Dickie Bush 🚢 Profile picture
Mar 23, 2023 26 tweets 8 min read Read on X
ChatGPT is overhyped.

That's what I told myself after 2 weeks of trying (and failing) to use it well.

Turns out, I was just a poor prompt writer.

But after spending hundreds of hours tinkering, I've finally cracked it.

And now, it's my personal writing assistant.

Here's how: Image
From the beginning, I made 1 crucial mistake with ChatGPT:

I expected it to "think" rather than "do."

This means I fed it poorly written, 1-sentence prompts and expected some magical output.

But poor instructions = poor results.

So here's how I reframed it:
ChatGPT is my personal intern.

And if I train it correctly, I can arm myself with the world's *most skilled* intern.

Unfortunately, I spent weeks training it all wrong (and blamed my intern for being incompetent).

Here's what I learned about what to avoid:
At a high level, ChatGPT is horrible at coming up with things "from scratch."

• "Write me a Twitter thread on X"
• "Draft an email about Y"
• "Come up with ideas about Z"

When given prompts like this, ChatGPT has to make too many arbitrary decisions—which means poor output.
So rather than give vague instructions, I learned to give 3 clear constraints in every prompt:

• A specific objective (with input)
• A specific format for the output
• A specific list of things to avoid

But most importantly, I realized 1 thing about prompt writing: Image
Prompt writing is an iterative game—you will not get it right on the first try.

But like training an employee, the upfront time investment is worth it.

Because once you have a working, reliable prompt, you can use it forever.

So with this in mind, how do I use it?
I use ChatGPT for 3 types of tasks:

1. Executing templates (that I create)

2. Enhancing something already written

3. Synthesizing unstructured notes into a desired output

Notice: There is no "thinking" required in any of these—just executing.

Let's look at some examples:
First, I have a ChatGPT prompt template for idea generation.

This one took me quite a bit of time to train, but now I can write (and learn) about *anything*

All I feed it is a topic I want to explore.

Then, it generates 2 lists (which I'll walk through in the next 2 tweets). Image
1. It generates a list of "actions" that someone interested in that topic might have questions about.

My constraint: Each must start with a verb so I can write things that help people accomplish that action.

Here's an example with the topic of "Building a writing habit" Image
And just to drive the point home, here's the list of actions for 4 other topics:

1. Learning to play House Music (my current hobby)
2. Buying your first rental property in NYC
3. Transferring bitcoin to a hardware wallet
4. Traveling through Greece in the summertime Image
Image
Image
Image
2. From this list of subtopics, I then have it ask me 3 "questions" about that subtopic.

I trained it on a list of common questions to ask, then I just say "ask."

And these become content topics—which makes writing incredibly easy because I literally just answer the question. Image
Image
Image
Image
You could see how each of these subtopics is a "pillar" piece of content helping a reader achieve the desired result.

And you build that "pillar" piece from the ground up by answering the questions.

Then, you can repurpose each part of the pillar piece into short-form content.
Alrighty, that's it for idea generation.

And now I've never been more excited to explore new topics.

(If you want me to send you that prompt, hit reply on the top tweet and let me know—I'll shoot it your way.)

Now, onto the second way I use ChatGPT: rewriting and remixing.
I often get stuck in my own pattern of writing, failing to ever explore other ways to communicate an idea.

Luckily, this is what ChatGPT is best at.

So with the ideas generated above, I'll take a crack at my first draft.

Then, I have ChatGPT rewrite in 4 specific ways:
1) I ask ChatGPT to rewrite my writing with 6 different "tones":

1. More formal
2. More serious
3. More sarcastic
4. More optimistic
5. More pessimistic
6. More lighthearted

This immediately taps me into new writing voices that I can work with to enhance my own voice.
2) I ask ChatGPT to rewrite my writing as 7 different authors:

1. Gary Vaynerchuk
2. Maya Angelou
3. George R.R. Martin
4. Winston Churchill
5. Brene Brown
6. J.K. Rowling
7. Ernest Hemingway

Again, this gives me a 360-degree perspective of ways I can talk about my idea.
3) I ask ChatGPT to rewrite my writing with 7 different "goals":

1. More concise
2. More emphatic
3. More humorous
4. More descriptive
5. More persuasive
6. More informative
7. More action-oriented

This one is my personal favorite.

Great for rewriting emails/messages.
4) Lastly, I ask ChatGPT to rewrite my writing for 7 different demographics:

1. For 3rd graders
2. For 8th graders
3. For college students
4. For busy 40-year-old moms
5. For an 80-year-old who reads slowly
6. For an audience where English is a second language

(I love number 5)
You get the point.

I always start with my own writing to give it something to work with.

ThenI look at it from different angles, picking and choosing bits I can use to enhance my own voice.

And all of this happens in *seconds* which would be impossible to do otherwise.
Alrighty—I think that's enough for one thread.

Over the coming days I'll write breakdowns with deeper dives into each of these:

• Journaling
• Idea generation
• Headline iteration
• Brain dump synthesizing
• Research and summarization

So be on the lookout for those!
To recap, how I turned ChatGPT into my personal writing intern:

• Used it to "do," not "think"
• Fed it 3 clear constraints
• Iterated those constraints over time
• Build it into my personal idea generator
• Trained it to rewrite my drafts with a 360-degree perspective
Boom—that's it.

If you found this helpful, jump back to the top tweet to like and retweet it (link below).

And hit reply if you want me to send over the idea generation prompt!

If this is inspiring you to take writing with AI more seriously, start with this free 13,000-word Ultimate Guide + email course.

It's taught 60,000 people the fundamentals they need to know to get the most out of ChatGPT (and other AI writing platforms)

startwritingonline.com
And lastly, if you're looking to up your writing game, here's a list of my 10 most popular threads.

Pair this ChatGPT thread with the fundamentals I teach in the other threads below and you have everything you need.

Tried to get to everyone but can't keep up with DMs.

Here's the entire "plug and play" prompt with a video breaking down how to use it.

I hope you find it helpful!

Once my DMs are working again I'll respond to any questions you have about using it!

vine-perch-730.notion.site/Endless-Idea-G…
If you're looking to start writing with AI, here's a free 5-day crash course that will put you ahead of 99% of people: startwritingwithai.com

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More from @dickiebush

Dec 28, 2025
25 questions to reflect on 2025 (and make 2026 your best year yet):🧵
This list will help you:

• Recap the year
• Take stock of where you are
• And refresh your perspective heading into 2025

It's the exact process I used to do my yearly reflection.

Let's dive in:
1. What were the big moments, memories, and milestones from this year?

Add some constraints and try to pick 3-5 per month.

Write this as if you were writing a summary of the year you could look back on in 20 years.
Read 30 tweets
Dec 23, 2025
I asked 430,000 people for their favorite book of 2025.

These 12 books showed up the most often (so they must be worth reading):🧵 Image
1. Grit by Angela Duckworth

a.co/d/dFsJuL0
2. The Art of Spending Money by Morgan Housel

a.co/d/0IBjluN
Read 15 tweets
Jul 17, 2025
Jeff Bezos built Amazon into a $200B+ empire.

And his most famous decision-making model was inspired by a book he has reread every year for 25+ years.

7 lessons from "The Remains of the Day":🧵 Image
The book follows Stevens, an English butler who sacrificed everything for "professional dignity."

But in his final years, he realizes a devastating truth:

• His dignity was a prison
• He never lived for himself
• His whole life was spent in fear Image
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This revelation shook Bezos to his core.

At 30, he was the youngest Senior VP at D.E. Shaw:

• Making $1M/year
• On track to be partner
• Living the Wall Street dream

But something felt off:
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Jul 8, 2025
Everyone should have a digital business that makes $10k/month.

But most overthink, never start, and waste years.

This is the simple playbook that took me from $0 to $40k/month while working full-time at BlackRock:🧵 Image
1. Start a Side Hustle While Working Full-Time

Don't quit your job right away. Instead, trade time for money until you can trade what you've learned for money.

Here's how to choose a high-leverage job (so you don’t waste time in your 9 to 5):
In January 2020, I started to write online.

For 9 months, I worked on my newsletter which hardly anyone read.

So, I picked one platform (𝕏) and went all-in.

I wrote a thread every day for 30 days. On day 28, one of them went viral.

Here's the story:
Read 11 tweets
Jul 1, 2025
For years, I struggled to build a daily writing habit.

But now I write for 90 minutes every single day.

I used these 5 dead-simple steps to create a habit I could actually stick to:🧵 Image
By the end of this thread you will have:

1. Found time to write
2. Generated 12 months of ideas
2. Set a daily publishing cadence
4. Overcome your procrastination
5. Built a bulletproof accountability system

So you can start writing today.

Let's go:
Step 1. Design your writing routine in a single sentence.

This is immediately where most people go wrong.

They set a vague goal to "start writing."

Instead, you want to define:

• When you're writing
• Where you're writing
• For how long you're writing

Here's an example:
Read 19 tweets
Jun 23, 2025
The single most powerful habit for personal growth:

Journaling.

Over the past 5 years, I have tested 1,000+ prompts and journaled every single day.

And I always return to these 5 simple prompts:🧵 Image
For my prompts, I use:

• The 80/20 Audit
• The Morning Kickstart
• The Evening Shutdown
• The Bottleneck Analysis
• The Compounding Projection

For notebook & pen, I use:

• Muji 0.5 pens
• Leuchtturm1917 soft-covers

Here's why I picked these tools:
Prompt 1: The Morning Kickstart

My current morning routine:

• Make a fresh double espresso
• Crack open my notebook
• Brain dump answers to 5 questions

But here's the catch: I set strict limits.

No one has time to write a novel every morning—so here's what I do instead:
Read 18 tweets

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