Here are 8 prompts that expose Airbnb pricing tricks:
1/ The Same Listing Price Hunter
You are a travel research analyst who specializes in finding price discrepancies across booking platforms. I need you to find every place this exact Airbnb listing appears online and what it costs on each.
Please provide:
- Cross-platform search strategy: Exact steps to find this same property on VRBO, Booking .com, Expedia, Hotels. com, TripAdvisor, and direct host websites
- Search methodology: How to use the property name, host name, address clues, photo reverse search, and description keywords to identify the same listing elsewhere
- Price extraction: For each platform found, the nightly rate, cleaning fee, service fee, and total for my exact dates side by side
- Fee structure comparison: How each platform's fee breakdown differs for the same underlying property price
- Platform loyalty benefits: Whether any platform offers cashback, points, or member discounts that reduce the effective price further
- Direct booking detection: How to identify if this host operates a direct booking website or Instagram/Facebook listing where they likely charge less (no platform commission)
- Host contact strategy: If direct booking is possible, how to ethically and safely reach the host outside the platform
- Best deal calculator: After comparing all sources, the true lowest cost for this exact stay including all mandatory fees
- Risk assessment: What protections I lose on cheaper platforms and whether the savings justify the tradeoff
Format as a price comparison report with a platform-by-platform table and a clear "best total price" recommendation.
Airbnb listing details: [PASTE LISTING URL, TITLE, OR DESCRIPTION]
My travel dates: [CHECK-IN / CHECK-OUT]
Number of guests: [GUEST COUNT]
2/ The Dynamic Pricing Decoder
You are a revenue management analyst who has studied Airbnb's pricing algorithm in depth. I need to understand exactly why this listing is priced the way it is and when it will be cheaper.
Please provide:
- Algorithm factors: The 12 variables Airbnb's algorithm uses to set nightly prices (demand signals, local events, competitor pricing, booking window, host settings, seasonal patterns)
- Demand triggers: What is driving this listing's current price up — local events, peak season, last-minute premium, or artificially high base price
- Price history pattern: How to access or estimate this listing's price history using AirDNA, Wheelhouse, and Price Labs data
- Optimal booking window: At what point before check-in does this type of listing typically drop in price (e.g., last-minute discount window, 6-week booking sweet spot)
- Day-of-week pricing: Which check-in days and stay durations trigger lower algorithmic prices for this market
- Seasonal calendar: Month-by-month price patterns for this destination and when this specific listing category is cheapest
- Demand calendar: How to use Google Trends, local event calendars, and conference schedules to find low-demand windows
- Price alert strategy: Exactly how to set up tracking so I am notified the moment this listing drops to a target price
- Negotiation window: When is the host most likely to accept a lower offer (days out, vacancy gap, slower market periods)
Format as a pricing intelligence brief with a calendar showing cheapest booking windows and a target price recommendation.
Listing location: [CITY / NEIGHBORHOOD]
Listing type: [ENTIRE HOME / PRIVATE ROOM / TYPE OF PROPERTY]
My flexible date range: [EARLIEST TO LATEST I CAN TRAVEL]
3/ The Fee Exposure Audit
You are a consumer advocate specializing in hidden fee analysis. I need you to expose every fee Airbnb buries in this listing's total price.
Please provide:
- Fee anatomy: Break down this listing's total cost into every line item (nightly rate × nights, cleaning fee, Airbnb service fee, local taxes, any "other fees")
- Cleaning fee deception: How to calculate the real nightly cost when the cleaning fee is amortized across the stay length (1 night vs 7 nights vs 14 nights)
- Service fee percentage: The exact percentage Airbnb takes from both the host and the guest, and how that compares to other platforms
- Tax layer analysis: Which taxes are mandatory vs platform-added vs host-added, and whether they are legally required or discretionary
- Fee inflation tactics: Common tricks hosts and Airbnb use to make the per-night headline price look lower than the true total
- Short stay penalty: How fees are structured to penalize 1–3 night stays and reward longer bookings on this exact listing
- Stay length optimization: The exact number of nights that produces the lowest average nightly cost on this listing
- Comparable fee structures: How this listing's fees compare to a hotel for the same dates in the same location including resort fees and taxes
- True cost per night: Final calculation of actual cost per night including every mandatory fee divided by number of nights
Format as a fee transparency report with a total cost comparison table and the optimal stay length recommendation.
You are a travel data analyst who tracks short-term rental pricing across seasons. I need to find the exact dates when this destination and listing type will be cheapest.
Please provide:
- Annual price calendar: Month-by-month average nightly rates for this destination across all listing types
- Peak season identification: Exact months and dates that trigger the highest prices and why (school holidays, festivals, weather, events)
- Shoulder season windows: The specific 2–4 week windows between peak and off-peak that offer the best combination of price and experience
- Off-peak windows: When prices are at their absolute lowest and what trade-offs exist (weather, closures, reduced experiences)
- Micro-season patterns: Specific weeks within months that are unusually cheap due to event calendars (post-holiday lows, pre-season gaps)
- Day-of-week price gaps: How much cheaper a Wednesday check-in is vs Friday check-in for this destination and listing type
- Holiday premium: Which holidays add the largest price premiums and how many days before/after the premium fades
- My specific dates evaluation: Whether my current dates are at a seasonal high, mid, or low — and if adjusting by 1–2 weeks would materially change the price
- Best value windows: A ranked list of the 5 best date windows in the next 12 months for this destination and property type
Format as a seasonal pricing calendar with specific date recommendations and expected savings per window.
Destination: [CITY OR REGION]
Listing type: [TYPE OF PROPERTY]
Flexible date window: [EARLIEST AND LATEST I CAN TRAVEL]
5/ The Direct Booking Strategy
You are a travel hacker who specializes in booking directly with hosts to avoid platform fees entirely.
Please provide:
- Host identification: How to find the host's name, other properties they manage, and any public presence outside Airbnb
- Direct website search: Exact Google search strings to find if this host operates a direct booking site (use: "[host name] vacation rental" + "[city]" + site:none -airbnb -vrbo)
- Social media trace: How to find the property or host on Instagram, Facebook groups, and local rental directories where direct contact is possible
- Off-platform listing platforms: Which direct booking platforms (Houfy, Lodgify, Hospitable) hosts commonly use to list without paying Airbnb commissions
- Fee math: Exactly how much both host and guest save when booking direct (Airbnb typically charges host 3% + guest 14–16% in service fees)
- Direct booking pitch: A professional, non-creepy message to send a host offering to book direct for a fair discount
- Trust and safety setup: How to protect yourself when booking outside a platform (written contracts, payment via credit card, what to document)
- Negotiation leverage: How to use my stay length, off-peak dates, and repeat visit potential as negotiating tools
- Red flags: Signs that a host's direct booking request is a scam vs legitimate
Format as a direct booking playbook with scripts, search strings, and a safety checklist.
Listing details: [HOST NAME, CITY, PROPERTY TYPE]
My stay length: [NUMBER OF NIGHTS]
6/ The Alternative Platform Finder
You are a travel research analyst who knows every short-term rental platform and their relative pricing for specific markets.
Please provide:
- Platform inventory: All major and niche platforms that list short-term rentals in this destination (VRBO, Booking .com, Expedia, Vacasa, TripAdvisor, Marriott Homes and Villas, Plum Guide, Kid and Coe, The Plum Guide, Houfy, and any local or regional platforms)
- Platform fee comparison: Guest-facing fees for each platform as a percentage of the booking total
- Market coverage: Which platforms have the deepest inventory in this specific city and neighborhood
- Quality tier differences: Which platforms specialize in budget, mid-range, or luxury inventory and how that affects comparable options
- Loyalty and cashback: Which platforms offer points, status perks, cashback portals, or credit card bonuses that reduce effective cost
- Subscription programs: Whether any platform (Booking. com Genius, VRBO's value programs) offers member discounts worth activating
- Best platform for my needs: Given my destination, dates, group size, and budget — the single platform most likely to yield the best total price
- Search strategy: Exact filters and sort orders to use on each platform to surface genuinely comparable listings at lower price points
Format as a platform comparison guide with fee percentages, market coverage ratings, and a recommended search sequence.
Destination: [CITY OR NEIGHBORHOOD]
Dates: [CHECK-IN / CHECK-OUT]
Group size and budget: [GUESTS AND TARGET NIGHTLY RATE]
7/ The Negotiation Script Generator
You are a negotiation coach who specializes in short-term rental price negotiations. I need to get this listing for less than the listed price.
Please provide:
- Negotiation viability assessment: Based on the listing, host review pattern, price history, and current vacancy, how likely is this host to accept a lower offer
- Maximum discount range: The realistic discount range I can expect (typically 10–25% for off-peak, longer stays, or gap bookings) with reasoning
- Leverage identification: Every piece of legitimate leverage I have (off-peak dates, long stay, flexible check-in, gap in their calendar, no reviews needed, repeat booking potential)
- Timing strategy: The exact point in the host's vacancy calendar when they are most psychologically ready to accept a lower offer
- Opening offer calculation: What to offer first, how to anchor the negotiation, and why never to start at my target price
- Message script 1 — long stay discount: Word-for-word message requesting a discount on a multi-week stay, professional and direct
- Message script 2 — last-minute gap: Word-for-word message for a listing with a calendar gap in the next 2 weeks
- Message script 3 — off-season offer: Word-for-word message for an off-peak booking where I am offering guaranteed revenue during a slow period
- Counter-offer response: How to respond if the host makes a partial concession vs if they reject entirely
- Non-price negotiation: What to ask for if the host won't lower the price (free early check-in, late checkout, waived cleaning fee, parking included)
Format as a negotiation playbook with scripts, expected outcomes, and counter-offer guidance.
Listing details: [TYPE, LOCATION, PRICE]
My dates: [CHECK-IN / CHECK-OUT]
My leverage: [STAY LENGTH, FLEXIBILITY, GROUP SIZE]
8/ The Complete Airbnb Savings Maximizer (Master Prompt)
You are a travel cost optimization consultant who has helped hundreds of travelers reduce Airbnb costs by 30–50% without sacrificing quality.
Please provide:
- Full price audit: Break down every fee in my current booking (nightly rate, cleaning fee, service fee, taxes) and calculate the true cost per night
- Cross-platform comparison: Where else this exact or equivalent listing appears, at what price, and what protections I gain or lose on each platform
- Direct booking opportunity: Whether this host likely has a direct booking option and how to find and approach them
- Dynamic pricing window: When this listing's algorithmic price is likely to drop and whether I should wait, book now, or set an alert
- Stay length optimization: The exact number of nights that minimizes my average nightly cost on this listing
- Date optimization: Whether shifting my dates by a few days would materially reduce the price, and specifically which dates to target
- Negotiation recommendation: Whether to negotiate, what to offer, and the exact message to send based on the listing's vacancy status
- Alternative platform recommendation: The one platform most likely to have a cheaper equivalent listing for my specific dates and destination
- Total potential savings: Realistic estimate of how much I could save vs my current quoted total by implementing the best 2–3 strategies
Format as a complete savings action plan ranked by ease and impact, with specific numbers, a step-by-step implementation sequence, and a target price to aim for.
Current Airbnb listing: [PASTE URL OR DESCRIBE THE LISTING]
Current quoted total: [TOTAL PRICE AIRBNB SHOWS]
My travel dates: [CHECK-IN / CHECK-OUT]
Destination: [CITY / NEIGHBORHOOD]
Group size: [NUMBER OF GUESTS]
My flexibility: [HOW FLEXIBLE MY DATES AND LENGTH ARE]
Airbnb made $11.9 billion in revenue last year.
Most of it came from guests who never questioned the first price they were shown.
These 8 prompts take 20 minutes to run.
The average savings on a week-long stay is $200–$600.
BREAKING: AI can now analyze any stock like a Wall Street analyst (for free).
Here are 10 insane Grok prompts that replace $2,000/month Bloomberg terminals: (Save for later):
1/ The Complete Stock Breakdown
Stop Googling stock tickers and reading garbage articles. Use this:
"You are a senior equity research analyst at a top-tier investment bank with access to Bloomberg, FactSet, and SEC filings. Cite every metric with its source and date. If data is unavailable or potentially outdated, say so explicitly. Do not estimate or fabricate any numbers.
Give me a complete analysis of [STOCK TICKER / COMPANY NAME].
Step 1 — Company Overview:
→ What the company does in plain English
→ Business model and all revenue streams broken down by percentage of total revenue
→ Key competitive advantage in one sentence
Step 2 — Key Financials (cite source and date for every number):
→ Revenue (TTM and most recent quarter)
→ Net income and EPS
→ P/E ratio, forward P/E, P/S ratio, PEG ratio
→ Debt-to-equity ratio and total debt
→ Free cash flow (TTM)
→ Year-over-year comparison vs. same quarter last year
Step 3 — Stock Performance:
→ Price movement: 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, YTD (with exact % change)
→ 52-week high and low
→ Performance vs. S&P 500 over the same periods
Step 4 — Wall Street Consensus:
→ Number of analysts covering this stock
→ Buy / Hold / Sell breakdown
→ Average, highest, and lowest price target
→ Most recent analyst upgrade or downgrade (with firm name and date)
Step 5 — Institutional Activity:
→ Top 5 institutional holders and their position changes last quarter
→ Any notable hedge fund activity (new positions or exits)
Format with clear markdown headers, tables where appropriate, and source citations after every metric. Flag any data that may be more than 30 days old."
In 30 seconds you'll know more than 95% of retail investors.
2/ The Financial Statement Deep Dive
Every hedge fund manager reads financial statements. Now you can too:
"You are a senior equity research analyst at a top-tier investment bank. Cite every financial metric with its exact source (SEC filing, earnings report, or financial database) and reporting date. Do not estimate any numbers. If a metric is unavailable, state that clearly instead of guessing.
Analyze the most recent financial statements for [COMPANY NAME / TICKER].
Step 1 — Income Statement Analysis:
→ Revenue for last 4 quarters with exact figures and YoY growth rates
→ Gross margin, operating margin, and net margin for each quarter
→ Trend direction: Are margins expanding, stable, or compressing? By how much?
→ R&D spend as a percentage of revenue (if applicable)
Step 2 — Balance Sheet Health:
→ Total assets vs. total liabilities
→ Current ratio and quick ratio
→ Cash and short-term investments on hand
→ Total debt and debt maturity schedule (when is debt due?)
→ Goodwill as a percentage of total assets (flag if >30%)
Step 3 — Cash Flow Reality Check:
→ Operating cash flow (TTM)
→ Capital expenditures (TTM)
→ Free cash flow (TTM) and FCF margin
→ How they're spending cash: buybacks, dividends, acquisitions, debt repayment, R&D
→ Is cash flow growing or declining vs. previous year?
Step 4 — Red Flags (check each one explicitly):
→ Revenue growing but cash flow declining? ⚠️
→ Debt growing faster than revenue? ⚠️
→ Accounts receivable growing faster than revenue? ⚠️
→ Inventory buildup without revenue growth? ⚠️
→ Frequent one-time charges or adjusted earnings that differ significantly from GAAP? ⚠️
→ Auditor changes or qualified opinions? ⚠️
Step 5 — Green Flags:
→ Improving margins quarter over quarter
→ Growing free cash flow
→ Decreasing debt or increasing cash reserves
→ Consistent GAAP and non-GAAP earnings alignment
Step 6 — Competitive Context:
→ Compare all key margins and ratios to the company's top 3 competitors in a table
End with a plain English summary: What story are these financials telling? Is this company getting healthier or weaker? Use a table format with clear column headers and cite the source of every number."
This is what analysts at Goldman Sachs do every morning. Now it takes you 60 seconds.
BREAKING: Claude can now grow any YouTube channel like a top creator coach (for free).
Here are 10 insane prompts that take you from 0 to monetized authority in 90 days: (Save for later)
1/ The Channel Positioning Blueprint
You are a YouTube growth strategist who has built 50+ channels from zero to monetization. I need to define my channel's exact position in the market before I upload a single video.
Please provide:
- Niche clarity: Based on my topic, identify the 3 most viable sub-niches I could own — from broadest to most specific with audience size estimates for each
- Competitor audit: The top 10 channels in my niche ranked by subscribers, upload frequency, average views, and engagement rate
- Gap analysis: Topics, formats, and audiences that current top channels are underserving or ignoring entirely
- Positioning statement: One sentence defining what my channel is, for whom, and why it is different from every other channel in this space
- Unique angle: The specific perspective, format, or insight style that only I can bring based on my background and experience
- Audience persona: Detailed profile of my ideal viewer (age, occupation, frustrations, aspirations, what they watch, why they would subscribe to me)
- Channel promise: The transformation or value a viewer gets from watching my channel consistently that they cannot get elsewhere
- Content pillar design: 3-5 core topic categories my channel will own, with content volume estimates per pillar
- Monetization alignment: How this positioning sets up long-term revenue (AdSense, sponsorships, courses, affiliate, memberships)
- Name and branding direction: Channel name options, visual style recommendations, and tone of voice guidelines
Format as a channel strategy document with positioning statement, competitor gap map, and content pillar breakdown.
My topic or expertise: [WHAT YOU KNOW OR WANT TO TEACH]
My background: [RELEVANT EXPERIENCE OR CREDENTIALS]
My target audience: [WHO YOU THINK YOU'RE MAKING THIS FOR]
2/ The Viral Title and Thumbnail System
You are a YouTube click-through rate specialist who has tested 10,000+ titles and thumbnails. I need a repeatable system for creating titles and thumbnails that get clicked every time.
Please provide:
- Title formula bank: 12 proven title formulas for my niche with fill-in-the-blank templates (curiosity gap, number list, transformation promise, controversy, speed promise, authority challenge)
- Emotional trigger analysis: Which emotions drive the most clicks in my specific niche (fear, curiosity, desire, urgency, FOMO, aspiration)
- Power word library: 30 high-CTR power words that are specifically effective in my niche with context for when to use each
- Title length optimization: Optimal character count for desktop vs mobile, where to front-load the hook
- A/B test pairs: For my next 5 video topics, write 3 title variations each and rate which is most likely to win and why
- Thumbnail concept guide: For each title, describe the ideal thumbnail composition (facial expression, text overlay, background, color psychology, focal point)
- CTR benchmark targets: What CTR to aim for at each channel size and how to diagnose underperforming titles
- Clickbait line: How to be intriguing without being misleading — where the line is and how to stay on the right side of it
- Pattern interrupt tactics: How to make my thumbnail visually disruptive in a sea of similar content
- Title-to-thumbnail alignment: How to ensure the title and thumbnail tell a consistent story that delivers on the click
Format as a title and thumbnail playbook with formula templates, example titles, and thumbnail concept briefs for each.
My niche: [YOUR CHANNEL TOPIC]
My video topics this month: [LIST 3-5 UPCOMING VIDEO IDEAS]
I used AI to compress 50 years of Warren Buffett’s wisdom into a decision‑making system.
It’s like having him in the room any time you face a big choice.
Here are the 12 prompts that now run my life: (Save for later)
1/ The 80-Year-Old Self Filter
You are my 80-year-old self looking back on this moment with Buffett’s long-term mindset and zero concern for short-term ego.
Please provide:
- How I will likely feel about each option at 80 — proud, ashamed, relieved, regretful, or indifferent
- Which option I am most likely to regret *not* taking, and why
- How each choice will compound over 10, 20, and 40 years in terms of skills, reputation, relationships, and freedom
- For each option: does it build or erode my character, reliability, and self-respect over time
- What I’m currently overvaluing (status, speed, other people’s opinions) vs. undervaluing (time with the right people, learning, health)
- 3 non‑negotiable principles my 80‑year‑old self would refuse to violate, even for big upside
- One clear sentence of advice from my older self about this decision
Format as a direct letter from my 80‑year‑old self, written in the first person, ending with one clear recommendation.
Decision I’m facing: [DESCRIBE IT BRIEFLY]
2/ The Incentives & Interests X-Ray
You are Warren Buffett analyzing incentives and interests the way you do when assessing managers and partners. I need an X‑ray of why everyone (including me) is behaving the way they are.
Please provide:
- Stakeholder map: Every relevant party (including me), what they want, and what they fear losing
- Incentive breakdown: For each party — financial, career, reputational, comfort, and fear‑based incentives
- Where stated motives and actual incentives diverge (“says they care about X but are rewarded for Y”)
- How the current setup rewards or punishes different behaviors over the next 6–12 months
- Likely behavior: How each party will act if nothing changes — based purely on their incentives
- Levers: 3 realistic ways I could slightly adjust structure, expectations, or rewards to get better long‑term behavior
- Self‑incentive check: Where my own incentives might push me toward a choice Buffett would call “a mistake of character”
- One sentence summarizing: “Given these incentives, here’s what will almost certainly happen if you do nothing.”
Format as an incentive map with a final paragraph on what Buffett would watch most closely.
Harvard Business School charges $200K to teach you how to think like a strategist.
I built the same thinking system in one afternoon
Here are the 10 Claude Opus 4.6 prompts behind it:
1/ The Porter's Five Forces Analyzer
You are a Harvard Business School professor who has taught competitive strategy for 20 years. I need a complete Porter's Five Forces analysis that gives me the same strategic clarity an MBA case study produces.
Please provide:
- Threat of new entrants: Capital requirements to enter, economies of scale advantages, brand loyalty barriers, regulatory or licensing hurdles, access to distribution channels, proprietary technology protection, expected retaliation from incumbents, overall entry threat rating (1-10)
- Supplier power: Number of suppliers available, switching costs between suppliers, supplier concentration vs. industry concentration, threat of forward integration by suppliers, importance of volume to each supplier, overall supplier power rating (1-10)
- Buyer power: Buyer concentration and purchase volume, price sensitivity and its drivers, switching costs for buyers, threat of backward integration, information asymmetry between buyer and seller, overall buyer power rating (1-10)
- Threat of substitutes: Availability of substitute products or services, relative price and performance of substitutes, buyer propensity to switch, switching costs to substitutes, overall substitution threat rating (1-10)
- Competitive rivalry: Number and relative size of competitors, industry growth rate, product differentiation, fixed cost structure and exit barriers, diversity of competitor strategies, overall rivalry intensity rating (1-10)
- Industry attractiveness score: Weighted composite score across all five forces with interpretation
- Strategic implications: For each force, the one action a company in this industry should take to improve its position
- Dominant force identification: Which single force most determines profitability in this industry and why
- Positioning recommendation: Where in this industry structure would I build the most defensible, profitable position
Format as a strategy consulting deliverable with force ratings, evidence for each rating, and ranked strategic recommendations.
Industry or business: [DESCRIBE YOUR INDUSTRY OR COMPANY]
My position in the market: [WHERE YOU SIT IN THE VALUE CHAIN]
2/ The Blue Ocean Strategy Builder
You are a strategy consultant trained in Blue Ocean Strategy methodology. I need to find uncontested market space where competition becomes irrelevant rather than fighting harder in existing markets.
Please provide:
- Current red ocean assessment: Where is my industry competing intensely right now, what are the standard battlegrounds everyone fights on
- Strategy canvas: Map the current industry on 8-10 competing factors, show where all players converge on the same profile
- Four actions framework:
→ Eliminate: Which factors the industry competes on that deliver no real value to customers and should be removed entirely
→ Reduce: Which factors are overdelivered relative to what customers actually need and should be scaled back
→ Raise: Which factors should be raised well above the industry standard because customers actually value them
→ Create: Which factors have never been offered in this industry that a new buyer segment would pay for
- New value curve: Describe the resulting strategic profile after applying the four actions and how it diverges from competitors
- Non-customer analysis: The three tiers of non-customers (soon-to-be, refusing, unexplored) and what would bring each tier in
- New market opportunity: The specific uncontested space identified and who the new customer is
- Tipping point leadership: The cognitive, political, motivational, and resource hurdles to executing this shift
- Blue ocean metrics: What success looks like in the new market space and how to measure it
Format as a Blue Ocean strategy report with strategy canvas description, four actions table, and new market opportunity brief.
Industry: [YOUR INDUSTRY]
Current offering: [WHAT YOU SELL TODAY]
Frustrations with current competition: [WHERE COMPETING IS MOST PAINFUL]
🚨BREAKING: AI can now teach coding like Fullstack mentors (for free).
Here are 14 insane Claude Opus 4.6 prompts that replace $20,000 bootcamps (Save for later):
1/ The Full-Stack Curriculum Builder
Prompt:
You are a senior full-stack engineer who has taken 500+ bootcamp graduates
from zero to their first job. You know exactly where beginners waste time
and what hiring managers actually test.
My current skills: [YOUR SKILLS]
Target role: [frontend / backend / full-stack]
Study time: [X hours/week]
Deadline: [TIMEFRAME or "flexible"]
Think through my level and hours before building the plan.
Generate a week-by-week curriculum. Use this exact structure for every week:
Week [N] - [Theme]
- Concept: [specific, not generic]
- Free resource: [exact title and channel or URL, only recommend
what you are certain exists, use official docs if unsure]
- Challenge: [specific problem with clear acceptance criteria]
- Mini-project: [must build toward a final portfolio piece]
- Exit quiz: [3 questions I must answer correctly before
unlocking the next week]
- Realistic time needed: [hours]
Rules:
- Calculate total weeks from my actual level, do not pad
- Every week ends with working, runnable code
- Flag any week where I am likely to stall and explain why
2/ The Code Review Mentor
Prompt:
You are a principal engineer reviewing code before a production deployment.
This review determines whether the PR gets merged or sent back.
[PASTE YOUR CODE HERE]
Language/framework: [e.g., Node.js, React, Python]
What this code does: [one sentence]
Think through the full logic before writing a single comment.
Structure your review in this exact order:
Critical - Ship Blocker
(bugs, security vulnerabilities, data loss risks)
Major - Fix Before Merge
(logic errors, missing edge cases, performance issues)
Minor - Clean Up Next PR
(naming, structure, clean code violations)
For each issue: cite the line, explain the exact problem,
show the fixed code, and explain why it matters in production.
Rewrite: Take the single worst section. Show before and after in diff format.
Verdict: Ship It / Needs Changes / Major Rework
Diagnosis: One thing I clearly do not understand yet, name it precisely.
Gamma builds professional decks from a single prompt and auto-designs every slide.
Here are 7 prompts that create presentation-ready decks in minutes (Save for later):
Prompt 1: The One-Paragraph Deck Generator
Paste this into Gamma > Generate > Presentation:
Act as a world-class presentation designer who has created 500+ high-impact decks. Create a professional 10-slide presentation for [paste your detailed description: include your topic, target audience, main message, tone, key data points, and desired outcome]. Required slides in order: 1. Title with hook, 2. Problem/Context, 3. Solution/Key Message, 4. Supporting Evidence, 5. Real-World Application, 6. Visual Comparison, 7. Implementation Steps, 8. Expected Outcomes, 9. Social Proof, 10. Call-to-Action. Design: premium minimalist style, [primary color] background with [accent color] highlights, bold sans-serif typography, generous white space, one core idea per slide, max 5 bullet points, high-quality imagery only. Make every slide scannable in under 3 seconds.
Outcome: Complete 10-slide deck generated in under 60 seconds with professional design and structured content flow.
Prompt 2: The Brand-Locked Makeover
After generating, open Gamma Agent and type:
Act as my personal brand guardian. Apply my exact brand identity to every slide with pixel-perfect consistency. Primary color: [Hex code]. Secondary color: [Hex code]. Accent color: [Hex code]. Heading font: [exact font]. Body font: [exact font]. Logo placement: [top-left/center of every slide]. Tone: [confident/conversational/technical/inspirational] - remove all generic AI phrases. Replace with specific, concrete language. Design elevation: increase visual polish 3x while keeping layouts intact, add subtle depth with shadows, ensure clear text hierarchy, maintain consistent spacing across all slides. Make the entire deck feel cohesive like it was designed by one person from start to finish.
Outcome: Entire deck instantly restyled with your brand colors, fonts, and voice applied consistently across every slide.