Your first hour with an AI assistant
Go from “I opened it” to actually getting useful work done — calmly, in one sitting.
Don't test it with trivia. Bring one real task you'd normally spend 30 minutes on, give it plenty of context, and improve the answer over 2–3 replies instead of starting over.
AI is like a brilliant new assistant who knows nothing about you. What you get out depends almost entirely on how well you brief it. The whole skill is briefing and steering — and you can learn it in one focused hour on a task that actually matters to you. Below is that hour, plus a pack of starter prompts you'll reuse for years.
Bring a real task, not a test
The instinct is to test the AI with trivia — 'what's the capital of France', 'write a poem about my dog'. That teaches you nothing and trains you to treat it like a toy. Instead bring something genuinely on your plate: an email you're dreading, a plan you keep avoiding, a messy document to summarise. Real stakes force you to practise the two things that matter — giving context and iterating — because you actually care about the output.
Brief it like a colleague, then iterate
In one message, tell it the goal, who it's for, what 'good' looks like, and any constraints — over-explain rather than under-explain, because context is the single biggest lever on quality. Ask for a first draft and treat it as a starting point, never the final. Then reply with exactly what to change ('shorter', 'warmer', 'lead with the decision') two or three times. The magic is almost always in the second and third reply, not the first.
Direct it like a collaborator
The mindset shift that makes everything click: stop treating AI as a vending machine you put a request into, and start treating it as a fast, tireless collaborator you direct. You're the editor; it's the talented assistant who needs direction. Once that lands you stop being frustrated by imperfect drafts and start steering — and every advanced technique (projects, prompt libraries, chained workflows) is just this same briefing-and-steering instinct scaled up.
- 1Pick one real task from today — an email, a plan, a summary.
- 2In one message give the goal, the audience, what 'good' looks like, and any rules.
- 3Ask for a first draft; treat it as rough.
- 4Reply with exactly what to change. Repeat 2–3 times.
- 5Save the message that worked — you'll reuse it.
Copy-paste prompts to start with
Want the prompts that go further?
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