technique of refining prompts through iterations for improved outcomes.
  • Chain of Thought Prompting: Discover how to guide AI through complex problem-solving processes.
  • Tabular Format: Utilize structured data formats for clear and concise AI interactions.
  • Ask Before Answer: Enhance AI responses by structuring prompts to elicit clarifying questions.
  • Fill in the Blank Prompting: Engage AI in completing sentences or statements for more interactive dialogues.
  • Perspective Prompting: Learn to prompt AI from different viewpoints for diverse responses.
  • Constructive Critic Framework: Implement a framework for AI to provide constructive feedback.
  • Comparative Prompting: Develop skills to create prompts that compare and contrast information.
  • RGC Prompting: Explore Response Generation Control (RGC) techniques to fine-tune AI outputs.
  • "Act As..." Technique: Direct AI to assume specific roles for tailored responses.
  • 4th Grader Technique: Simplify complex information by prompting AI to explain it as if to a 4th grader.
  • Sentiment Analysis: Integrate sentiment analysis into your prompts for emotionally aware responses.
  • Knowledge Extraction: Extract valuable information from AI using precise prompts.

Creative and Analytical Thinking Techniques:

  • Brainwriting: Foster idea generation through collaborative writing exercises.
  • Reverse Brainstorming: Challenge assumptions by considering the opposite of traditional ideas.
  • Mind Mapping: Organize and visualize ideas through structured diagrams.
  • Assumptions: Identify and challenge underlying assumptions in problem-solving.
  • SWOT Analysis: Conduct Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats analysis using AI.
  • SCAMPER: Apply the SCAMPER technique to modify and improve ideas.
  • Six Thinking Hats: Utilize different thinking styles to approach problems from various angles.
  • Worst Possible Idea: Encourage creativity by exploring the worst possible solutions.
  • Trigger Words: Use specific words or phrases to stimulate creative thinking.
  • Questioning: Enhance critical thinking with effective questioning techniques.
  • Scenarios: Develop hypothetical scenarios to explore potential outcomes.
  • Analogy Thinking: Draw parallels between unrelated concepts to spark innovation.
  • Idea Spurring: Generate new ideas through prompts designed to spur creativity.
  • Concept Fan: Expand ideas by exploring related concepts and their connections.
  • Headline Writing: Craft compelling headlines to summarize ideas succinctly.
  • Brainstorming Journey: Track the evolution of ideas through structured brainstorming sessions.
  • Outside Perspectives: Gain fresh insights by incorporating external viewpoints.


Meet Your Teacher

Teacher Profile Image

Hugo Garza

Content Creator

Teacher

Hugo has over 10 years of self-taught language learning experience. He is passionate about language learning and it's considered his biggest hobby. Besides Spanish and English, he is also fluent in French, German, and Italian. He obtained his Masters's degree in Political Science at Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China. He shares his methods for learning a foreign language as well as his experience in various topics.

See full profile

Level: All Levels

Class Ratings

Expectations Met?
    Exceeded!
  • 0%
  • Yes
  • 0%
  • Somewhat
  • 0%
  • Not really
  • 0%

Why Join Skillshare?

Take award-winning Skillshare Original Classes

Each class has short lessons, hands-on projects

Your membership supports Skillshare teachers

Learn From Anywhere

Take classes on the go with the Skillshare app. Stream or download to watch on the plane, the subway, or wherever you learn best.

Transcripts

1. introduction to section - What is prompt engineering: Prompt engineering is the process of writing and refining your prompts to get better results from GPT. This is important because the way you write your prompts can give you different results. Prompt engineering is like the art of asking the best questions in order to get the best results. Let me give you two different examples of ways that you can write your prompts. On the first one, I'm going to write, write a review out a pair of wireless earbuds. We send it and we get this like generic message from GPT. It analyzes the sound quality, the comfort and fit, the battery life, and the connectivity and controls. This is basically a very small prompt, a very simple prompt. Now let's try a more advanced prompt. I'm going to write craft a comprehensive review for a pair of wireless earbuts, focusing on their noise cancellation features, comfort during prolonged use, and audio quality across various generals evaluate their battery longevity, connectivity range, and the convenience of touch controls for playback and calls. This prompt is much more detailed, and if we send it, we're going to get different results. It has an introduction, the noise cancellation features, the comfort, the audio quality, the battery longevity. It's basically looking at everything that we ask for and it's going to give us a very different result. This is what prompt engineering is about. The results that you will get from CGP t depend on the way that you formulate your prompts and the type of language that you use. In the next lessons, we will talk about many different frameworks that you can use to get different results from GPT. 2. Prompt Priming and Shot Priming: Now we're going to talk about shot priming, which is basically a fancy way of saying that we're going to add more information to our prompt in order to get better results from Cha GPT. As we know, the better our priming is, the better that the results are going to be. If you use poor priming, you might get irrelevant answers. For this, we have a technique called shot priming. We can either do zero shots, one shot, or few shots. The first example uses zero shot priming. I'm going to ask, write a paragraph about the history and evolution of tennis. We send it and we get a short paragraph about it. The next example is going to use one shot priming. I'm going to ask, write a paragraph about the history and evolution of tennis, just like the previous one, but I'm going to add focusing on how changes in equipment have influenced the game. You can see that here we added one more shot. We wanted to focus on the changes in equipment and how that influences the game. This one is a little bit different. It uses one shot priming. Here we go, we now get a different paragraph from the first one. This one focuses more on the changes in equipment. The last example is going to use few shot priming. I'm going to ask, incorporate the following points into a paragraph about the history and evolution of tennis. The origins of the game in France in the 19th century. Then we have the transition from long tennis to modern hardcore surfaces in the 20th century. Then we have and the significance of players like road labor in popularizing the sport. You can see here we have the same topic, and we have different type of shots that we want to ask. We have the origins in france, the transition from type of court surfaces, and the significance of players. This one uses the few shot priming method. If we send it, we get a very different result. This is what I'm talking about. The first one uses no shots. The second one uses one simple shot, and the third one is much more detailed. Of course, Chagpt is going to give you different answers according to how you formulate your prompts. Let's try another example with zero shot priming. I'm going to ask, discuss the cultural achievements of the Roman Empire. And I send it, and we get this from Chagpt. We have the architecture, the literature, art, philosophy, engineering, language. Here we have one specific result from C GPT. Now let's try another example using one shot priming. I'm going to ask, build upon your knowledge of ancient civilizations. Elaborate on the artistic architectural and intellectual accomplishments that emerged during the reign of the Roman Empire, showcasting its lasting influence on Western culture. This one is way more detailed than the first one. Of course, the results from Cha GPT are going to be different. Here we have the architecture just like we asked, the art, and the intellectual accomplishments. Now let's try a different example using few shot priming. I'm going to ask, drawing from your understanding of the Roman Empire, as well as other contemporaneous civilizations like the Han Dynasty and the Guta Empire. Analyze the shared and distinct cultural achievements across these empires. Emphasizing how their contributions shape the societies of their time. This one is very, very complex, and CPT is going to give us a solution for this. We send it, and here we get the results. We have the shared cultural advancements of the writing systems, literature, mathematics, infrastructure. Then we also have the differences. All of these prompts give us different results from Cha GPT. If we use a very simple prompt, basically just like a one sentence prompt, We might get some information, but it might not be very, very specific. The more details that we put into our prompts, the more specific that CGP is going to be. If we don't put many details, GP is going to be very general. If we add a lot of details, GP is going to be more accurate. If you want to know how to make better prompts, more detailed prompts, you can also just ask GPT. I'm going to ask, write three GPT prompt examples about the following topic. The topic is going to be write an essay about whales. We send it Here we get three different examples, three different prompts that we can ask GPT. Ca GPT can also give you its own prompts that you can ask GPT back and get more information from it. But if you want to know and see the differences between zero shot, one shot, and f shot priming, we can ask CGPT the same question. Write three GPT prompts about an essay about whales. But the first one we're going to add is write one example without prompt priming. Then a similar example, applying one shot priming. Then another similar example, applying few shot priming. The three examples have to be related to the same topic, and we send it, and there we go. We can see that three differences right here. Ca GPT gives us prompt using no prompt priming. It gives us another prompt using one shot priming, and then it gives us a third prompt using few shot priming. If you, for example, have an idea, I want to make an essay about whales, but you want to improve your prompts, you can just ask CGPT to give you better prompts and CGPT will do it. This one is the first example using zero shot priming, one shot priming, and few shot priming, and feel free to play around with it. 3. Iterative prompting: Now we have iterative prompting, which means that we can ask GPT more questions, or we can edit the original question. Let's try the first example where we keep on asking GPT questions. We can ask GPT. Can you provide me with information about the solar system? It's a broad topic. Here we get information about the solar system, and if we want to get more accurate, more precise responses, we can keep on digging further. I'm going to ask GPT. Can you elaborate on the planets in our solar system? GPT is going to give you its initial response as context and give you more results. And here we go. We now have more information related to the planets. And we can keep on going deeper. We can ask, could you give more details about Earth? We send it and is going to use the previous information as part of the context and is going to give you near responses. From here, we can just keep on asking Cha DPT more questions. We can ask, tell me about the Earth's moons and its significance. And we will keep on getting more information from GPT. This one is very simple. You just keep on asking and asking more questions according to what you get from the results. Now I'm going to try a different one and this one is one of my favorites. My original question is going to be. Tell me about CATs. And GPT is going to give you some information about cats. But what we can do is that we can click on this symbol right here, and we can change cats, for example, to dogs, and we save and submit it, and here we have two answers. Here we have the second answer. Now we're talking about dogs. But if we click here and we go back, We have the original question about cats. Then we have the second question about dogs with information related to dogs. We can change this one more time and we can say maybe Tigers. Tell me about tigers, and now he's going to talk about tigers. You can use this as different categories. For example, you have the cats category, and you can keep on asking Cha GPT about information about cats. Then we have the dogs category, and then we have the Tigers category. From here, we can just keep on going on and on. For example, I can say, tell me about lions. Then we save and submit it, and now we have a fourth category, basically a fourth question related to lions. We have lions, tigers, dogs, and cats. In some scenarios, this can be very helpful because you don't have to keep on opening new GPT discussions. All the time, we can keep on modifying the question and have everything basically on the same page. So I like to think about this as having some folders inside folders. This method can help you organize your information better. 4. Chain of thought Prompting: Now we're going to talk about chain of thought prompting, which is basically getting step by step instructions on how to do something. The prompt we're going to use is this one. Let's think step by step. You can also say, let's go step by step, but I'm going to try this one. Let's think step by step. I'm going to ask 12 times 17, Let's think step by step, and we send it. Here we go. We get a step by step instructions on how to do this long multiplication. We can also ask GPT, write down these steps, and we send it and here we get a more detailed information. Write down the numbers with one above the other. Multiply the one digit, then write down the results. Here CPT is giving you more detailed instructions on how to multiply 12 by 17 and is basically giving us eight different steps with very detailed instructions. Let's try a different one. I'm going to ask CPT, write an essay about the whale. Let's think step by step, and we send it. Here we go. Here we get some information about how to write an essay about whales. For example, we can choose a specific topic. We can do the research, create the outline, write the introduction, write the body paragraphs. Use citations, conclusion, proof read it, finalize it, submit it. Now it's giving us instructions on how to do an essay about whales. We can also ask, develop the body paragraphs. Let's think step by step, and we send it. Here we go. We have the first body paragraph about the physical characteristics of a W. The topic sentence, the supporting points, the second paragraph, the third paragraph. From here, we can just keep on asking and asking more questions. This one is the famous step by step prompt, where you can get more information on how to do something. If you don't know how to do something and you want to figure it out, you can ask GPT to do it and show you the process, the thinking process on how to do it. 5. Tabular format: A GPT can also make different types of tables like data tables, financial tables, comparison tables. The first table we're going to learn is how to make a data table. And for this, I'm going to add one prompt. Here I have, create a data table showing the average monthly temperatures in degree Celsius for three different cities, C A, B and C. Include the following temperature values for each city and month. Then I'm going to add the information. Here I have CDA, and then some of the weather, B and C C. Now we send it to Ch GPT. And GPT will start creating a data table for us. Another way that you can create a data table is to just ask GPT for the information itself. On this first one, I gave GPT my own data, but GPT can also give you its own data. I'm going to ask GPT. Create a data table showing the most expensive cities in the world. Here we go, CGP starts creating a table using its own information. Here we have Singapore, Switzerland, Paris, in France, Hong Kong, Geneva. So you can either give ChagPT your own data or you can get data from CAGPT. The next table is going to be a comparison table. Here I have, create a comparison table comparing Sydney, Australia, and Oakland, New Zealand in terms of expenses. Include the price of things in US dollars. I send it and here we go. It starts to create a data table showing the cost of accommodation in Australia and New Zealand, the cost of food, transportation, entertainment. This way, you can also make a comparison table and get the information straight from CGPT. The next table I want to make is a schedule table. Here I have create a schedule table for a conference. Include columns for time, event name, and location. Populate the table with the following information. In this case, I'm going to be the one that's going to give GPT the information. This is for a schedule that I want to make. Here I have the registration, the opening ceremony, and some other information. On the bottom, I actually added two extra points. Here I have use a table format to present the information. I don't want a coding format because sometimes you ask GPT for a table, and it actually gives you a coding format table, and I want a normal table. I don't want the coding style. I send it and there we go. This is the format that I want a table like this. The next table I'm going to make is going to be a reference table. Here I have write information about the most popular fruits in a reference table format. I send it, and here we go. We now have a reference table. Here we have the fruit, the scientific name, the origins, the taste, the benefits you get from eating that fruit, and the common uses. This is how you can create a reference table, and CGPT can also make tables in a coding format. Let's try this prompt. Please provide a table listing some countries and their capitals. I send it, and there we go. Here we have the countries and the capital. What I want to do now is that I want to add another prompt, and I want to say format it as JSON. I send it, and there we go. We now have this in JSN coding format. We can also change, for example, if I go up here, I can modify it, and I'm going to say format it as CSV. And I submit it. There we go. We now have it in a CSV format. You can also change it. For example, you can say, I want it as an HTML and submit. There we go. We now have the table in HTML format. This is how you can create a table and have it in a computer code type of format. 6. Ask before answer: Now we're going to learn the ask before answer method. This one allows GPT to ask you questions to better tailor its response. The prompt I'm going to use is this one. You are an expert in the field of, then I can just choose any field. I'm going to say in the field of biology. I'm going to ask you some specific tasks to complete. But before you answer, I want you to do the following. If you have any questions about my tasks or uncertainty about delivering the best possible answer, always ask bullet point questions for clarification before generating your answer. Is that understood? We send it and it says Understood. So first, we're priming GPT to act as an expert in the field of biology and to ask any questions that it might have. Let's try another prompt, and I'm going to say, my question is, how can I become a biologist? Your task is to create a step by step guide for me to implement. Please ask any questions you have so that I can improve my prompt before you complete your task. If you need more information, ask me follow up questions. We want GPT to ask us any follow up questions. We send it, and here we get a whole bunch of questions that we can answer. Here we have to create a step by step guide, I have some additional information. From here, you start to answer these questions like number one. Are you in high school, college? I'm going to say college. U two, have you completed any course work related to biology? I'm going to say, yes. Now we can respond to GPT questions, and we get a more tailored response from it. Here we have the first thing you have to do is to get a degree, gain practical experience, network. You might also want to pursue a master's degree, do the job search and applications, tailor your resume, prepare for interviews, apply for jobs. For most of these steps, CPT can also help you. For example, if you want to tailor your resume, GPT can do that. If you want to prepare for interviews, CGPT can also do that. From here, we can just keep on digging deeper into each step, and we can ask CGP for more information on any type of step. This one is the ask before answer prompt, where CGP asked you questions before giving you a more precise answer. 7. Fill in the blank prompting: We're going to learn the fill in the blank prompt. Basically, Cha GPT is going to give us a much better prompt that we can ask it back. We just have to fill in the blanks with our own information. The prompt I'm going to use is this one. You are an expert in creating prompts that generate the most concise and resourceful responses. What additional bullet point details can I add to the following prompt to improve the output? My prompt is, I'm going to say, what should I invest in with $500? I send it and here we go. Here we get some information from Ch GPT. Where we have your investment goals, your risk tolerance, the time horizon, your existing investments. Now I'm going to ask GPT another prompt. Here I have. Great. Now turn these bullet points into a fill in the blank format into which I can put my own information. I send it. Here we go, we have the exact same information, but now it's in a fill in the blank format. I can always copy this and I can start filling in the blank, like number one. I'm looking for maybe short term gains. Number two, risk tolerance comfortable. We send it. Here we go. We now get a prompt that we can ask GPT back. Now we just copy it and we can send it, and we will get information from GPT. Here we have a high yield savings account, certificates of deposit, the stock market, Rv advisors, peer to peer lending, educational resources. This is a very nice prompt that you can use to fill in the blanks and GPT will give you its own prompt that you can ask it back with the information that you provided. 8. Perspective prompting: Next prompt we have is the perspective prompting method. This way, you gain different types of perspectives on a topic. The prompt I'm going to use is this one. Please write about the end topic from the perspective of the end perspective. So I'm going to write. Please write about improving as a tennis player from the perspective of a tennis professional. We send it, and there we go. We get some information about improving as a tennis player and is designed from the perspective of a professional a professional tennis player. Here we get, for example, technical mastery, physical fitness, your mental toughness. It even recommends to record your matches and practice sessions. This one is basically taking the perspective of a tennis professional. We can also change it a little bit. We can write a new prompt that says, please write about improving as a tennis player. From the perspective of a nutritionist, and we send it, and there we go. In this one, we're getting different information. Here we get proper hydration, balanced micronutrients. You recovering nutrition, avoid overeating, the type of diet that you might want, the supplements that you might take. Here we get two different perspectives from the tennis professional and from a nutritionist, but they're both related to the same topic. I want to try a new one where we get different perspectives. Here we have. Please write an argument for and against The topic of artificial intelligence from multiple diverse perspectives, include the names and point of views of the different perspectives, such as politicians and business owners. We send it, and here we go. The first one is the tech entrepreneur. We have the argument in favor and the argument against. Then we have the ethical concerns for activists argument in favor and argument against. We have the economic impact from business owners in favor and against, and we have government and policy by politicians and regulators, and we also have the environmental impact by environmentalists. This way, you get different perspectives about one topic. 9. Constructive Critic Framework: Next prompt we're going to learn is the constructive critic framework. This is very useful if you want to receive criticism or get some feedback. Let's send a prompt. Here I have this one. I want you to act as an expert and critic in the subject of, and then you can write the subject you want. Criticize my content posted below, convince me why it's bad and give me constructive criticism on how it should be improved. For some context, my, then you can select product or service, in this case, I'm going to select service is for, and then what it is for. I'm going to say a live comedy show. The purpose of my product or service is to entertain people. Let's think step by step, and I want you to address each piece of content individually. Here's my content to critique, and then you put your content. I'm going to write what do you call a fake noodle and impaste. This one should be a joke. Let's see what feedback we get from CG PT. Here we go, the joke, what do you call a fake noodle, and the critique, it's very predictable. It lacks originality. There's limited engagement. Then you have some constructive criticism. Maybe you can add a twist or build a story related to current events or popular culture, experiment with proper timing and proper delivery. You can use this prompt on any kind of topic. This way, you get some ideas on how to improve or how to make things better. 10. Comparative prompting: The next method we're going to learn is the comparative prompting. This is an advanced way of comparing different things. This is a prompt that I'm going to use. Compare and contrast the following text samples. Outline the similarities, differences, qualitative characteristics, quantitative factors, functionality, impact, key takeaways, and other factors into one table. Then I wrote, here are the two pieces of content, number one and number two. Here I'm going to post number one and number two. We send them. These two texts, I got them from the Internet, so I just copied and paste them. Here we have the main content on text sample number one, n number two, the characteristics, the factors, the functionalities, the impacts, the takeaways, and the other factors. This is one of the advanced prompts that you can use to compare and contrast two different texts. 11. RGC Prompting: Now we're going to learn about RCG prompting, and RCG stands for the role, the results, the goals, the context, and the constraints. Let's start with a prompt. Here I have you are an expert, and then we have the role, create, and then we write the results that we want. The goal is, then we write the goal. The content is f, and then we write the context, Your guidelines for writing are and then we put the constraints. Let's write a much better prompt. Here I have, you are an expert urban planner, that's the role. Create a comprehensive sustainable mobility plan for a rapidly growing city. That's the result that we want. The goal is to reduce traffic congestion, minimize carbon emissions and improve overall transportation efficiency. That's the goal. The content is for a presentation to the city council and urban development stakeholders. That's who the presentation the content is going for. Your guidelines for writing are to focus on data driven solutions. Consider both short term and long term implementation strategies and address the importance of public engagement in the planning process. Those are the constraints. This one is a very, very long prompt. This is not just like a one line, one sentence, zero shot prompt. This is a many shot prompt. Once we send it, we get a big plan. We have the summary, the introduction, data driven solutions. What we can also do, for example, we can present key findings. We can discuss how predictive modeling can help forecasting traffic patterns. This is another prompt that you can always use if you want to get more accurate results from GPT. Of course, it's a very long prompt as well. 12. Act as….: Now we're going to learn the act as framework. This way, we make GPT act as someone or something in particular. The prompt we're going to be using is this one. It's divided into five parts. The first one is that we ask, I want you to act as, then we at what we want it to be. This basically creates the gipits persona. The second part is, I will give you and then you give CGP some more information. You will then then you write what you want CGPT to do. In a tone or style, you can always customize the tones that CG PT replies. The important details are, and then you write the important details. You don't actually have to choose all five of them. In this case, I'm going to use this example. I want you to act as a travel planner. I will give you information about my travel destination, budget and interests. You will then provide a detailed itinerary and suggestions for activities, dining and lodging to make the most out of my trip, and we send it. Now, Cha gPT is acting as a travel planner, and it's giving us seven questions that we can answer in order to get a better output from CGPT, to get some better results. From here, I can just type it. Number one, when do you want to visit Paris? I'm just going to write in the summer. Number two, how long one week. Number seven, any specific landmarks that you would like to prioritize, and of course, the Eiffel Tower. We send it. There we go. CGPT is now creating a travel itinerary because we established the persona on the first prompt. We wanted it to act as a travel planner, the information that we're getting from Cha gPT is basically like a travel planning guide. Here we have the first day, you can arrive and see the Eiffel Tower. Explore this area, then this area, the next day, the Cham Celse, the Palazzo Bersa, day six, and then departure on day seven. This is one of the prompts that you can use. You can do it for any type of topic. It's not just a travel planner. You can make it, for example, act as a gym trainer or like a tennis coach or anything you wanted to act as. You can select any type of persona or any type of thing that you want GPT to be like. 13. 4th Grader technique: Now we're going to learn the fourth grader technique, and this technique is very useful to explain something in a specific language, style, or tone. For this, we're going to use this framework. We're going to ask GPT, explain, then we write what we want to explain. Like, for example, fifth grader, like I'm a beginner or like, for example, Arnold Schwzenegger. We can do any type of topics. Let's try some examples. The first prompt I'm going to use is explain the theory of gravity like a scientist. In this case, we're going to be using very advanced language. We're going to use a scientist language. We send it, and there we go. Gravity is a fundamental force of nature that governs the way objects with mass, energy interact. You can see that the language here is very professional, it's very advanced. Now let's try a different one. Now I'm going to ask, explain the theory of gravity like a third grader. It's the same topic as before, but now we're changing that tone. To be easily understood to third graders. We send it. Now we get a very, very different result. Sure, imagine you have a big invisible force that pulls everything with a mass or weight towards each other. You can see that everything here is very, very simplified. It's now using the language of a third grader. It's explaining it to a third grader. Now we're going to try a different one. I'm going to ask Explain that theory of gravity like Arnold Sazeger. We send it, and the language now has changed a lot. Here we have a gravity. It's like the ultimate force that's always pulling us down. You can see that the language here is very similar to like Arnold Schatzegger type of language. This is the other framework that you can use, the fourth grader technique, which you can change the tone and the way you get results from GPT. You can ask GPT to explain it in a specific manner. 14. Sentiment Analysis: Now we're going to learn the sentiment analysis framework. You can use this one to identify if a particular text is positive or negative or neutral and y. The prompt that I want to use is this one. You a sentiment analysis butt. Classify any texts that I provide into three classes. Positive, neutral, and negative. Include the sentiment this text expresses and the reasons. I'm going to look for a review that I got online and I'm just going to paste it down here. And now I'm going to send it. Here we go. The sentiment is negative, and the reasons are the ones. It expresses regret over buying it. The author mentions that the product falls short of the expectations. It gives you some other reasons why the text is negative. Now I'm going to try a different one. Here I have another review that I got online from the same product, and I'm going to paste it and send it. In this case, the sentiment is positive, and here we have some of the reasons. The author mentions that he is absolutely thrilled. He describes it as powerful and consistent. This is something that you can do, for example, if you have a specific product online, and you have many reviews, and you want to see how many reviews are positive, how many are negative. Why are they positive? Why are they negative? If they're negative, you can ask Ch GPT for a help on how to make them better, what you can do to make them positive. 15. Knowledge Extraction: Now we're going to learn the knowledge extraction framework, and this is an advanced way of getting information from a text. The prompt I want to use is this one. It says, I'll give you a few examples of knowledge extraction and its formatting, and you need to extract that information from all future prompts. Here I gave it three examples. Samsung is a company in South Korea. Samsung company, South Korea country. Hugo is the manager of Microsoft. Hugo person, manager is the position. Microsoft is the company. Oakland, New Zealand is cold. Oakland is the city, New Zealand, the country, and cold is that description. Now we're going to send it over. And we get this message from GBT. Now we can send some other prompts. The first text I want to give is basically a story from the news about some archaeologists. I'm going to send it, so I send the text. Here we get some information. We have the location being Peru, the discovery, the age of the tomb, the name of the tomb, some details. This is a way you can get some information. Something else that you can do is that you can grab this information and say, make this into a table. There we go. It now turns this information into a table format. Now I want to give another text. Here I have another new story. This one is about a man that was fighting a Kangaroo in Australia. Let's send it and let's see what we get. There we go. We have the video source, how many views it got. It got more than 2.5 million views in just 10 hours, the man's, martial skills, the dog's rescue, the caption of the video, the confrontation, even the kangaroos reaction and the aftermath. You can use this prompt as an advanced way of extracting knowledge from a specific text. 16. Brainwriting: Now we're going to learn the brain writing prompt, which is a very good prompt for brainstorming or gathering new ideas. The prompt I want to use is this one. Here I have, Let's brainstorm ideas four, and then we put the topic. By writing down as many ideas as you can. Then I can build on them with related ideas. Structure your answer using market down. The three topics that I want to use are parenting tips and advice, travel safety and tips and start up ideas in emerging industries. Let's start with the first one, parenting tips and advice. So we paste it and we send it. Here we get our response from Cha GPT. If you notice, it's much more detailed, it has much more ideas than normal responses from Ca GPT. From here, of course, you can select one and keep on building from there. Let's try the other topic. I'm going to click here and modify, and I'm going to select and paste the new one. Travel safety and tips. We send it and we get this big brainstorm of ideas. Some general travel safety tips, for example, research your destination, have some emergency contacts, learn some common phrases, personal safety, accommodation safety, choose a safe lodging, fire safety, digital security, cultural sensitivity, emergency preparedness. This prompt gives you much more ideas than just normal prompts from C GPT. Let's try a third topic. For this one, I'm going to write, start up ideas in emerging industries. We send it Here we go, we get about 20 ideas from GPT. For example, sustainable agriculture technology, personalized medicine, telemedicine platforms, three D printing for customization, space exploration, I don't know if anybody's going to go for this one. Virtual reality fitness. That's interesting. This is how the brain writing prompt works. You get more brainstorm ideas than just a normal prompt for CGPT. 17. Reverse brainstorming: We're going to learn the reverse brainstorming prompt. This is a very good prompt if you want to come up with intentionally bad ideas in order to spark your creativity. The prompt I want to use for this one is this. We will use reverse brainstorming four, and then the topic. Coming up with intentionally bad ideas can spark creativity and lead us in new directions. I'm going to use three topics. Improving employee morale in the workspace, making homework more enjoyable for students, and designing the worst possible smartphone app. We're going to get some really bad ideas from this. Let's try the first one, improving the employee morale in the workspace. And here we go, we get ten really bad ideas from GPT. For example, mandatory overtime Mondays, that everyone has to work extra hours on Mondays, no matter what. Daily s price desk inspections, random pay deductions, negative feedback Fridays, cubicle swap week. Bureaucracy bon answer. This way, you start to see what people don't like. What are some really bad business ideas? You can try to basically not do them. Hopefully not do them. Let's try the next one and this one is making homework more enjoyable for students. We get the results, some really bad ideas. For example, assign homework during every class. In this case, it actually tells you how to flip it, so basically how to solve it. Reduce the frequency of homework assignments to allow students more time for other activities. Let's try the next bad idea. Make homework longer and more difficult. Require students to complete their homework in complete silence. Provide no feedback or recognition for completed homework. This way, you start to understand what you're not supposed to do, what people don't like. What are some really bad ideas you should not be making? And let's try the third topic, and here I have, designing the worst possible smartphone app. And here we go. If you're creating an app, this can give you some inspiration on what you don't want your app to do. For example, the battery drainer Pro, an app that actively drains your phone's battery as quickly as possible. If you're building an app, you should pay attention on how much your app will drain a person's battery. Another one is the pop up ads Galore. Basically getting bombarded with a whole bunch of pop up ads. If you're making an ad, try not to put too many pop up ads. Notification overload. Basically when you keep on getting notifications and notifications and notifications. Try not to do that. Phone overheater, basically an app that overheats your phone. If you're making an app, try to find a solution for this. This is a very good prompt for coming up with intentionally bad ideas in order to spark your creativity. 18. Mind mapping: Now we're going to learn an advanced prompt for mind mapping. The prompt I want to use is this one. Please create a complete mind map for the topic, starting with a central concept and expanding outward with connected branches of related ideas. I'm going to choose three topics, Mal planning, stress management, and World Wars. Let's start with meal planning. We send it Here we go. In this case, J GPT is actually creating a mind map in a coding type of format using CSS. We have the meal planning, the benefits, the steps, step number one, set goals, inventory, choose recipes. If you go down here, you get some more information. Let's try the next one, which is stress management. We send it. Here we go, we start to get a mind map from GPT. The central concept, the causes strategies, coping with stress, professional help and support, changes in lifestyle, and some coping skills, for example, deep breathing or meditation. Here you get some extra information related to some parts from the mind map. Let's try our third topic. World Wars. We send it. In this case, we're not getting the coding format for the mind map, but I like this way a little bit better. For example, we have the central concept of World War one, causes, key players, major battles, consequences. Then we have some of the causes right here, the key players, the battles, consequences, then World War two, same information. Some common tames like propaganda, some war crimes, technological advancements. If you want to learn more about any topic, you can always use this prompt, the mind map prompt, and you can keep on going deeper and deeper into each section. 19. Assumptions: Now we're going to learn the assumptions prompt. Basically, you're trying to get assumptions and how you can challenge those assumptions and coming up with more innovative ideas. Here I have this prompt. List your assumptions about then the topic. Then how can you challenge those assumptions to come up with innovative ideas? Describe your journey. The topics I want to use are full time office based work being the most productive. AI is a threat to human jobs and lab grown meat. Let's start with the first one. Full time office work being the most productive. Let's see what we get. Here we go. We get ten assumptions about this topic. For example, physical presence, fosters collaboration, and innovation, and then you get the challenge for it. Supervision and accountability are easier in an office setting, then you get the challenge for that assumption. Let's try another topic. AI is a threat to human jobs. We send it. Here we go. The first assumption, AI will replace humans in most jobs and the challenge. AI can be used as a tool to enhance human productivity rather than replace them entirely. Then another assumption, automation will lead to mass unemployment and the challenge to investigate potential new job opportunities that AI and automation can create. Let's try a third topic, which is lab grown meat, and we send it. Here we go. In this case, we get it a little bit differently. The first one is that lab grown meat is expensive, and here we have the challenge. Then we have limited consumer acceptance, then we have the challenge for that assumption. Sustainability. Then the challenge for that. There is a very good way if you have some assumptions that you want to challenge, some common assumptions that you know, and you want to give a counter argument to those assumptions. 20. Swot analysis: Now we have the SWAT analysis prompt. Here I'm going to write. Let's do a SWAT analysis on then the topic, considering internal strengths, weaknesses, and external opportunities or threats. Then write a conclusion to summarize. The topics I want to use are online education, health care systems, and the effect of geopolitical tensions on global supply chains. Let's try the first topic, online education. And we send it. Here we go, we get a huge SWAT analysis, for example, the strengths, the weaknesses, the opportunities, the threats from online education, and a conclusion about it. With this swat analysis prompt, you're getting a lot of information on this topic. Let's try the other topic, and here I have healthcare systems. We send it, and here we go. Here we get the strengths of medical healthcare systems, for example, the medical expertise, the advanced technology, then some of the weaknesses, for example, the high costs, the bureaucracy. Limited capacity, talent shortages, some opportunities and some threats to healthcare systems like pandemics. Let's try the third topic, geopolitical tensions on global supply chains. Here we go we get the strengths such as diversification, advanced technology, some of the weaknesses, depending on one single source, some of the complexities, some of the opportunities, and some of the threats, and of course, a small conclusion related to this topic. This is a very good prom that you can use if you want to do a swat analysis of a particular topic. 21. Scamper: Now we're going to learn the scamper checklist prompt. Here I have this prompt. Use the scamper checklist to ideate on the topic. How can we substitute, combine, adapt, modify, put to other uses, eliminate or reverse, detail your answers. That's basically what scamper means, SCAMPER. The topics I want to use are the use of traditional textbooks in language learning using C GPT at work and social media marketing. Let's try the first topic. Traditional textbooks in language learning, and we send them. Here we get the ideas. For example, what can we substitute? We can substitute physical textbooks with digital textbooks. Maybe include some videos audios. What can we combine? How can we adapt? What can we modify? What other uses can we find What can we eliminate? What can we reverse? Here you're getting some specific information about what can you change? What can you improve? Let's try the next topic. Using GPT at work. Here we go. We get some substitute, substitute traditional brainstorming sessions with GPT. What can we combine? We can combine CGPT with project management tools. How can we adapt? We can adapt CGPT for language translation and communication with international clients, modify, put to other uses. What should we eliminate? The last topic is social media marketing. Here we go, we start to get some new ideas for social media marketing. What can we substitute? What can we combine for social media marketing, adapt, modify, put to other uses. This is a very good prompt if you want to get some new ideas on what things can you improve? 22. Six thinking hats: Now we're going to use the six thinking hats prompt. Here I have. Use the six hats method by Edward De Bono. The red head is optimistic. The black head looks at negatives, et cetera. Date on the your topic from different mindset angles. The topics I want to use are starting a YouTube channel, learning Japanese, and traveling to Paris. Let's start with the first one. Starting a YouTube channel, and we send it, and here we go. Here we get some six thinking heads. The factual head, gather information about the audience. The redhead, the emotional hat, express your passion and enthusiasm, the black hat, the critical had, the optimistic hat, the creative one, the process oriented hat. Here you get some specific type of ideas and some recommendations that you get from using this framework. Let's try a different topic. Here I have learning Japanese. And here we go, this one looks a little bit differently. The red had encourages us to focus on emotions and intuition. Learning Japanese would be an opportunity to connect with the beauty of Japanese tradition. Enjoy the culture, create meaningful relationships with Japanese speakers. Then we have a little bit more negative had. You have to acknowledge the challenges that you will find. For example, the characters, the grammar rules, the writing system. Consider the potential difficulties, the optimist had, the creative had. Here you're getting some different recommendations from multiple mindset angles and the third topic, traveling to Paris. Here we have the factual, the white hat. Analyze the information about Paris. Then we have the emotions, the black head, the critical thinking. For example, consider the drawbacks that you can find in Paris, like the language barriers, safety issues, overcrowded tourist spots. Talk about your budget constraints. With this prompt, you're basically getting six different ways of thinking, six different mindset angles, and they're all giving you recommendation on what to do related to your specific topic. From here, you can keep on expanding, for example, you can say, Expand more on the black hat. It's now giving you even more information. For example, pay attention to the language barrier to the safety concerns like pickpockets and scams in crowded touristic areas. Yeah, pay attention to this in Paris. So tourist crowds, the cost of living in Paris, the weather, the cultural differences, transportation strikes, the accommodation availability. Now you're getting more information related to that one specific way of thinking, that specific thinking hat. 23. Worst possible idea: We have the worst possible idea prompt. This one is one of my favorite prompts, because GPT can come up with some very, very funny ideas. Let's try the first prompt. Brainstorm intentionally terrible ideas, four than the topic to get the creative juices flowing in new directions. Expand on your answers a little explaining why these ideas are bad. The topics I want to use are a dating a profile, a restaurant concept, and a country to travel to. Let's start with the first one, a dating app profile. Here we go. We have some descriptions of what you can put on a dating app, for example, the ghost. I'm here, but I'm not really here. Maybe you'll see me once in a blue moon commitment, that's not my thing. It also tells you why that's a terrible idea to write it. We also have the self obsessed narcissis. I'm the best thing that has ever happened on this app. Swipe right if you can handle my awesomeness. We have the negative Nancy. Life is terrible, and I'm just looking for someone to complain with. Nothing ever goes my way, and why that's a terrible idea. We have the overly clingy. I'll text you every minute to let you know how much I miss you. I expect you to do the same. We should be inseparable. Why that's a terrible idea. This is a very good prompt if you want to know what you should not do. The next topic is going to be a restaurant concept. Here we have the restaurant that only serves raw chicken. Here we have the food fight cafe where people engage in food fights. We have the noise factory where the staff is intentionally making as much noise as possible. Here you're getting some ideas on what kind of restaurant is a really bad concept. For the third topic, a country to travel to. And here are some terrible ideas for countries to travel to. For example, Antarctica, and why it's a bad idea. North Korea, Somalia, Chernobyl, Iraq, Syria, Turkmenistan, Eritrea, Somalia, and why traveling to those places might not be the best idea. With this prompt, you can intentionally get really bad ideas so that you know what not to do and to get maybe some inspiration from those terrible ideas. 24. Triggerwords: We have the trigger words prompt. Here we have. Here are some random words, number one, two, and three. How might these trigger new ideas related to, and then the topic? The random words that I want to use are efficiency, diversification, social media, and they're going to be related to business growth. Let's send it. Here we have some efficiency related to business growth, some diversification, some social media, and then combining these concepts together. This way, is basically combining this words and this one. How can efficiency affect business growth, diversification, social media? Let's try a different one. The three words are health, food innovation, and they're going to be related to nutritional meal delivery services. Let's send it. Now it looks a little bit different. For example, here we have personalized nutrition plans. We have the smart meal prep, for example, developing an innovative meal prep system. So AI powered meal suggestions. It's basically trying to get these three random words and combining them with this specific topic. The last prompt that one I use is this one, is going to combine robotics, education, and stem with robotics education for kids. Here are some ideas related to this topic. For example, here we have robotic kids for young learners. Interactive Stem workshops, online learning platforms, robotic competitions, stem storytelling, so mentorship programs. Here you get a lot of different ideas, basically combining these three words with a specific topic. 25. Questioning: Now we have an advanced prompt for generating questions. The prompt I want to use is this one. Generate questions about the topic, like who, what, when, where, why, and how. Turn the questions into ideas. The three topics I'm going to use are mindfulness and meditation, cyber bulling, and the future of work. Let's start with the first topic, mindfulness and meditation. And we send it. Here we go. We get 20 questions related to mindfulness and meditation, who are some renowned practitioners? What's the science behind it? When is the best time to practice? It basically takes your topic and it tries to ask questions related to that topic. Let's try another topic, cyber buling. We send it, and here we go, we get more questions, like for example, who is most vulnerable to cyber bulling? How can we raise awareness about the risks? It also gives you some ideas about what to look for. For example, develop a targeted educational campaign. Here we get some ideas about how you can tackle this question. This is a very good prompt, for example, if you want to do a master thesis, and you want to find some nice topics to talk about, and you want to formulate your question. Let's try another topic with The future of work. Let's submit it, and here we get the questions. What are the key trends shaping the future of work? Here we get some ideas related to these questions. For example, you can create a seminar or online course on adapting to the future of work. This is basically an advanced prompt for generating different types of questions. 26. Scenarios: We have a prompt that generates the best and the worst case scenarios for a specific topic. So La Prama one I use is this one. Imagine a best case scenario for the the topic. Everything goes right. Now, imagine a worst case scenario. Everything goes wrong. Brainstorm ideas for each. The topics I want to use are a date at a Sushi restaurant, a trip to Europe, and an unexpected meeting with your boss. Let's try the first topic, a date at a Sushi restaurant. Here we go, we get eight best case scenarios and nine worst case scenarios where everything goes wrong. For example, the best case scenario is that the reservation was perfect. Everyone arrived on time. The conversation was seamless. The date ends with a passionate, good night kiss. Here we have the worst case scenario where everything goes wrong. The reservation goes wrong, the meeting is awkward. There's a painful silence throughout the meal. And you have an awkward goodbye, where you have a forced hug and you're finally relieved that it's over with no desire for a second date. This is a very good prompt if you want to try to imagine what's the best thing that can happen and the worst thing that can happen. Let's try another topic, a trip to Europe. Here we get the best case scenarios. The weather is going to be perfect. The accommodation is stunning. The transportation is seamless. You develop new friendships and the worst case scenarios. The weather is a disaster. You struggle with language barriers. You get food poisoning, get rubbed or scammed. If you're thinking about a vacation, GPT can give you the best things that can happen and the worst things that could happen. Let's try another topic. An unexpected meeting with your boss. Here we go. The best case scenarios, you get recognition and praised. You get very positive feedback. Your boss increases your salary. Or the worst case scenarios, you get a reprimand, you get negative feedback. Your boss hints at potential layoffs, Your salary gets decreased. Again, this is a very good prompt. If you're facing any type of situation, and you're thinking, what's the worst thing that could happen? You can always send it to Cha GPT and get some ideas on what could possibly happen. 27. Analogy thinking: Now we're going to learn the analogy thinking prompt. The prompt I one I use is this one. You first start with the topic, and you say, is like what? Identify an analogy, then brainstorm ideas based on properties of the analogy. Explain each idea that follows from this analogy. The topics I want to use are money, dreams, and traveling. Let's start with the first one. Money. We send it, and here we get an analogy. Money is often likened to a tool or a lubricant in the economic system. Here we get more information where they start to open up on this specific phrase. Money as a tool, money as a lubricant, money as a measure of value, and more information. Let's try a different one. I'm going to write dreams. What are dreams like? Here we have. Dreams can be likened to a beast and uncharted ocean. Here we have some of the properties. You have the depth and the mystery, the fluidity and the change, the reflection, some hidden treasures, just as the ocean hides treasures. Let's try the third topic. Which is going to be traveling. Here we go. Traveling is like embarking on a journey through uncharted territory, and we get some information related to this phrase. You have the sense of discovery and adventure, the personal growth, the uncertainty and the risks, the cultural exchange, and more information related to this analogy. If you have a situation where you might need an analogy, you can try to use this prompt. 28. Idea spurring: Now we're going to learn the idea sparring prompt. This way, you can get a lot of different ideas on a specific topic. The prompt I want to use is this one. Build on the following idea related to, then your topic, and then you write your idea. What does it make you think of? Use it as a jumping off point for more ideas. The first topic and idea that I want to use is this one. The topic is going to be business and the idea is opening an unmanned instant urs restaurant in Korea. Let's see what CGPT can tell us. Here we get some extra ideas that we can get from ChagpT. For example, the automated ordering and payment systems. Implement a user friendly mobile app or a kiosk system where customers can browse the menu. That's a good idea. Customize the noodles, place orders, make the payments seamlessly. We can have a noodle bending machine, a variety of noodle options, a noodle subscription service, some noodle testing events. These are 15 ideas that we can get from CGPT related to our initial topic. The next topic is going to be getting a computer, and the idea is going to be buying an M one Macbook err. Let's see what GPT can tell us. Here are some ideas. It will give you a productivity boost. You can start a block or a YouTube channel where you review the computer. You can use it as a programming tool as a programming computer, digital creativity. If you wanted to buy a computer, you can ask GPT what it thinks about it, what it thinks about your idea. The next topic is going to be saving money, and we're going to put the same idea, buying a Macbook err. Now CGPT changes its ideas, its recommendations. So now it's more focused towards saving money. For example, you should budget and plan your finances. You should look into trade in options or selling your unused items. You should look into part time job opportunities or starting a site hustle. You can use financial apps to track your expenses. Now we're getting similar information about buying an M one MacBook Air, but that topic is different and the CA GPT responses are going to be different now. They're more related to saving money to the money aspect of buying the computer, not about the usability aspects of the computer. 29. Concept Fan: Now we're going to look into the concept Fan prompt, and the prompt I want to use is this one. Here is one idea related to the topic. Then we have the idea. Fan out from this concept in different directions to generate related ideas. Explain each new idea in a few words. This one is a little bit similar to the other one, but let's see what different results we get from C GPT. The first topic and idea I want to write is this one. The topic is e commerce, the role of digital marketing in e commerce success. So let's send it and we get some ideas. Social media advertising, Explore social medias like Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, and how they can play a role in e commerce success. E mail marketing strategies, SEO, paid search advertisement, influencer marketing. Here we get a whole bunch of ideas related to our topic. Let's try another topic. The topic is going to be a YouTube channel, creating a street food channel in New York City. We send it, and here we have some ideas. For example, you can have a food truck tour. Where you explore different food trucks. You can have the street food challenges. You can look into the behind the scenes of the street food vendors, and understanding their cooking techniques, their story, the history of their dishes. You can do some cooking tutorials. You can look into street food events. Here you get a lot of different ideas related to our topic. Let's try one more topic. Here I have politics. The role of social media in shaping political discourse. Here we get some ideas. For example, social media can create filter bubbles or eco chambers, where the algorithm shows people content that aligns with their existing beliefs. It starts to create an eco chamber where people are only exposed to their like minded viewpoints. That's an interesting point. You can express misinformation. You can make political campaigns go viral through social media. You can have online activism and mobilization of people. You can look into how influencers that have large followings can sway public opinion. And promote specific political causes. You can do political advertisement to social media. This is a very good prompt if you have an idea and you want to expand more on that idea. 30. Headline writing: Now we have the headline writing prompt. The prompt I want to use is this one. Come up with, then we write the number of creative headlines or slogans related to the topic, turn them into full ideas. The first topic I want to use is personal finance and budgeting. I want to have 20 creative headline ideas. Let's send it, and here we get some ideas. For example, financial freedom starts here, and the idea, start a personal finance blog or an app. That guides users towards financial independence. That's a good idea. The next one is, budget like a pro, live like a king, a budgeting course or a workshop that teaches people how to manage their money. So we have 20 different ideas right here. The next topic I want to use is fitness and workout routines. I'm going to select 15 ideas. Here we have the headline of our idea. Unleash your inner beast, transform your body with our savage workouts, and you can create a fitness program with intense and challenging workouts, inspired by animal movements, helping people tap into their primal strength and agility. Here we have 15 different headlines and some ideas related to that headline. Now I want to try another topic, and I'm going to select mental health awareness. I'm going to come up with ten different ideas. Here we get a headline. Break the silence, mend the mind. The idea is to launch a nationwide campaign, encouraging opening conversations about mental health. Here we have a whole bunch of different headlines with an idea related to it. If you find this prompt useful, you can give it a try. This can also be very helpful, for example, for YouTube channels. 31. Brainstorming journey: Now we have the brainstorming journey prompt, which can help you imagine the journey or something happening. Let's try out. The first prompt I want to use is, imagine you're on a journey related to, then we have our topic. Describe where you are, what you see, who you meet, what you're thinking. Et this scenario spark ideas. The first topic I want to use is walking to pick up my price after winning the lottery. Let's send it. Here, CGP starts to imagine a story. As I set out on my journey to claim my lottery prize. I find myself in the heart of the city. I begin my walk from my apartment, as I make my way through the city streets. Finally, I arrive at the lottery office, a big building with a gold plated sign that reads lottery headquarters. I wait in line and I feel a mix of excitement and nervousness. Here, Jag P is creating a story that you can imagine yourself related to any topic that you give it. Let's try a different topic. The next topic is talking to your boss about a salary raise. We submit it, and here we have, I find myself walking towards my office building. Upon entering the lobby, I am greeted by my colleagues. On the way up, I can see the city through the glass elevator walls. I arrive at the 20th floor where my boss's office is located. I begin our conversation, explaining my contributions to the company. My boss listens attentively. When I leave the office, I have a feeling of relief and excitement. Basically, you're putting yourself in a specific story, you're imagining yourself being in that place. The third topic I want to use is this one, meeting the president. Let's send it. And here I have, I find myself in the heart of Washington DC on a crisp sunny morning. I approach the White House, I make my way through a security checkpoint. I finally reached the Oval office and I'm talking to the president, and then I leave the White House. This is a very good prompt for visualization to imagining yourself doing something. 32. Outside perspectives: Now we have the outside's perspective prompt, which can give you different perspectives on a specific topic. The prompt I want to use is this one. Bring in different viewpoints to ideate on, then we write our topic and get new perspectives. Develop these different points of view explaining succinctly why they are relevant in each case. The first topic I want to use is healthcare reform. We send it, and here we get many different perspectives related to healthcare reform. For example, the patient centered care to advocate, and its relevance. Then we have the free market proponent and their way of thinking. Then we have the universal healthcare supporter and their way of thinking, the physicians perspective, the health insurance industry, insider perspective. Here we get many different perspectives about a specific topic. Here I'm using a controversial one. The next topic I'm going to use is economic inequality. And here we get different perspectives, the economic growth perspective, and the argument from advocates of this perspective. We have the social justice perspective, what the advocates of this perspective argue about, the historical, the political power perspective. Here we have nine different perspectives. For my last topic, I'm going to select the cost of higher education. Here we get the different perspectives, for example, the student perspective, which are the people directly affected by the cost of higher education. Then we have the government perspective related to this, the university perspectives, the employer perspective, the overall economic perspective. This one is using the way of thinking of economists, the international perspective, the society perspective, the future of work perspective. With this prompt, you can get many different perspectives. If you have a very controversial topic or a topic that everyone has a different perspective towards said, you can ask GPT to try to understand their perspectives. 33. Prompt Creator Prompt: Now we're going to learn an advanced prompt creator prompt. But this prompt is actually very, very long. Take your time with this one. Here I have this prompt, and you can either post the video right now, copy the prompt and skip to the part where I send it or you can stay with me and listen to the whole prompt. Here I have. I want you to become my prompt creator. Your goal is to help me craft the best possible prompt for my needs. The prompt will be used by you, Cha DPT. You will follow the following process. Your first response will be to ask me what the prompt should be about. I will provide my answer, but we will need to improve it through continual iterations by going through the next steps. Based on my input, you will generate three sections. A, revise prompt. You provide the written prompt. It should be clear, concise, and easily understood by you. Suggestions, provide suggestions on what details to include in the prompt to improve it. And questions. Ask any relevant questions perturning to what additional information is needed from me to improve the prompt. We will continue this iterative process with me providing additional information to you and you updating the prompt in the revised prompt section until it's complete. Basically, we send a prompt and Ch GPT will help us improve it and improve it and improve it. Let's send it. We first send the whole paragraph, CGPT now understands the assignment, and we can give our prompt to Capt. The prompt I want to give is this one. Describe the major events of World War two, just a very simple prompt. We send it, and here we get some recommendations from CGPT. We get the revised prompt, saying, summarize the significant events of World War two. But here we get some suggestions, for example, a specific focus, at time frame, a geographical scope, either Europe or Asia, the parties involved and some questions. Could you provide me more details on the specific aspects or areas of World War two? I'm going to say that I want the World War two in Europe. I'm going to write Europe and send it back, and now we have a revised prompt. Summarize the significant events of World War two in Europe. Now it's a small change from the previous one. Now we read through the suggestions. Add a time frame, for example, 1939 to 1945, mention specific regions or countries. Specify whether you want a general overview or if there are particular aspects. I'm going to say, how did World War two start in Europe. Now we send it. Now we get a revised prompt. Explain the events and factors that led to the outbreak of World War two. Again, we get some suggestions. Specify a time frame period, for example, 1933 to 1939, provide specific regions within Europe. Mention key political figures. On this one, I'm going to take the first one. I want a time period. So I'm going to say from 193. We send it. And now we get a revised prompt. Explain the events and factors that led to World War two in 1933, and here we get more information. Clarifying, would you like the prompt to focus on the causes or early events? I'm going to say both causes and early events of World War two, mentioning key political figures, treaties that played a significant role, I'm going to say this one, the impact of the treaty of Versailles, and I'm going to add it as well. Now I'm adding two extra things. Send it, and once again, we get a revised prompt. Now our prompt is becoming bigger this way. Now, consider adding a word limit, so I'm going to say 2000 words and send it. Here we have some suggestions. I think I'm just going to copy this one and addit the whole suggestion. Here I have mentioned any particular aspects of the treaty of Versailles. For example, its impact on Germany's economy, territorial changes. I'm going to take all of these ones and also add them. Let's see. Here we have, if you pay attention, now we got a huge prompt right here. Write a 2001 essay on the causes early events, treaty of site, territorial changes, military restrictions. I think I'm just going to take now this whole huge prompt. We're going to create a new one, and we're going to send the whole prompt. We're going to get very different replies from GPT. Now we went from a very small prompt to a huge prompt, and we're getting a lot of information from CGPT this way. This is one of my favorite prompts because you can start with something so small and you can keep on adding and adding and adding and you come up with a very big prompt. 34. Emoji Converter: We're going to learn a very simple prompt is just an emoji converter. Here I have this prompt. I want you to translate these sentences. I wrote into moges. I will write this sentence and you will express it with moges. I just want you to express it with moges. It's being very precise. I don't want you to reply with anything but moges. When I need to tell you something in English, I will do it by wrapping it in curly brackets like this. My first sentence is, Hello, what's your profession? And now we send the prompt and Ca DPT will only reply with moges. Let's try another one and I'm going to write. Do you have any plans for the weekend? We send it? Now GPT has a calendar, a question mark, and a person thinking. Let's try another one. I'm going to say, I'm going to the grocery store to pick up some essentials. We send it, and CGPT replies with its own images. Basically, it's translating what we're saying to mage. Let's try a different prompt. My phone's battery died, so I'll need to recharge it soon and we get these images, phone, battery, sad person, died or dead person, and he needs to recharge. The last example. I can't decide what movie to watch tonight. There are so many choices. Here we have a, a movie, person thinking, TV. If you want to send someone some moges to express some sentences, you can always use this prompt. 35. Prompt Perfect Prompt Generator: Now I'm going to show you a tool that can improve the way you formulate your prompts. The tool is called Prompt Perfect. First, we go to this website called Prompt Perfect dot Gina AI. Now we're just going to sign up, and I'm going to click on Continue with Google. I agree and continue with Google, or you can use any other platform that you have. Prompt Perfect has many different tools to improve your prompts. For example, it has an auto tune section and Ana to compare them. So agents, you can run agents in a simulation. So let's try the first one, which is going to be the Auto Tune option, and we can also click right here. We try the first one. Now we can add a prompt, and here we also have some extra examples if you want to have some ideas. The prompt that I want to use is this one. Write a persuasive argument for or against the colonization of other planets, and we send it, and here we're going to get an optimized prompt. And here we go. We can click here where we have our original prompt, which is very short, and then we have two different optimized prompts. The first one is very long, right a persuasive argument, either supporting or opposing the colonization of other planets. It also includes a lot more shots to it. Then we have a second one, an AI assistant. I need you to become an expert advocate on the topic of colonizing other planets. You can choose either one of these two prompts. You can see here how your small zero shot prompt just became much better. Now let's try the other option, which is the Ana option, and here we can compare different AI models. I'm going to use the same prompt and we send it. Here we go. We get examples of what CGP t would reply to our prompt. We also get examples from Cloud, which is another AI agent, and here we can compare them. Here we get another example from CGP. We have GPT, and then we also have GPT three. I believe this CGP t one might be CP 3.5. We also get GPT four. And all of them are of course different. We also have Gina Chat, and then we have this one called Command. From here, you can analyze the different AI models and see which answer you like more. Another option that you can choose is the streamline option. This way, your prompt is going to be refined, and you can keep on refining it step by step. I'm going to select the model, which is going to be the GBT, the normal one. Here I write my prompt. Now we have different options. Here we have, what do you want your prompt to do? We can choose to suggest prompt improvements. We can choose to optimize our prompt. We can view the output that you will get from the models. We can shorten along prompt. We can bypass the ethical filter. Or we can also test the prompt a chat. This one is going to be by Gena Chet. I'm going to suggest prompt improvements, and here we get some suggestions. What is the target audience for our argument? I'm going to select general public. Here we have what are the main arguments in favor of colonization of other planets and what are the main arguments against the colonization? I'm going to leave it like this in favor of resources against ethics. We can also choose another action if we want to continue. But in this case, I'm just going to click on Improve my prompt with the answers, and here we get more options. What specific resources should be discussed in favor? What are the main ethical considerations? Are there any specific scientific theories to be considered? Now it's going very, very deep into this. So I'm just going to live it like this scientific theories and continue, and it's going to keep on trying to improve and improve our prompt step by step. Here we have more prompt suggestions, and I'm just going to keep on accepting them all the time. The more and more I keep on accepting its suggestions, the more our prompt starts to change. Here we go. We now have a very, very long prompt right here, and we keep on getting suggestions. What is the preferred structure or the format? From here, you can just keep on going and going deeper and GPT will give you suggestions, and you can accept them or change them, and your prompt will just keep on growing. Now, I'm just going to copy this huge prompt. I'm going to send it to Cha GBT and see what we get. We went from a very, very small prompt, like a 13 word prompt to this huge monster of a prompt, and Cha gibt is now going to react to this big prompt. And you can play around with this website because there are tons and tons of different functions. So this is one of the websites that you can use to improve your prompts if you don't know how to improve it. However, this one is also is a paid website. So you get 55 credits when you first sign up, but then you have to pay for it. You can either get a monthly plan, a yearly plan, or just some top up of more credits. For example, here, I have 55 credits, and I already use 16 credits with other proms that I was doing before and the ones from this example. So keep in mind that it's not a free website, but you can play around with it in the beginning if you want to get familiar with it. 36. FusionAI Prompt Generator: The next tool for improving our prompt is Fusion AI. For this, you go over to fusion ai dot world, and then we can click on Generate Prompt. Here we go. Let's try our first prompt, and I'm going to write the same prompt as before. Write a persuasive argument for or against the colonization of other planets. Now I can click on generate Prompt and it's going to generate it, and here we go. We get a bigger prompt right now. Write a 500 word essay exploring the ethical implications of colonizing other planets. Focus on the potential impact on the environment and human life and provide evidence from existing research. Now we went from a small prompt to a much righter prompt, if we want, we can also click on write and it will write it for us right here. Now it's going to start writing the results from this prompt. Something else that we can do is that we can just click on copy. And send it over to Cha GPT and see if we get any differences. There we go. The results we get from Cha GPT are going to be different from the results that we get here. But what matters here is that we improved our small prompt into a much better prompt. Let's try a different one, and I'm going to write a persuasive essay on the impact of social media on modern relationships and communication. We generated and here we get a much longer prompt. Write a 500 word persuasive essay. From here we can of course change it. If you want to change the amount of words or something else, we can always do it. But what matters here is that we went from a small prompt to a much stronger prompt that can get us better results. We can also try a prompt like this. Send a super casual text to my friend to see if she wants to have dinner tomorrow night. Mention in a candid way that she can't bring her roommate, and we generate it, and here we get a different prompt. Write a 100 word message to a friend inviting them to dinner tomorrow, focus on making the invitation sound casual, while also making it clear that the roommate is not invited. Let's see what Cha j PT has to say. And we get some results from GPT. Let's try the Fusion one, and let's click on right, and here we get some differences. Hey, friend, I'm having a dinner tonight. I should mention that this is just the two of us sorry for not inviting a roommate this time. Of course, we can write it again if we want something different. This one is using the power of Fusion AI while CGP is using something different. If we're not satisfied, we can always rewrite it, and I think this one sounds a little bit better. That's how fusion AI works. 37. WebUtility Prompt Generator: Now we're going to learn the web utility prompt generator. For this, we go over to web utility dot IO But here we had many different tools. We have the co beautifiers, but what we want is going to be down here with the generators, and I'm going to go for this one, C GPT Pm generator, not the AI prompts generator because this one just generates random prompts. We want this one. So we click on pen, and there we go. We can add some actions. We can select a specific focus, a subject, and also we can add some extra context. So the first prompt that I want to use is that I want the action to be to create, then the focus, I'm going to select a solution. Then for the subject, I'm going to select, provide clean drinking water to remote villages in developing countries. I want to create a solution for this subject. Now I can generate the prompt, and now we get a much stronger prompt. Of course, we can just copy it and paste it over to CGPT, and we will get more results than if we just had a simple small prompt. This prompt is much more precise. Here, we have the key components, the logic behind the choices, potential improvement and the limitations that we might encounter. Let's try a different one. For this one, the action is going to be to explain, then I'm going to select a principle and the subject is going to be Newton's law of motion. I wanted on the additional context to provide real world examples. Now we generate a prompt and here we get this specific prompt tailored to these factors. Then we can of course just copy it and send it over to CGP. CGPT here shows the principle, how it works. It also gives us some real world examples, some common misconceptions, some challenges and complexities. Of course, if we want to go deeper, we can ask GPT to expand on any section. The third prompt that I want to use is I wanted to recommend an approach to improving workplace productivity, and employee morale. For the additional context, I wanted to give me five examples. We generate a prompt. Of course, we can just copy and send it over to GPT. GPT will give us a more accurate response. It will give us more details than if we just sent a small prompt. This is another tool that you can use if you have some ideas, but you don't know how to formulate your prompt. You can always use this website, web utility dot IO.