Let’s get this out of the way:
You don’t need to write like a Silicon Valley researcher to get good results from AI.
No “as an expert in quantum linguistics…”
No “assume the role of a medieval blacksmith who also bakes sourdough…”
You just need to think less like a coder and more like a collaborator.
Imagine this:
You’re not prompting a robot.
You’re delegating a task to a brilliant—but extremely literal—intern.
Would you say:
“Analyze sentiment using tiered evaluation structures within NLP context”?
…or just:
“Check if this tweet sounds negative or sarcastic.”
Guess which one works better?
You don’t need more words.
You need better setup.
✅ Instead of:
“Write me a viral tweet about productivity.”
👉 Try:
“Write a tweet about how I get distracted by AI tools while trying to work. Make it funny but relatable to remote workers.”
You’re not just telling it what to do, you’re showing it who it’s for.
Forget “Prompt Engineering.”
Think “Scene Directing.”
Like this:
“I’m emailing a client who missed our meeting. I’m annoyed, but I want to stay professional. Draft something that nudges them firmly but politely.”
Boom. AI gets it.
Because you got it first.
Some of the best prompts start with:
Forget the jargon. Use real voice. AI responds better to natural intent than forced formula.
If you want to prompt smarter without switching tabs,
or skip the whole “copy → paste → tab hop” routine…
🔗 Learn more about QuickAsk AI at https://quickask.me
🧩 Or install it now from the Chrome Web Store
🧠 It’s like whispering to your AI assistant — wherever your cursor is.