[0:00] Most people are using Chad GBT [0:02] completely wrong. They type in basic [0:04] questions and basic answers and think [0:06] that's all there is to it. But here's [0:07] what they don't realize. The difference [0:09] between beginner and an expert isn't [0:12] just knowledge. It's knowing the right [0:14] prompts to unlock GPT's true potential. [0:16] The problem is most tutorials show you [0:18] surface level tricks while the real [0:20] power stays hidden. Today I'm going to [0:22] show you exactly 21 prompts will [0:24] transform you from someone who asks, [0:26] "Hey, can you help me with this?" to [0:28] someone who commands chat GBT like a [0:31] professional tool. We'll go from basic [0:33] conversations to advanced techniques [0:35] most people don't even know exist. Let's [0:37] start with the seven prompts that will [0:39] take you from a complete beginner to [0:41] someone who actually understands how [0:42] chat GPT thinks. Prompt one, basic [0:45] structure. Most people type something [0:47] like, "Write me a blog post about [0:50] marketing." That's amateur hour. Here's [0:52] the professional approach. You are an [0:54] experienced marketing strategist. Write [0:56] a 1,000word blog post about email [0:58] marketing for small businesses. Include [1:00] specific tactics. Avoid generic advice [1:03] and format it with clear subheadings and [1:05] bullet points. See the difference? I [1:07] gave it a role, specific task, clear [1:10] constraints, and formatting [1:12] requirements. When I run this prompt, [1:14] Chad GPT doesn't just generate text, [1:16] creates structured professional content [1:18] because I told it exactly what I wanted. [1:20] The amateur version would give you [1:22] something that screams AI generated. The [1:25] professional version gives you content [1:27] that's indistinguishable from expert [1:29] human writing, but I always recommend [1:30] add a bit of human touch. Remember, AI [1:33] is not creator. It is very efficient [1:35] assistant. Actually, before we dive into [1:37] the next prompts, show you what I [1:39] personally use to save my prompt writing [1:41] time. While you're learning these [1:42] techniques, you probably don't want to [1:44] memorize every single prompt structure, [1:47] right? Look inside AM Pro, we have [1:49] Prompt Lab Pro. 300 plus readyto-use [1:52] prompts for exactly what we're covering [1:55] today. Content creation, data analysis, [1:57] business automation. Instead of starting [1:59] from scratch every time, just grab a [2:01] proven template, customize it, and [2:03] you're done. This is especially powerful [2:05] for freelancers and entrepreneurs who [2:07] need consistent results without spending [2:09] hours crafting the perfect prompt. But [2:11] let's keep building your foundation with [2:13] prompt number two. Prompt two, [2:15] roleplaying power. Here's where most [2:17] people completely miss the boat. They [2:19] think chat GPT is just a smart search [2:22] engine, but it's actually a master actor [2:25] that embody any expertise you need. Try [2:27] this. You are Gordon Ramsay teaching [2:30] cooking to a nervous home chef. I want [2:32] to make beef Wellington, but I've never [2:34] done pastry work. Be encouraging, but [2:36] honest about the challenges. Give me [2:38] step-by-step instructions in your [2:40] characteristic style. When I run this, [2:42] GPT5 doesn't just give me a recipe, [2:44] becomes Gordon Ramsay. the tone, the [2:46] encouragement, the brutal honesty about [2:48] technique. It's all there. This is [2:50] because Chad GPT has been trained on [2:52] massive amounts of text, including [2:54] interviews, shows, and writing from real [2:57] experts. But most people pick boring [2:59] roles. Be a teacher is weak. Be a [3:01] patient kindergarten teacher. Helping a [3:04] frustrated parent with homeschool math [3:06] is powerful. Specificity in ROS creates [3:09] authenticity and responses. Prompt [3:11] three, stepbystep mastery. Most people [3:13] ask chat GBT to solve complex problems [3:16] in one go, then get frustrated when the [3:18] answer is shallow or incorrect. [3:20] Professionals know how to break down [3:23] complex requests. Instead of how do I [3:25] start a business, try this. I want to [3:27] start an online consulting business. [3:29] Walk me through this step by step. [3:31] First, help me identify my expertise and [3:34] target market. Wait for my response [3:36] before moving to step two. Then, we'll [3:38] work on pricing strategy. Then, [3:40] marketing approach. Then, legal setup. [3:42] Ask clarifying questions at each step. [3:44] This approach turns Czech GPT into a [3:47] consultant rather than search engine. It [3:50] forces the AI to go deeper, ask [3:53] questions, and create a customized road [3:55] map instead of generic advice. When I [3:57] use this technique, I get responses that [3:59] are 10 times more valuable because Chad [4:01] GBT is forced to think through the [4:03] problem methodically rather than [4:05] generating surface level content. Prompt [4:07] four, formatting control. Here's a [4:09] simple trick that immediately makes your [4:11] outputs more professional. Most people [4:13] let Chad GPT choose how to format [4:16] responses, but professionals control [4:18] every aspect. Try this. Create a [4:21] comparison between iPhone and Android [4:23] phones. Format your response as a table [4:25] with these columns. Feature iPhone, [4:27] Android, winner. Include 10 key [4:30] comparison points. After the table, [4:32] provide a one paragraph recommendation [4:34] for business users and another for [4:36] creative professionals. This level of [4:38] formatting control makes GPT's outputs [4:40] immediately usable in presentations, [4:42] reports, or client communications. [4:44] You're not just getting information, you [4:46] are getting professionally formatted [4:48] deliverables. You know what's crazy? We [4:50] spend all this time mastering chat GPT5 [4:53] and these incredible AI tools, but most [4:55] sales teams are still drowning in busy [4:58] work. It's like having a Ferrari, but [5:00] being stuck in traffic. That's exactly [5:02] why I'm excited to tell you about [5:03] today's sponsor, ZAMS. Think of it as [5:05] your AI command center for sales. Here's [5:08] what makes it different. Instead of [5:09] clicking through 10 different apps, you [5:12] just tell ZAMS what you need in plain [5:13] English. You can say something like, [5:15] "Pull my latest call from AMC from Gong [5:18] and add a summary in Salesforce." It [5:21] just happens. Or every time we get a [5:23] demo request, assign the right rep and [5:26] send me a Gmail asking for approval. The [5:28] thing is, ZAMS connects to everything [5:31] you already use. Salesforce, HubSpot, [5:33] Slack, Apollo, Gong, and 100 plus other [5:37] apps. But instead of managing each tool [5:39] separately, you're running them all from [5:41] one interface. Sales teams using ZAMS [5:43] are saving 20 plus hours a week. If busy [5:46] work is the hidden tax on your revenue, [5:49] ZAMS cuts it out. Check out the link in [5:51] the description to book a demo and see [5:53] it in action. Let's get back to [5:54] mastering the next prompt. Prompt five, [5:57] context and constraints. This is where [5:59] beginners often struggle. They either [6:01] give too little context or too much. [6:04] Here's the sweet spot. I'm a freelance [6:06] web designer who primarily works with [6:08] local restaurants. I need to write a [6:10] cold email to a new Italian restaurant [6:12] that just opened downtown. The email [6:14] should be personal but professional. [6:16] Mention their recent opening, offer [6:18] specific web design services they likely [6:20] need, and include a soft call to action. [6:23] Keep it under 150 words, and avoid [6:25] overly salesy language. This prompt [6:27] gives Chad GBT enough context to write [6:29] something specific and relevant while [6:32] constraints ensure the output meets my [6:34] exact needs. Without constraints, it [6:36] might write a 500word sales pitch that [6:39] nobody would actually send. Prompt six, [6:41] style mirroring. Here's a technique that [6:43] most people never discover. You can [6:46] teach it to write in your exact style by [6:49] giving it samples of your writing. [6:51] Analyze the writing style in this email [6:53] I wrote. Paste your email. Now, write a [6:56] follow-up email to the same client about [6:58] project delays. Matching my tone, [7:00] sentence structure, and communication [7:02] approach. Exactly. This is incredibly [7:04] powerful for business communication. [7:06] Once GPT understands your style, can [7:08] write emails, proposals, and content [7:10] that sound authentically like you. I use [7:13] this technique to maintain consistent [7:15] voice across all my communications, even [7:17] when I'm pressed for time. Prompt seven, [7:20] error correction. Here's what separates [7:22] beginners from experts. Knowing how to [7:24] fix problems when chat GBT gets it [7:27] wrong. Instead of starting over, [7:28] professionals know how to guide the AI [7:31] back on track. When it gives you [7:32] something offtarget, don't just type [7:35] that's wrong. Instead, try this. That [7:37] response was too technical for my [7:39] audience. Rewrite it for business owners [7:41] who aren't familiar with marketing [7:43] jargon. Use simple language and [7:45] practical examples instead of theory. [7:47] This approach teaches chat GPT exactly [7:50] what went wrong and how to fix it rather [7:52] than forcing it to guess what you wanted [7:55] because the biggest AI world problem is [7:58] chaos. GBT5 here claw there new models [8:02] every week prompts scattered across [8:04] notebooks. Most people drown in this [8:06] mess instead of getting results. That's [8:08] exactly why we built AI Master Pro. It's [8:11] your home base for everything AI. [8:13] Imagine instead of hunting for prompts [8:15] online, you have a library of 300 plus [8:18] tested templates. Instead of wondering [8:20] if you're using AI right, you get our [8:22] complete AI master method that walks you [8:25] through building sellable AI offers. [8:27] Instead of falling behind every week, [8:30] you get curated updates and a community [8:32] of people actually making money with AI. [8:34] Look, these 21 prompts are powerful, but [8:37] they are just the beginning. If you want [8:38] the full system that turns GBT5 into [8:41] your personal AI employee, check out AM [8:43] Master Pro. Links below. Now, we're [8:45] moving into techniques that most casual [8:47] users never learn. These eight prompts [8:49] will transform how you think about AI [8:52] interaction. Prompt eight, chain of [8:54] thought reasoning. This is where the [8:55] GPT5 really shines compared to earlier [8:58] models. You can force it to show its [9:01] think and process, which leads to much [9:03] better results. I need to decide whether [9:05] to hire a full-time marketing manager or [9:07] use freelancers for my growing SES [9:10] company. Walk me through your reasoning [9:12] process step by step. First, analyze the [9:14] pros and cons of each approach. Then, [9:17] consider the specific context of CES [9:19] businesses. Finally, factor in cost, [9:21] scalability, and control. Show me your [9:24] complete thought process before giving [9:26] your final recommendation. When I use [9:28] this prompt, GBT5 doesn't just give me [9:30] an answer, shows me exactly how it [9:32] arrived at that answer. This [9:34] transparency allows me to spot flaws in [9:37] reasoning or areas where I need to [9:39] provide additional context. The magic [9:41] happens in that phrase, show me your [9:44] complete thought process. This forces [9:46] GBT5 to be methodical rather than just [9:49] generating text that sounds good. Prompt [9:51] nine, nested complexity. This is where [9:54] we start getting into advanced [9:56] territory. Instead of asking for simple [9:58] outputs, you can create prompts within [10:00] prompts that handle complex multi-part [10:03] requests. Create a content marketing [10:05] strategy for a B2B software company. [10:07] Structure your response in three nested [10:09] levels. Level one, overall strategy and [10:12] goals. Level two, monthly themes and [10:15] content pillars. Level three, specific [10:17] content pieces for month one, including [10:19] blog topics, social media posts, and [10:22] email sequences. For each content piece, [10:24] provide the title, target audience, key [10:26] points to cover, and distribution [10:28] channels. This type of nested prompting [10:30] allows you to get comprehensive [10:32] deliverables instead of surface level [10:34] advice. You're essentially creating a [10:35] content production system rather than [10:38] just getting ideas. Prompt 10, [10:40] perspective switching. This technique is [10:42] incredibly powerful for decision-m or [10:45] get in comprehensive analysis and force [10:47] GPT5 to examine issues from multiple [10:50] viewpoints. I'm considering pivoting my [10:52] consulting business from general [10:54] business consulting to AI implementation [10:56] specifically. Analyze this decision from [10:59] three perspectives. One, as a [11:01] conservative CFO focused on financial [11:03] risk. Two, as an aggressive growth [11:05] strategist focused on market [11:07] opportunity. Three, as a cautious [11:09] operations manager focused on execution [11:11] challenges. After all, three analyses [11:13] synthesize the insights into actionable [11:15] recommendations. This approach prevents [11:17] the tunnel vision that often happens [11:19] when you only ask for one perspective. [11:21] You get a more complete picture of [11:24] complex decisions because GBT5 is forced [11:27] to consider multiple angles. Prompt 11. [11:30] Image generation mastery. Now we're [11:32] getting into Chad GBT's multimodal [11:34] capabilities. Most people use image [11:36] generation like this. Create a logo for [11:38] my business. That's amateur. Try this [11:41] instead. Generate a minimalist logo for [11:43] a sustainable tech startup. The company [11:45] develops solar panel optimization [11:47] software. Style should be clean [11:49] geometric shapes. Incorporate subtle [11:52] solar or tech elements. Use a palette of [11:54] deep blue and gold suitable for both [11:56] digital and print applications. Avoid [11:58] cliche sun symbols or overly complex [12:01] designs. Create something that would [12:03] work well on business cards and [12:04] billboards equally. The specificity in [12:07] style color application and [12:09] constraints gives you professionalgrade [12:11] results instead of generic clip art. I [12:13] always include what to avoid because [12:15] GPT5 tends toward cliches without [12:18] specific guidance. Prompt 12, vision [12:21] analysis power. This is where Chad GPT's [12:24] vision capabilities really shine. Most [12:27] people just upload images and ask, "What [12:30] is this?" But professionals use vision [12:32] for strategic analysis. I'm uploading a [12:34] photo of my competitor's retail display. [12:37] Analyze this image from a marketing [12:39] perspective. Identify the target [12:40] demographic they're appealing to. [12:42] evaluate the effectiveness of product [12:44] placement, assess the use of color and [12:46] visual hierarchy, and suggest three [12:48] specific improvements I can implement in [12:50] my own store layout. This transforms [12:52] check GBT from a basic image identifier [12:55] into a marketing consultant that can [12:57] analyze visual strategy and provide [12:59] actionable insights. Prompt 13: OCR and [13:03] document intelligence. Here's a [13:05] capability most people completely [13:07] overlook. GPT5 can read text from images [13:10] and documents, but more importantly [13:12] analyze and act on that information. I'm [13:15] uploading a screenshot of my [13:16] competitor's pricing page. First, [13:18] extract all the pricing information [13:20] accurately. Then analyze their pricing [13:22] strategy. What market position are they [13:24] taking? What psychology are they using? [13:27] Where are the gaps I could exploit? [13:28] Finally, suggest how I should position [13:30] my pricing to compete effectively. This [13:33] turns GBT5 into competitive intelligence [13:36] tool that not only reads information but [13:38] provides strategic analysis based on [13:40] what it finds. Prompt 14. Voice mode [13:43] conversations. Voice mode isn't just for [13:46] convenience. It unlocks different types [13:48] of interactions that text can provide. [13:50] The key is structuring voice prompts [13:53] differently. When using voice, try I [13:55] want to practice a sales pitch for a new [13:58] client. You'll play the role of a [14:00] skeptical business owner who needs [14:02] convincing. Interrupt me with realistic [14:05] objections and questions. Let's have a [14:07] natural conversation where you challenge [14:09] my points and I respond. Start by asking [14:11] me what I'm selling. Voice mode creates [14:13] more natural conversational interactions [14:16] that can help with practice, [14:17] brainstorming, and working through [14:19] complex ideas in a way that feels more [14:22] collaborative. So, you're basically [14:23] pitching me an all-in-one hub so I don't [14:26] have to juggle a bunch of different AI [14:28] tools and subscriptions separately. [14:30] Prompt 15, agent mode automation. This [14:33] is where GBT5 starts feeling like having [14:35] a personal assistant. Agent mode allows [14:38] GBT5 to work more autonomously on [14:40] complex tasks. Research and create a [14:43] comprehensive competitive analysis for [14:45] my email marketing software startup. [14:47] Identify the top 10 competitors. analyze [14:50] their pricing, features, and market [14:52] positioning. Create a comparison matrix [14:54] of competitors, highlight market gaps, [14:56] and suggest positioning strategies for [14:58] my product. Work through this [14:59] systematically, and ask me clarifying [15:01] questions if something is unclear or [15:04] needs more detail. Agent mode allows [15:06] GBT5 to break down complex projects into [15:10] steps, work through them methodically, [15:12] and come back to you with comprehensive [15:14] results rather than requiring constant [15:16] guidance. Now, we're entering expert [15:18] territory. These six prompts represent [15:21] techniques that separate professionals [15:23] from everyone else. Prompt 16, study [15:25] mode mastery. Study mode turns GPT5 into [15:29] personalized tutor that adapts to your [15:31] learning style and knowledge gaps. I [15:33] need to learn digital marketing [15:34] fundamentals for my business, but I'm a [15:37] visual learner who learns best through [15:39] practical examples. Create a [15:41] personalized learning path. Start with a [15:43] knowledge assessment to identify what I [15:45] already know. Then create lessons that [15:47] build systematically. Use real business [15:49] case studies include practical exercises [15:51] I can implement and check my [15:53] understanding before moving to the next [15:55] concept. Begin with the assessment. This [15:57] approach creates a customized [15:59] educational experience rather than just [16:01] dumping information. GBT5 becomes a [16:04] learning partner that adapts to your [16:06] needs and pace. Prompt 17, advanced data [16:09] analysis. Here's where GBT5's analytical [16:12] capabilities really shine. Most people [16:15] upload spreadsheets and ask for basic [16:17] summaries, but experts know how to [16:19] extract strategic insights. I'm [16:22] uploading six months of sales data for [16:24] my e-commerce business, perform a [16:26] comprehensive analysis, identify [16:28] seasonal trends, calculate customer [16:29] lifetime value patterns, analyze product [16:32] performance correlations, detect any [16:34] anomalies or unusual patterns, and [16:36] predict likely outcomes for the next [16:38] quarter. Present findings as an [16:40] executive summary with visual [16:41] recommendations for strategic decisions. [16:44] This transforms raw data into actionable [16:47] business intelligence. GPT5 doesn't just [16:50] read your data, becomes a data scientist [16:52] that can spot patterns and provide [16:54] strategic recommendations. Prompt 18, [16:58] creative combination mastery. This is [17:00] where things get really interesting. You [17:02] can combine multiple creative elements [17:05] in ways that would be impossible with [17:07] traditional tools. Create a marketing [17:10] campaign that combines the storytelling [17:11] approach of Pixar movies with the direct [17:14] response techniques of old school mail [17:16] order ads targeted at millennial [17:18] entrepreneurs who are building their [17:20] first businesses. The campaign should [17:22] feel emotionally compelling but drive [17:25] immediate action. include three [17:27] different touch points, an email [17:28] sequence, social media content, and a [17:30] landing page concept. This type of [17:32] creative hybridization allows you to [17:34] create truly unique approaches by [17:37] combining elements that wouldn't [17:38] normally go together. Prompt 19, [17:41] template creation systems. Instead of [17:43] just getting one-off outputs, experts [17:46] create reusable systems and templates [17:48] that can be applied repeatedly. Create a [17:50] comprehensive template system for client [17:53] onboarding in my web design business. [17:55] include initial client questionnaire [17:57] with strategic questions, project [17:59] timeline template that can be [18:01] customized, communication templates for [18:03] each project phase, and a final delivery [18:05] checklist. Make each template [18:07] professional but personalized to my [18:08] brand voice. Also create instructions [18:10] for how to customize these templates for [18:13] different client types. This approach [18:14] builds business systems rather than just [18:17] solving immediate problems. You're [18:18] creating assets that improve your [18:20] business operations long term. Prompt [18:22] 20, handling complex problems. Expert [18:25] level prompting involves knowing how to [18:27] structure complex multi-layered problems [18:30] that require sophisticated reasoning. [18:32] I'm dealing with a complex business [18:34] situation. My main client wants to [18:36] reduce their budget by 40% but they also [18:38] want to expand the scope of work. I have [18:40] three team members whose jobs might be [18:42] at risk and I'm considering pivoting to [18:45] a different service model entirely. Help [18:47] me think through this systematically. [18:49] First map out all the interconnected [18:51] factors and potential consequences. then [18:53] generate multiple solution paths, [18:55] evaluate each path's risks and benefits, [18:57] and finally recommend a decision [18:59] framework I can use to choose the best [19:01] approach. This type of prompt treats [19:03] GBT5 as a strategic thinking partner [19:06] rather than just an information [19:08] provider. You're leveraging its reason [19:09] and capabilities to work through complex [19:12] ambiguous situations. Prompt 21, master [19:16] integration prompt. This is the [19:18] culmination, a prompt that combines [19:20] multiple advanced techniques to solve [19:22] comprehensive business challenges. I am [19:24] the founder of growing digital marketing [19:27] agency. I need a complete strategic plan [19:29] that addresses multiple interconnected [19:32] challenges. Act as my senior business [19:34] advisor and work through this [19:36] systematically. This technique actually [19:38] reminds me of something we teach inside [19:41] AI Master Pro. the idea that AI works [19:44] best when you give it specific roles and [19:46] constraints. We have entire modules on [19:49] this in our generative AI course. But [19:51] the key principle is what we're doing [19:53] right here. Phase one, analyze my [19:55] current situation using the data I'll [19:57] provide about revenue, team structure, [20:00] and client portfolio. Identify [20:02] strengths, weaknesses, and market [20:04] position. Phase two, research market [20:06] trends in digital marketing and identify [20:10] emerging opportunities that align with [20:12] my company's capabilities. Phase three, [20:14] develop three distinct growth scenarios, [20:17] conservative, moderate, and aggressive [20:19] with specific tactics, resource [20:21] requirements, and timeline for each. [20:23] Phase four, create implementation [20:26] templates, including hiring plans, [20:28] service offerings, pricing strategies, [20:30] and client acquisition systems. Phase [20:32] five, build monitoring system with KPIs [20:35] and decision points for each growth [20:37] phase. Work through each phase [20:39] methodically, ask clarifying questions [20:41] when needed, and present deliverables [20:43] that I can implement immediately. Begin [20:45] with phase one, and wait for my input [20:48] before proceeding. This type of master [20:50] prompt demonstrates how GBT5 can serve [20:53] as a comprehensive business partner [20:55] rather than just a tool for individual [20:57] tasks. Let me share the most important [20:59] insights I've learned from working with [21:01] GBT5 at this level. First, the biggest [21:03] mistake I see people make is trying to [21:06] get everything in one prompt. ChatGpt [21:08] works best when you treat it as [21:10] conversation partner rather than search [21:12] engine. Build complexity through [21:15] iteration rather than trying to create [21:17] the perfect prompt up front. Second, [21:19] always be specific about what you don't [21:22] want. Chad GPT has a tendency toward [21:24] explain cliches and generic responses. [21:27] Explicitly telling it what to avoid is [21:30] often more powerful than telling it what [21:31] to include. Third, context is [21:33] everything, but too much context can be [21:36] counterproductive. The sweet spot is [21:38] giving chat GPT enough information to [21:41] understand your situation without [21:43] overwhelming it with irrelevant details. [21:45] Fourth, save your best prompt. When you [21:48] find something that works well, document [21:51] it and create variations. Build your own [21:53] library of proven prompts rather than [21:56] starting from scratch each time. So, [21:58] three immediate steps. First, I [22:00] recommend you to pick three prompts from [22:03] today's video and use them this week. [22:05] Learning is not just watching, it's [22:07] actually implementing knowledge into [22:09] your work or business. Second, build [22:12] your own template library for your most [22:14] common tasks. And third, if you're [22:16] serious about AMy, check out AM Mastery [22:19] Pro. Links in the description. Remember, [22:21] the goal isn't to replace your thinking, [22:24] it's to amplify it. Thanks for watching. [22:26] I'll see you in the next one.