User flows: Onboarding, Authentication, Search, Filtering, Empty States
Feedback patterns: Success, Error, Loading, Empty
4. TOKENS
Complete design token structure in JSON format for developer handoff
5. DOCUMENTATION
Design principles (3 key principles with examples)
Do’s and Don’ts (10 examples with visual descriptions)
Implementation guide for developers
Format everything as design system documentation ready to be published immediately.
Jun 10 • 11 tweets • 3 min read
STOP starting your emails with:
“I hope you’re doing well.”
It’s correct. It’s polite. And it’s also one of the most forgettable openings there is.
If you want someone to reply, don’t start like everyone else.
Start with intention.
Here are 10 alternatives: 👇
1. When you want to bring an email back to the top of someone’s inbox without sounding pushy
Instead of:
“Any updates on this?”
Try:
“I’m reaching out to bring this back to the top of your inbox. Have you had a chance to review it?”
It works because it doesn’t sound demanding.
It sounds helpful.
You’re not applying pressure.
You’re making it easier for the other person to pick the conversation back up.
Jun 9 • 11 tweets • 3 min read
I use Claude all day without exhausting my token limit.
Claude doesn’t count messages, it counts tokens. Some conversations use up your limit 10× faster than others.
If you want to use Claude all day without running out of limits, use these 10 tricks:
1. Edit the prompt, don’t add follow-ups
Every follow-up message adds to the conversation history and costs more tokens. When Claude misses the mark, click the edit icon on your original message, fix the prompt, and regenerate.
Fix the prompt, don’t keep extending the chat.
Suggested prompt:
← Use the ✏️ icon next to your message to edit it
and press ↵ to regenerate the response.
Can save up to 40% of tokens.
Jun 3 • 8 tweets • 3 min read
My friend lost 18.5 kg using Claude.
No gym.
No dietitian.
No apps.
Just 7 prompts he sends to Claude every morning.
I’m sharing all of them—don’t forget to save them: 👇
1. Calorie Deficit and Macronutrient Calculation
Prompt:
"Act as a body composition expert.
Age: [age]
Gender: [gender]
Height: [cm] / Weight: [kg]
Estimated body fat percentage: [%]
Training days per week: [days]
Office job: [yes / no]
Calculate my BMR and TDEE values. Determine my daily calorie target for losing 0.5–1 kg per week. Break down the macronutrient distribution into protein, carbohydrates, and fats. Propose a calorie deficit that is not overly aggressive. Show the calculation logic step by step. Present the results in a table."
Jun 1 • 12 tweets • 8 min read
JOB INTERVIEW:
"Tell me about a conflict with a coworker."
Most candidates say:
"We had different working styles, but we sat down, talked it through, and found common ground. It made us stronger as a team."
THE WINNING ANSWER:
1. The Scope Creep Coordinator
Situation:
A Product Manager had a chronic habit of sneaking "minor" feature requests into the active sprint. They would bypass standard grooming sessions and slide tasks directly to the engineers via Slack, claiming it would "only take a few hours." This was silently destroying velocity, derailing focus, and putting the quarter's core deliverables at severe risk.
Response:
"I intercepted the requests and set up a 1-on-1. I didn't just tell them 'no,' which paints engineering as uncooperative. Instead, I pulled up our sprint capacity dashboard and said: 'We have bandwidth for exactly 40 story points this week. I am happy to swap out Feature A to accommodate your new Feature B. However, you are the product owner you have to make the executive call right now on which core feature gets delayed to next month.' I forced them to make the trade-off decision."
Why it works:
You completely remove emotion and ego from the conflict. By framing it as a strict mathematical capacity issue rather than a personal refusal, you shift the burden of responsibility. You aren't the bad guy saying no; you are the facilitator forcing the stakeholder to own the business consequences and opportunity costs of their demands.
May 31 • 12 tweets • 3 min read
Most people use NotebookLM the wrong way.
They only ask for summaries and get mediocre results.
Here are 10 advanced NotebookLM prompts that will help you learn faster, think more deeply, and truly understand your sources.
🔖 Save this for later.
1/ Practice with Real-Life Situations
“Using only the uploaded resources, create 5 realistic situations where [the topic] would be applied in real life.
For the first one, explain the solution step by step, showing the reasoning process, the concepts applied, and the common mistakes beginners make.
For the other 4, provide only the scenario and let me solve them without revealing the answers.
After each of my responses, evaluate my reasoning, explain what I missed, and show how an expert would approach it.”
May 28 • 9 tweets • 2 min read
YOUR BIRTHDAY + CHATGPT = CREEPY ACCURACY
ChatGPT knows more about you than your best friend.
Just give it your birthday and you’ll see how it READS YOU LIKE A BOOK.
Here are 7 terrifyingly accurate prompts to try:
1. The Shadow Mirror
My birthday is [Day/Month/Year]. Act as an expert psychologist in personality profiling. Analyze my date of birth and tell me what my biggest emotional “blind spot” is and what personality trait I tend to hide from others to appear strong. Don’t be nice — be brutally honest.
May 24 • 8 tweets • 2 min read
MY FRIEND STARTED SPEAKING ENGLISH WITH CLAUDE IN JUST 21 DAYS.
Before that, he had been trying to learn English for years.
He took courses
Downloaded apps
Watched videos for hours
But whenever he had to speak with real people, he still froze.
After 21 days using Claude, he had his first real conversation in English.
Here are the 7 prompts we used:
1. REAL DIAGNOSIS
Act like an expert English teacher for people who understand English but can’t speak it.
Based on my written and spoken responses, evaluate my real English level.
Identify:
Mental blocks
Repeated mistakes
Lack of fluency
Confidence issues
Then tell me clearly what is actually stopping me from speaking English and what I should focus on first.
May 22 • 7 tweets • 2 min read
🚨 Goodbye to the love of my life, PowerPoint!
Claude 4.7 can create a complete presentation in just 60 seconds.
Use these 6 prompts and watch the insanity unfold.
Save this — you’ll use it a lot.
Thread:
1. Presentation Blueprint (Outline)
The prompt:
“Act as a professional presentation consultant.
Create a complete outline for a presentation about [topic]. Define the objective, target audience, core message, slide flow, and the required number of slides. The structure should be logical, engaging, and professional.”
May 21 • 12 tweets • 3 min read
After 3 years of using ChatGPT, I switched to Claude — and I can honestly say it has multiplied my productivity by 10x.
Here are 10 prompts I use every day that transformed my daily life and could do the same for you:
(Save this before you lose it 🧵)
1️⃣ The Daily Strategist
“These are my tasks for today: [paste list]. My main goal this week is [goal]. Organize them by real impact, not urgency. Eliminate the ones I can delegate or ignore. Group the 3 most important ones into a 3-hour deep work block and tell me in which order I should do them and why.”
Every morning. 30 seconds.
And my day stops feeling chaotic.
May 14 • 12 tweets • 5 min read
🚨BREAKING: Google Gemini has insane features that almost nobody is using.
Most people only use Gemini for basic prompts… while Google quietly packed it with tools that replace hours of work in seconds.
You’re probably using less than 5% of what Gemini can actually do.
Here are 10 hidden Gemini features that feel almost unfair once you start using them: 👇
1️⃣ DEEP RESEARCH MODE
Open Gemini → tap the model menu → choose “2.5 Pro with Deep Research” and type any topic.
Gemini automatically scans 50+ websites, analyzes the information, compares sources, organizes key data, and generates a complete professional research report with citations included.
It feels less like a chatbot… and more like having a full research team working for you.
In just 5 to 10 minutes, you get something that looks more like a premium analyst report than a normal AI response.
The craziest part?
Tools with similar capabilities cost hundreds of dollars per month. Gemini gives you access for free. 🚀
May 5 • 10 tweets • 2 min read
I cancelled Spotify.
I cancelled Disney+.
I cancelled Apple TV+.
I got tired of paying subscriptions every month.
So Claude turned my laptop into a free entertainment hub.
And the best part: it did it in minutes.
Here are 8 prompts to build your own system 👇
1. Build Your Free Entertainment Dashboard
Act as my entertainment systems designer.
Create a laptop dashboard using only free + legal sources.
Organize it into:
• Movies
• TV Shows
• Music
• Podcasts
• Books
• Games
• Documentaries
• Learning
Return:
• 5 platforms per category
• What each is best for
• How to use it like a premium system
May 3 • 9 tweets • 2 min read
🚨 BREAKING: Claude can now analyze stocks like a senior Wall Street analyst—for FREE.
Here are 7 prompts to research, pick, and manage winning stocks like a pro:
1/ Full Stock Analysis
“Act as a senior Wall Street analyst. Analyze [stock symbol] covering revenue growth, profit margins, debt levels, competitive position, and valuation. Give me a clear buy, hold, or sell recommendation with reasoning.”
Apr 28 • 9 tweets • 2 min read
🚨 SEO agencies charge $10,000/month for this.
Claude does it for free.
And very few people are using it.
Here are the 7 prompts I used to rank my local business ⬇️
1. Google Business Category Audit
Prompt:
“Act as a local SEO expert.
Search on Google Maps:
‘[service] in [city]’
Analyze the top 10 results in the Map Pack.
For each business, extract:
• primary category
• secondary categories
• rating
• number of reviews
• position
Compare it with my business and tell me which categories I’m missing.”
Apr 26 • 8 tweets • 2 min read
GOODBYE TO ASTROLOGERS.
CHATGPT just made it Easy and Free.
Just give it your birth date.
No horoscopes.
No tarot.
Copy these 6 prompts and get results that will blow your mind 😱
1. The Life Path Decoder
“I want you to act as a decoder of my life path. I will give you my birth date: [insert date]. Analyze it using psychology, numerological logic, and life patterns to reveal my deepest personality traits, hidden strengths, weaknesses, and my destiny map. Be brutally honest and deliver an analysis so accurate it feels like you’ve always known me. Highlight the most important purpose I should pursue in this life.”
Apr 21 • 11 tweets • 2 min read
Remote jobs for introverts (almost no calls or meetings)
You can work at night, from home, after your 9–5, and still get paid in USD.
Thread below ↓
1. Kickresume
The first step is having a resume aligned with the filters and criteria that AI systems use in hiring today.
And in that regard, Kickresume is simply the best option.
Apr 11 • 7 tweets • 2 min read
I used to believe wealthy people were simply lucky.
That changed when I began observing how they spend their Sundays.
“A Sunday afternoon reveals exactly what your financial future will look like in 5 years,” a mentor once told me.
Here are 10 Sunday habits of people who quietly build wealth:
1. They review their finances weekly.
Just 30 minutes. No stress, no drama.
They track income, expenses, and whether their financial margin is improving or declining.
This simple habit is more powerful than months of passive financial content consumption.
---
2. They read material that boosts their market value.
Not for entertainment—but for leverage.
What they read on Sunday often gets applied by Monday.
They’re constantly building skills that set them apart from others.
Apr 7 • 11 tweets • 2 min read
YOUR PHONE HEARD YOUR THOUGHTS.
You didn’t search it. You didn’t say it out loud.
You thought it.
And 20 minutes later, it showed up in your feed.
Here’s what’s actually happening. 🧵
In 2014, Facebook published a study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
They manipulated the emotional content of posts seen by 689,000 users—without their knowledge or consent.
Apr 6 • 11 tweets • 2 min read
A billionaire walked into a five-star hotel and asked for the cheapest room they had.
The receptionist blinked, confused.
“Sir, our presidential suite has a full city view…”
He smiled and replied, “I’m sure it does. I’ll take the smallest room.”
The next morning, he ordered a €9 coffee from room service.
Then a €40 breakfast with fresh fruit and pastries.
Apr 5 • 5 tweets • 1 min read
My father always used to tell my brother:
“Never put anything in your wife’s name.”
The moment my brother registered his house in my sister-in-law’s name, her nagging started.
And just 3 months later, they got divorced.
When I asked my father why that happened,
he said:
He looked at me and said:
“Because you don’t understand how power works in relationships.
The moment one person feels they have nothing to lose, the dynamic changes.
And when the dynamic changes, behavior follows.”
Apr 4 • 12 tweets • 2 min read
“Why did God create evil?”
[This is probably the best answer I’ve ever heard to that question.]
A university professor asked his students:
“Was everything that exists created by God?”
One student bravely replied:
“Yes, it was created by God.”
The professor asked:
“If God created everything, then He created evil as well, since it exists. And according to the principle that our actions define us, then God is evil.”
The student remained silent after hearing this answer.