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AI Prompting Secrets: Boost Your Productivity with Expert Role-Playing Techniques

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Manage episode 513001934 series 3494377
Content provided by Quiet. Please and Inception Point Ai. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Quiet. Please and Inception Point Ai or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
[Upbeat intro music]
Hey, I’m Mal—the Misfit Master of AI—welcoming you to another episode of *I am GPTed,* the only show that promises practical AI advice, delivered with just enough sarcasm to keep the robots confused and the humans entertained.
Today, we're skipping the usual hype. There will be no metaphors about “unlocking infinite worlds” or “ushering in a new era.” Instead, let’s get ridiculous—ridiculously useful. I’m dishing out one prompting technique that’ll actually make your LLM responses stop sounding like fortune cookies, a clever way to use AI you haven’t thought of, the rookie mistake everyone makes (including yours truly), a dead-simple practice drill, and a tip that will save you from trusting AI like it’s your best friend from kindergarten.
Let’s roll.
First up—**the prompting technique.** It’s called *role prompting.* Yeah, ground-breaking, I know. But stick with me. Imagine you need a document summarized. Most people type, “Summarize this document.” The AI shrugs and spits out a Wikipedia-robot version. But what if you said, “Act as a veteran product marketer with 20 years’ experience and summarize this document so the marketing team can actually use it”? The result comes out sharper, with real insight, and, shocker, a grasp of your audience. It’s like asking someone to cook, but this time you tell them you’re gluten-free and allergic to flavorless pie charts. Instant upgrade.
Here’s my before and after:
- Before: “Summarize meeting notes.”
- After: “You are a people-pleasing executive assistant who translates dense jargon into lunchtime gossip. Summarize these meeting notes with bulleted action items and at least one note of encouragement.”
The difference? You get something actionable—and, if you’re lucky, just a dash of snark for flavor.
Now, **use case time.** Did you know you can use ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini as your *personal email tactician*? Next time you need to decline a meeting or reject an offer (without sounding like a robot or, worse, as emotionally stunted as me on a Monday), feed in the email, set the role—“Pretend you’re my friendly but assertive office manager”—and let AI draft a ‘no’ that won’t burn bridges. Saves time, saves friendships, saves me from waking up at 3AM regretting my reply-all faux pas.
Let’s talk failure—my favorite subject. **Common beginner mistake:** not giving your LLM enough context. I used to just bark vague orders at the AI (“Write a blog post about productivity!”), then wonder why the result sounded like a caffeinated high schooler’s essay. Give the system background, the audience, what’s at stake, and the desired tone. The more context, the more useful (and less cringe-worthy) your output will be. The only context-free thing that ever went well was my failed attempt at sourdough. Trust me, the smell still haunts me.
Ready for some rapid skill-up? **Here’s an exercise for you:** Take a simple prompt like “Explain quantum computing.” Now, rewrite it for three different roles—one as a high school physics teacher, one as a stand-up comic, and one as a time-traveling Victorian scientist. See what you get. It’s weirdly fun and terrifyingly effective for getting the hang of AI tone manipulation.
My last tip today: **How do you evaluate AI content?** Read it aloud. No, really. If you sound like a malfunctioning audiobook or someone reading a legal disclaimer at 1AM, tweak the output. Ask the AI, “What assumptions are you making here?” or “Can you explain this for a 5th grader?” Fresh eyes, fresh perspective. Or you could trust blindly, but I promised you practical, not catastrophic.
That’s a wrap—subscribe to *I am GPTed* anywhere you love your podcasts. Thanks for listening, and remember—if you want more misfit magic, this has been a Quiet Please production. Find more at quietplease.ai.
Stay curious, stay mischievous, and if an LLM tells you it loves you… maybe ask for a second opinion.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
and for some great deals go to https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
  continue reading

128 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 513001934 series 3494377
Content provided by Quiet. Please and Inception Point Ai. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Quiet. Please and Inception Point Ai or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
[Upbeat intro music]
Hey, I’m Mal—the Misfit Master of AI—welcoming you to another episode of *I am GPTed,* the only show that promises practical AI advice, delivered with just enough sarcasm to keep the robots confused and the humans entertained.
Today, we're skipping the usual hype. There will be no metaphors about “unlocking infinite worlds” or “ushering in a new era.” Instead, let’s get ridiculous—ridiculously useful. I’m dishing out one prompting technique that’ll actually make your LLM responses stop sounding like fortune cookies, a clever way to use AI you haven’t thought of, the rookie mistake everyone makes (including yours truly), a dead-simple practice drill, and a tip that will save you from trusting AI like it’s your best friend from kindergarten.
Let’s roll.
First up—**the prompting technique.** It’s called *role prompting.* Yeah, ground-breaking, I know. But stick with me. Imagine you need a document summarized. Most people type, “Summarize this document.” The AI shrugs and spits out a Wikipedia-robot version. But what if you said, “Act as a veteran product marketer with 20 years’ experience and summarize this document so the marketing team can actually use it”? The result comes out sharper, with real insight, and, shocker, a grasp of your audience. It’s like asking someone to cook, but this time you tell them you’re gluten-free and allergic to flavorless pie charts. Instant upgrade.
Here’s my before and after:
- Before: “Summarize meeting notes.”
- After: “You are a people-pleasing executive assistant who translates dense jargon into lunchtime gossip. Summarize these meeting notes with bulleted action items and at least one note of encouragement.”
The difference? You get something actionable—and, if you’re lucky, just a dash of snark for flavor.
Now, **use case time.** Did you know you can use ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini as your *personal email tactician*? Next time you need to decline a meeting or reject an offer (without sounding like a robot or, worse, as emotionally stunted as me on a Monday), feed in the email, set the role—“Pretend you’re my friendly but assertive office manager”—and let AI draft a ‘no’ that won’t burn bridges. Saves time, saves friendships, saves me from waking up at 3AM regretting my reply-all faux pas.
Let’s talk failure—my favorite subject. **Common beginner mistake:** not giving your LLM enough context. I used to just bark vague orders at the AI (“Write a blog post about productivity!”), then wonder why the result sounded like a caffeinated high schooler’s essay. Give the system background, the audience, what’s at stake, and the desired tone. The more context, the more useful (and less cringe-worthy) your output will be. The only context-free thing that ever went well was my failed attempt at sourdough. Trust me, the smell still haunts me.
Ready for some rapid skill-up? **Here’s an exercise for you:** Take a simple prompt like “Explain quantum computing.” Now, rewrite it for three different roles—one as a high school physics teacher, one as a stand-up comic, and one as a time-traveling Victorian scientist. See what you get. It’s weirdly fun and terrifyingly effective for getting the hang of AI tone manipulation.
My last tip today: **How do you evaluate AI content?** Read it aloud. No, really. If you sound like a malfunctioning audiobook or someone reading a legal disclaimer at 1AM, tweak the output. Ask the AI, “What assumptions are you making here?” or “Can you explain this for a 5th grader?” Fresh eyes, fresh perspective. Or you could trust blindly, but I promised you practical, not catastrophic.
That’s a wrap—subscribe to *I am GPTed* anywhere you love your podcasts. Thanks for listening, and remember—if you want more misfit magic, this has been a Quiet Please production. Find more at quietplease.ai.
Stay curious, stay mischievous, and if an LLM tells you it loves you… maybe ask for a second opinion.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
and for some great deals go to https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
  continue reading

128 episodes

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