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How to Turn a Messy Idea Into a Clear Plan With One “Clarify & Commit” Prompt
This is a longer, story-driven guide you can use as a template—not just a list of tips.
I once spent an entire afternoon “researching” and ended the day with… more tabs.
That’s when I realized my real problem wasn’t effort—it was decision friction.
I needed a repeatable way to turn fuzzy ideas into a clean next step.
The core idea
ChatGPT is most useful when you stop treating it like a search engine and start treating it like a collaborator. Collaboration needs structure: a goal, constraints, and a definition of done.
The 4 building blocks of a great prompt
- Goal: what you want the model to produce.
- Context: what it must know to do it well.
- Constraints: limits that prevent rambling (length, tone, audience).
- Format: the exact shape of the output (HTML, bullets, table).
Copy/paste master prompt
ROLE: You are my assistant.
GOAL: Create [deliverable].
CONTEXT: [background, audience, constraints].
FORMAT: [HTML/bullets/table].
QUALITY: Ask 3 clarifying questions first. Then give (1) quick option, (2) best option.
VERIFY: List assumptions and what to double-check.
Worked example (email / blog / plan)
Here’s an example you can adapt. Notice how the constraints do most of the heavy lifting.
ROLE: You are my editor.
GOAL: Rewrite my draft so it sounds like me.
CONTEXT: Friendly, practical, slightly playful. Audience: beginners.
FORMAT: Keep headings + bullets. 900-1200 words.
QUALITY: Reduce fluff, add a checklist, keep it actionable.
VERIFY: Flag anything that sounds like a claim without evidence.
The 15-minute workflow (repeatable)
- Minute 1: define the goal in one sentence.
- Minute 2: add 3 constraints (audience, tone, length).
- Minutes 3-5: let the model ask questions; answer briefly.
- Minutes 6-10: get the draft in your chosen format (HTML).
- Minutes 11-13: ask for a checklist + common mistakes.
- Minutes 14-15: ask for a shorter version you can post on social.
Quality control: the anti-hallucination mini-checklist
- If the answer includes numbers, names, or dates: ask where they came from.
- If it sounds too confident: request uncertainty and alternatives.
- If it recommends actions: ask for risks and safeguards.
- If it writes in your voice: provide 1-2 examples to match.
Mini prompt library (save these)
- Turn notes into a draft: “Use my notes. Ask questions first. Then write HTML with headings.”
- Make it clearer: “Rewrite 20% shorter, keep meaning, keep tone.”
- Decision help: “Give 2 options and recommend one with tradeoffs.”
- Make a plan: “7 steps, each with deliverable + risks + next action.”
- Make it publish-ready: “Add meta description, title variants, and internal link ideas.”
Recommended tools (affiliate links)
- Noise-cancelling headphones (helps you do focused writing sprints)
- Ergonomic keyboard (your hands will thank you)
- USB microphone (great if you dictate prompts or record content)
- Portable SSD (keep assets and drafts organized)
- Prompting book/guide (extra patterns to steal)
FAQ
- Do I need long prompts? No—just the right context and constraints.
- How do I keep outputs consistent? Save templates and reuse them.
- What should I verify? Any factual claim, statistic, or specific recommendation.
One-day challenge (do this today)
- Pick one real task that’s been hanging over your head.
- Set a 15-minute timer and run the template from this post.
- Ship a “version 1” (even if it’s imperfect).
- Write down one thing you’ll improve tomorrow.
Small reps beat big plans. Tomorrow, repeat with a slightly better prompt or checklist.
Related topics: prompting, planning, focus.
If you found this useful, bookmark it and reuse the templates. The real payoff is repetition.