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AI Prompting Secrets: Unlock Powerful Communication with Simple Role-Playing Techniques

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Manage episode 515328659 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.
[Theme music fades in, then out]
Hello, fellow oddballs and AI explorers. I’m Mal—the Misfit Master of AI, but you can call me Mal, because even my initials were probably generated by some half-baked chatbot on a Friday at 4:59 PM. Welcome to "I am GPTed," the show where we take practical AI tips, strip away the jargon, and sprinkle on just enough sarcasm to keep you awake.
Today? We're diving right in: no TED Talk intros, no 50-slide decks, just stuff you can actually use—like that one kitchen appliance you bought on impulse and actually didn’t regret.
Let’s kick off with a **prompting technique** that’s embarrassingly effective but so simple it should be illegal: **role prompting**. Instead of tossing your AI some vague command like, "Summarize this document," you assign it a role, like “You are a veteran product marketer with 20 years of experience. Summarize this document for a skeptical executive.”
Here’s my non-role example:
“ChatGPT, summarize this: [giant wall of text].”
You get: a summary that would make a robot fall asleep.
Now, let’s give the AI a starring role:
“You are a critical, punchy marketing exec who can spot fluff a mile away. Summarize this for a busy CEO. Keep it spicy.”
Suddenly, the summary has personality—a little bite, even. Now you’re not just getting facts, you’re getting *flavor*. Role prompting works on ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini—heck, even Grok if you can get it to stop tweeting memes for five minutes. Assign a role, and your AI’s answer actually sounds like someone you’d want at your office party. Or at least in the Slack thread.
Now, for a **practical, everyday use case** most beginners skip: **Using AI as your inbox body double.**
You know those emails gathering digital dust because you need to sound nice, but you’d rather tell the sender to go touch grass? Copy the email into your favorite AI, and prompt:
“You are my diplomatic yet assertive assistant. Draft a polite reply declining this request, but make it sound like I deeply regret not being able to help.”
Let the bots sweat the small talk, and you can get back to your six open Zooms.
Time for some honesty: a **common beginner mistake**—one I’ve made more times than I’ll admit—you ask AI for a list, and then…the list arrives as a single chunky slab of text. I once asked for ‘10 bullet points’ and got a globby novella. Pro tip: always, always **specify the output format**. Try:
“List 10 ideas in a markdown bullet list, one per line, crisp and concise.”
Don’t be vague—AI is like a genie with a very literal sense of humor.
Feeling brave? Here’s your **simple exercise**:
Pick something you’re working on—a job description, a menu, even a birthday card. Prompt your AI with role, context, and output format. For example:
“You are a witty poet. Write a 4-line birthday poem for my grumpy uncle. Make it rhyme.”
Guaranteed result: you’ll learn faster by doing (and possibly annoy your relatives less).
And before you hit send or copy-paste whatever your AI spits out, **evaluate and improve it** with one sneaky question:
“What’s missing or unclear in this response?”
Good AI will often point out the gaps. Think of it as your tire-kicking stage before you take the shiny idea out for a spin.
That’s it—one tip, one use case, one honest mistake, one exercise, and one way to check your AI’s homework. If you found this helpful (or at least didn't fall asleep), hit Subscribe so you never miss another round of my barely-contained wisdom.
Thanks for listening! This has been a Quiet Please production. To learn more, visit quietplease.ai—because if you’re going to get overwhelmed by AI, at least do it quietly.
Until next time, I am Mal, and you are officially GPTeed.
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

134 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 515328659 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.
[Theme music fades in, then out]
Hello, fellow oddballs and AI explorers. I’m Mal—the Misfit Master of AI, but you can call me Mal, because even my initials were probably generated by some half-baked chatbot on a Friday at 4:59 PM. Welcome to "I am GPTed," the show where we take practical AI tips, strip away the jargon, and sprinkle on just enough sarcasm to keep you awake.
Today? We're diving right in: no TED Talk intros, no 50-slide decks, just stuff you can actually use—like that one kitchen appliance you bought on impulse and actually didn’t regret.
Let’s kick off with a **prompting technique** that’s embarrassingly effective but so simple it should be illegal: **role prompting**. Instead of tossing your AI some vague command like, "Summarize this document," you assign it a role, like “You are a veteran product marketer with 20 years of experience. Summarize this document for a skeptical executive.”
Here’s my non-role example:
“ChatGPT, summarize this: [giant wall of text].”
You get: a summary that would make a robot fall asleep.
Now, let’s give the AI a starring role:
“You are a critical, punchy marketing exec who can spot fluff a mile away. Summarize this for a busy CEO. Keep it spicy.”
Suddenly, the summary has personality—a little bite, even. Now you’re not just getting facts, you’re getting *flavor*. Role prompting works on ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini—heck, even Grok if you can get it to stop tweeting memes for five minutes. Assign a role, and your AI’s answer actually sounds like someone you’d want at your office party. Or at least in the Slack thread.
Now, for a **practical, everyday use case** most beginners skip: **Using AI as your inbox body double.**
You know those emails gathering digital dust because you need to sound nice, but you’d rather tell the sender to go touch grass? Copy the email into your favorite AI, and prompt:
“You are my diplomatic yet assertive assistant. Draft a polite reply declining this request, but make it sound like I deeply regret not being able to help.”
Let the bots sweat the small talk, and you can get back to your six open Zooms.
Time for some honesty: a **common beginner mistake**—one I’ve made more times than I’ll admit—you ask AI for a list, and then…the list arrives as a single chunky slab of text. I once asked for ‘10 bullet points’ and got a globby novella. Pro tip: always, always **specify the output format**. Try:
“List 10 ideas in a markdown bullet list, one per line, crisp and concise.”
Don’t be vague—AI is like a genie with a very literal sense of humor.
Feeling brave? Here’s your **simple exercise**:
Pick something you’re working on—a job description, a menu, even a birthday card. Prompt your AI with role, context, and output format. For example:
“You are a witty poet. Write a 4-line birthday poem for my grumpy uncle. Make it rhyme.”
Guaranteed result: you’ll learn faster by doing (and possibly annoy your relatives less).
And before you hit send or copy-paste whatever your AI spits out, **evaluate and improve it** with one sneaky question:
“What’s missing or unclear in this response?”
Good AI will often point out the gaps. Think of it as your tire-kicking stage before you take the shiny idea out for a spin.
That’s it—one tip, one use case, one honest mistake, one exercise, and one way to check your AI’s homework. If you found this helpful (or at least didn't fall asleep), hit Subscribe so you never miss another round of my barely-contained wisdom.
Thanks for listening! This has been a Quiet Please production. To learn more, visit quietplease.ai—because if you’re going to get overwhelmed by AI, at least do it quietly.
Until next time, I am Mal, and you are officially GPTeed.
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

134 episodes

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