Improve ChatGPT output with better context, constraints, examples, and iterative refinement. A practical checklist plus a troubleshooting table.
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- Why answers are sometimes disappointing
- The 8-step checklist for better answers
- A prompt upgrade table (bad → better)
- Verification and reality checks
- FAQ
- What if the answer is too long?
- What if it misunderstands me?
- How do I avoid generic answers?
- Key Takeaways
- Useful resources and references
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On SenseCentral, we focus on practical, repeatable workflows. The fastest way to get great results from ChatGPT is to ask like a manager, not like a search engine: give context, define the goal, request an output format, and iterate.
Why answers are sometimes disappointing
Most “bad answers” happen because the prompt is missing at least one of these: goal, context, constraints, examples, or format. Fix those, and quality jumps.
The 8-step checklist for better answers
- State your outcome (“I need a 7‑day plan,” “I need 10 headline ideas,” etc.).
- Provide context (audience, level, tools, location, constraints).
- Request a format (table, bullets, checklist).
- Specify length (e.g., “under 200 words”).
- Give examples of what you like/dislike.
- Ask for options (3 variants).
- Ask for risks + assumptions.
- Iterate with targeted edits (“Rewrite section 2 only”).
A prompt upgrade table (bad → better)
| Problem | Bad prompt | Better prompt |
|---|---|---|
| Vague | “Write a resume.” | “Write a 1‑page resume for a junior Android developer. Use my details below. Format: ATS‑friendly. Include a 2‑line summary + skills table + 4 bullets per job.” |
| No constraints | “Give me a diet plan.” | “Give me a 7‑day vegetarian diet plan for 1800 calories. Include a shopping list and macros.” |
| No audience | “Explain Kubernetes.” | “Explain Kubernetes to a non‑technical founder in 8 bullets. Include 1 analogy and 3 common misconceptions.” |
Verification and reality checks
Ask for a self-check
Prompt: “Before finalizing, list 5 things you might be wrong about and how to verify them.”
Ask for sources
Prompt: “Cite sources (links) for factual claims, and label what’s opinion vs. fact.”
FAQ
What if the answer is too long?
Ask: “Condense to 120 words” or “Give a 1‑page version + a detailed appendix.”
What if it misunderstands me?
Ask it to restate your request in its own words and list assumptions.
How do I avoid generic answers?
Add constraints, your preferences, and ask for specific examples or step-by-step outputs.
Key Takeaways
- Lead with the outcome you want (not just the topic).
- Add context + constraints to prevent generic answers.
- Request a specific output format (table/checklist) for consistency.
- Iterate at least once: “tighten,” “expand,” then “verify.”
- Use SenseCentral resources and your own templates to scale results.
Useful resources and references
Internal links (SenseCentral)
- More SenseCentral posts about ChatGPT
- More SenseCentral posts about Prompt Engineering
- More SenseCentral posts about AI tools
Further reading (external)
- OpenAI Help: Best practices for prompt engineering (API)
- OpenAI Help: Prompt engineering best practices for ChatGPT
- OpenAI Help: How do I create a good prompt?
- OpenAI API: Prompt engineering guide
- PromptingGuide.ai: General tips for designing prompts
References: The links above include official OpenAI help documentation and an independent prompt engineering guide for general prompting principles.
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