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News Every Day |

8 AI Prompting Tips to Get Better Answers From Chatbots

3

AI chatbots are easy to use. They’re also surprisingly easy to underuse.

Most people type a quick question, get a passable answer, and move on. But the difference between a generic response and a genuinely useful one often comes down to how the prompt is written.

You don’t need to become a prompt engineer to get better results from tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, or Copilot. In most cases, you just need to give the chatbot clearer directions. A few extra details can help the system understand what you need, who the response is for, and what kind of answer would actually be helpful.

Here are eight prompting tips that can make AI chatbots more useful for work, writing, research, planning, and everyday tasks.

1. Start with the goal

Before writing a prompt, get clear about what you want the chatbot to do.

A vague prompt like “Tell me about cloud security” leaves too much room for interpretation. Do you want a beginner-friendly explanation? A list of risks? A comparison of tools? A short summary for executives?

A better prompt might be: “Give me a beginner-friendly overview of cloud security risks for small businesses, with three examples and three practical prevention tips.”

The clearer the goal, the less the chatbot has to guess. That usually means fewer generic answers and less cleanup afterward.

2. Add context before the task

AI tools don’t know your situation unless you explain it. Context helps the chatbot tailor the answer to your needs.

Instead of saying, “Write an email about the meeting,” add the details that matter: “Write a friendly follow-up email to a client after a product demo. Thank them for their time, recap the main points, and ask if they would like to schedule a next step.”

That extra context changes everything. It tells the chatbot the audience, tone, purpose, and likely next action.

This works for almost any task. If you’re asking for help with research, explain what you’re researching and why. If you’re asking for writing help, explain where the copy will appear. If you’re asking for advice, describe the constraints.

3. Define the audience

A chatbot can explain the same topic in many different ways. The right version depends on who will read it.

Explain artificial intelligence” will produce a very different answer than “Explain artificial intelligence to a small business owner who has never used AI tools before.”

Audience instructions help control the level of detail, vocabulary, tone, and examples. Try phrases like:

  • Write this for a nontechnical audience.”
  • Explain this to a beginner.”
  • Summarize this for a busy executive.”
  • Make this useful for someone comparing software vendors.”

This is especially important for business and technology topics, where the same concept may need to be translated for executives, IT teams, customers, employees, or students.

4. Ask for a specific format

One of the easiest ways to improve AI output is to tell the chatbot what shape the answer should take.

Instead of asking, “What should I know about password managers?” try: “Create a table comparing the pros, cons, pricing considerations, and best use cases for password managers.”

You can also ask for:

  • A checklist
  • A step-by-step guide
  • A short summary
  • A comparison table
  • A list of questions to ask
  • A draft email
  • A one-page brief

Format matters because it makes the answer easier to scan and use. Without that instruction, the chatbot may give you a long explanation when what you really needed was a checklist.

5. Give an example to follow

If you want a certain tone, style, or structure, show the chatbot what you mean.

For example: “Rewrite this paragraph in the same style as the example below.” Then paste the example and the text you want rewritten.

This is useful for writing headlines, product descriptions, social posts, emails, summaries, and reports. The chatbot can usually identify patterns in sentence length, tone, formatting, and level of detail.

Examples also reduce ambiguity. “Make this more conversational” can mean different things to different people. But “make this sound like the example below” gives the chatbot a clearer target.

Just avoid sharing confidential or sensitive information unless you’re using an approved tool and understand your organization’s AI policies.

6. Tell the chatbot what to avoid

Good prompts don’t just describe what you want. They also set boundaries.

If you don’t want buzzwords, say so. If you don’t want a long answer, say so. If you don’t want the chatbot to make assumptions, say so.

Useful constraints include:

  • Avoid jargon.”
  • Do not use marketing language.”
  • Keep this under 200 words.”
  • Do not invent statistics.”
  • Ask questions if information is missing.”
  • Do not repeat the same point.”

These guardrails can make the difference between a polished response and a fluffy one. They are especially helpful when you’re using AI for professional writing, research, analysis, or anything that requires accuracy.

7. Break big requests into smaller steps

Chatbots can handle complex tasks, but they often perform better when you guide them step by step.

Instead of asking, “Create a complete business plan for a new software company,” start with: “Create an outline for a business plan for a new software company.” Then follow up with: “Expand the market analysis section.” After that, ask: “Revise this section for clarity and remove any unsupported claims.”

This approach gives you more control. It also makes it easier to catch mistakes early, adjust direction, and improve each piece before moving on.

For longer projects, think of the chatbot as a collaborator. Ask for an outline, review it, refine it, and then build from there.

8. Treat the first answer as a draft

The first response is rarely the best response. That doesn’t mean the chatbot failed. It means the conversation has started.

If the answer is too broad, ask for more specificity. If it is too formal, ask for a more conversational version. If it misses something important, add that context and try again.

Helpful follow-up prompts include:

  • Make this more concise.”
  • Add more practical examples.”
  • Rewrite this for a beginner.”
  • Turn this into a checklist.”
  • Give me three alternative versions.”
  • Point out what might be missing.”

Prompting is iterative. The real value often comes from the second, third, or fourth request, when the chatbot has more information about what you’re trying to accomplish.

The bottom line

Better AI prompts don’t require clarity.

The more specific you are about the goal, audience, context, format, and constraints, the more useful the answer will be. Instead of treating the chatbot like a search box, treat it like a collaborator that needs a good brief.

A better prompt won’t make AI perfect. Chatbots can still be wrong, vague, or overconfident. But stronger prompts can reduce guesswork and improve the odds that the answer you get is one you can actually use.

Also helpful: For more ways to get better results from AI, check out our guide to the best AI image editing prompts for 2026.

The post 8 AI Prompting Tips to Get Better Answers From Chatbots appeared first on eWEEK.

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