The Smart Intern
Think of AI as the most impressive person you've ever met β knows everything about any topic, works in seconds, but might confidently say something wrong. Your job: give it direction.
Meet your new team member
Imagine you just hired someone who:
- Smart β has read practically every book, article, and paper ever published. Can speak on any topic.
- Fast β delivers in seconds what takes you 30 minutes
- Clueless about you β knows nothing about your role, your company, your preferences, or your current situation
- Occasionally wrong β can sound extremely confident while saying something completely made up (we'll cover how to catch this in Day 15)
That gap between "knows everything" and "knows nothing about you" β that's called context. And it's the single biggest lever you have. The more context you give, the better the output.
Context changes everything
Same AI, same question, completely different results:
β Generic, could be from anyone, about anything
β Specific, nuanced, sounds like you wrote it
Same AI. Completely different output. The difference is the context you provided. This is the #1 skill of the entire course.
Prompt frameworks that work
There are several proven structures for giving AI good context. Pick whichever feels natural β they all work. The point is: stop winging it.
ROLE: You are [what AI should act as]
CONTEXT: [Background, situation, constraints]
TASK: [What you want done]
FORMAT: [How you want the output β bullets, email, table, etc.]
ROLE: You are [expert persona]
INPUT: [The raw material β paste data, notes, context]
STEPS: [Break down what to do: first..., then..., finally...]
EXPECTATION: [What "good" looks like]
NARROWING: [Constraints: tone, length, what to avoid]
Act as [role]. I need [task]. Here's the context: [paste everything relevant]. Give me [format]. Keep it [constraint].
Your task: Delegate 5 real tasks
Open your actual to-do list, inbox, or calendar. Pick 5 tasks. Click any card below to see the full prompt template you can copy-paste:
How to evaluate the output
After each task, ask yourself:
You don't discover what AI is useful for by reading articles about it. You discover it by throwing your actual work at it and seeing what sticks. 5 tasks today. Some will surprise you. Some won't. Both are data.
Keep a mental note of which task worked best. That's a clue about where AI fits into your workflow β not someone else's.