Master AI Prompting With Role, Goal, and Constraints Plus Meeting Notes Tricks
JUN 10, 20264 MIN
Master AI Prompting With Role, Goal, and Constraints Plus Meeting Notes Tricks
JUN 10, 20264 MIN
Description
[Opening music fades in, then under]
You’re listening to “I Am GPTed,” the show where we turn terrifying robot overlords into slightly overqualified interns.
I’m Mal, the Misfit Master of AI. Or just Mal, if you hate syllables as much as I hate buzzwords.
Today, I’m going to give you one simple prompting trick, a sneaky real‑life use case, one embarrassing beginner mistake I made, a quick practice exercise, and a fast way to tell if the AI just lied to your face. All in about 500 words, because we all have tabs to get back to.
Alright, let’s plug in.
---
First up: **one specific prompting technique** that works across ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, all of them:
**Role + Goal + Constraints.**
Most people type:
“Help me write an email.”
And then wonder why they get something that sounds like a toaster wrote it.
Try this instead:
**Before:**
“Write an email to my boss about a deadline.”
**After:**
“You are a clear, friendly professional writer.
Goal: Write a short email to my boss asking for a 2‑day deadline extension.
Constraints:
- 120 words or less
- No corporate buzzwords
- Sound honest, not desperate.”
Same tools, completely different output. Role, goal, constraints. That’s the holy trinity. No incense required.
---
Next: **a practical use case you probably haven’t tried**.
Use AI as your **meeting memory upgrade**.
After a meeting, drop in your messy notes or bullet points and say:
“Act as my operations assistant. Turn these notes into:
- a clean summary
- 3 clear action items with owners
- 2 risks I should watch out for.”
Now your random brain dump becomes a follow‑up email, a task list, and a “hey, maybe don’t forget this and get fired” warning, all at once. Works for work meetings, PTA meetings, even family planning chaos.
---
Now, **one common beginner mistake** I absolutely made:
Treating AI like Google with manners.
I used to type: “Best ways to be productive?”
Hit enter.
Blindly trust the answer.
Then wonder why nothing changed in my life except my screen time.
The fix?
Turn it into a **conversation, not a vending machine**.
Instead of:
“Give me a workout plan.”
Try:
“Here’s what I’ve tried, what I like, and what I hate. Ask me 5 questions first, then build a 4‑week plan based on my answers.”
Good prompts tell the AI what to do.
Great prompts invite the AI to ask you better questions first.
---
Let’s do a **simple exercise** to build your AI skills. You can do this with any model:
1. Pick one small task: “Plan a 20‑minute dinner,” or “Summarize this article for a 10‑year‑old.”
2. Write your first prompt in one sentence.
3. Get the answer.
4. Now refine: add role, goal, and 2–3 constraints.
5. Compare version 1 and version 2.
Do this once a day for a week. You’ll develop a feel for how much detail gets you consistently better output, without turning every prompt into a novel.
---
Finally, **how to evaluate and improve AI‑generated content**:
Use the **3 C’s Check**:
- **Clear** – Can a smart 12‑year‑old understand this? If not, ask: “Rewrite this in plain language with shorter sentences.”
- **Correct** – Ask it: “List 3 things in this answer that might be wrong or need a source.” Then go sanity‑check those parts yourself.
- **Custom** – Does it sound like *you*? If it sounds like a LinkedIn post in a suit, say: “Rewrite this in my voice: casual, a bit dry, and less dramatic.”
Never accept the first draft as “done.” Treat it as “version zero.”
---
If this helped you feel a little more GPTed and a little less defeated, hit **subscribe** to the podcast so you don’t miss future episodes.
Thanks for listening and letting me live rent‑free in your headphones.
This has been a Quiet Please production. You can learn more at **quietplease.ai**.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
and for some great deals go to https://amzn.to/4nidg0P