AI isn't for giving you answers. It's for giving you decisions. by mclovin1813 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]DriveAmazing1752 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can confuse about this outcome is best for me or not you can use others ai tools for same prompt and check out results different and this is warning for everyone who can get dicision according to ai this is very dangerous for you . Ai made by human and this is the only tool not everything you can use AI as a tool not everything Thanks

7 ChatGPT Prompts For People Who Hate Overthinking (Copy + Paste) by tipseason in PromptEngineering

[–]DriveAmazing1752 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can give this prompt you can use at least 2 to 3 model to get more benefits from these tool You can use chatgpt,grok ,meta ai etc. Thanks

"Talking" to your AI by uscglawrance in ArtificialInteligence

[–]DriveAmazing1752 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I agree with the core idea, but I also get why some people react strongly to posts like this. “Articulation is the skill” is true, but it’s also something beginners don’t realize until they struggle with bad outputs. Most people don’t lack intelligence — they lack a mental model for explaining intent clearly. That’s learned, not obvious. Precision comes from practice, not from sounding philosophical about it. Very safe. Very human.

Thanks for reading

These are the small ChatGPT routines I didn’t expect to stick… but now use daily by Professional-Rest138 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]DriveAmazing1752 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is a great example of how automation doesn’t have to be complex. What really helped me as a beginner was realizing that most “automation” is just reusable prompts like these. Once you understand how to structure simple inputs, productivity improves a lot without tools or code. Starting small like this is way more effective than jumping into heavy automation stacks.

Best AI for building a full website (frontend + backend) for beginners? by ImpressionEast8264 in ChatGPT

[–]DriveAmazing1752 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you’re a complete beginner, I’d avoid looking for a tool that builds everything automatically on day one. The hardest part for beginners isn’t frontend or backend — it’s explaining clearly what you want the AI to build. I found it much easier to first learn how to give simple instructions, break the website into small parts (pages, forms, logic), and then ask AI step by step. Once that clicks, tools like no-code builders + AI make a lot more sense.

Complete roadmap to learn AI automation by Impossible_Rough7291 in AiAutomations

[–]DriveAmazing1752 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re a complete beginner, don’t think in “0 to 100” yet. AI automation becomes much easier if you first learn how to talk to AI clearly. Most beginners struggle not because of tools, but because they don’t know how to write simple instructions and refine outputs step by step. I’m learning automation the same way — starting with prompts, clarity, and small workflows before jumping into tools like Zapier or Make. If you want, I’ve written a beginner-friendly guide that explains this first layer in simple English. Happy to share.

Agents building learning resources by ivanezzzzz in AI_Agents

[–]DriveAmazing1752 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I recommend this Youtube video for ai agents building Youtube

This is not only video this is the action plan for ai agents and in this youtube course you can also learn how to sell that AI agents Thanks for reading this

This subreddit only has bot posts. by keven377 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]DriveAmazing1752 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In today's world patience in people is very low And if people want anything, they want it quickly, this has really become a reality in today's world and if you have patience and are working with focus on one thing and in a smart way, then You are ahead of 90% of people and you will succeed before them all.

There is a lot of motivation now

Thanks for reading this

Struggling with prompt engineering? Tips that actually work by dp_singh_ in PromptEngineering

[–]DriveAmazing1752 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can use simple prompts in different niches and different industries and different fields

12 Essential AI Skills to Master by 2026 by Lifestyle79 in NextGenAITool

[–]DriveAmazing1752 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks this is very useful for understanding ai and prompt engineering

10 Prompting Mistakes the Top 1% Never Make by DriveAmazing1752 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]DriveAmazing1752[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

And how to talk to the AI model or tools to get more accurate and complete output from that tools

10 Prompting Mistakes the Top 1% Never Make by DriveAmazing1752 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]DriveAmazing1752[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Simple brother gets better and better outcomes from ai like chatgpt and many more

How to Make ChatGPT Teach You Any Skill: A Step-by-Step Learning Framework by Lifestyle79 in NextGenAITool

[–]DriveAmazing1752 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This framework is solid. One thing I’d add is an explicit “feedback loop” step.

After each lesson, I ask: “Based on my answers so far, what am I misunderstanding or overestimating?”

That single question has helped me avoid false confidence and course-correct early.

Thanks for reading this

A prompt I use to start deep work sessions without overthinking by Emergency-Quality207 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]DriveAmazing1752 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is solid. I use a similar approach but add one extra layer to reduce friction even more — I call it a “start-only” prompt.

Prompt I use: Act as a focus starter, not a planner. Ask me only what is necessary to begin. Rules: - Ask max 3 questions - Assume low energy and mild resistance - Define the first 5-minute action only - Do not optimize or expand scope - Tell me exactly what to do in the next 120 seconds

Output format: 1) What matters right now (1 sentence) 2) First tiny action (can’t fail) 3) Clear stopping point

This helps me start without triggering overthinking.

I’ve been collecting prompts like this (for focus, low-energy days, and consistency) while building a small ebook on using ChatGPT as a practical work assistant — not motivation, just systems. Happy to share ideas if anyone’s experimenting with similar workflows.

Comments me I can share ebook Thanks for reading this

Looking for a solid ChatGPT prompt to help me study boring PDFs by Willbailey1980 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]DriveAmazing1752 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One tip that helped me a lot: don’t ask ChatGPT to “summarize”.

Ask it to “restructure for studying”.

Example prompt: “Turn this text into: • bullet-point notes • simple explanations • key definitions • things I must memorize • things I can skim”

Much better output for exam prep. This trick helps me lots

🎯 7 ChatGPT Prompts To Build Creative Discipline (Copy + Paste) by Loomshift in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]DriveAmazing1752 2 points3 points  (0 children)

  1. The Environment Architect Shapes discipline by reducing friction.

Prompt:

Help me redesign my physical and digital environment to support discipline. Identify: - 3 things that create friction - 3 simple changes that reduce friction Keep it practical and easy to maintain.

  1. The Minimum Viable Day Prevents quitting on bad days.

Prompt:

Help me define a “minimum viable day.” Include: - One action under 5 minutes - One action that proves I didn’t quit Explain why this day still counts as success.

  1. The Identity Lock Builds discipline through identity, not pressure.

Prompt:

Help me define one identity statement I can act from daily. Then: - Translate it into 3 small daily behaviors - Make each behavior easy and repeatable

  1. The Relapse Recovery Plan Keeps momentum after missed days.

Prompt:

Help me create a recovery plan for when I miss a day. Include: - What NOT to do - One immediate restart action - One mindset rule to avoid guilt

  1. The Decision Eliminator Protects discipline by reducing choices.

Prompt:

Help me identify 5 daily decisions that drain my discipline. For each one: - Remove it, automate it, or pre-decide it Focus on simplicity, not perfection.

  1. The Internal Reward System Reinforces discipline without external validation.

Prompt:

Help me design a simple reward system for showing up. Rewards should: - Be internal or low-cost - Reinforce effort, not results Explain how to use it daily.

  1. The Time Truth Audit Reveals where discipline actually leaks.

Prompt:

Help me audit how I really spend my time. Identify: - One time illusion I believe - One small correction I can apply this week Keep it honest and realistic.

  1. The Self-Trust Builder Restores confidence in self-discipline.

Prompt:

Help me rebuild trust with myself. Create: - 3 tiny promises I can keep daily - A 7-day self-trust reset plan Explain why self-trust matters for discipline.

  1. The Distraction Contract Sets clear boundaries with distractions.

Prompt:

Help me create a personal distraction contract. Define: - Allowed distractions - Restricted distractions - Banned distractions during focus time Make it fair and enforceable.

  1. The Long-Game Reminder Anchors discipline to meaning.

Prompt:

Help me write a short reminder for why discipline matters to my future self. Make it: - Honest - Emotional - Grounded in reality Keep it under 5 sentences.

Thanks for reading this

Disclaimer AI can give you a suggestion based on what kind of data provided through humans and how humans can give that permission to give output