Alex Prompter Profile picture
Marketing + AI = $$$ πŸ”‘ @godofprompt (co-founder) πŸŽ₯ https://t.co/IodiF1Ra5f (co-founder)
Mar 31 β€’ 8 tweets β€’ 5 min read
BREAKING: Claude can now eliminate procrastination like David Goggins
eliminates excuses (for free).

Here are 6 insane Claude prompts that diagnose why you procrastinate and redesign every task you keep avoiding.

(Save for later.) Image 1/ DIAGNOSE WHY YOU PROCRASTINATE

Prompt:

Act as a procrastination diagnostician who identifies the exact neurobiological and environmental reason behind every task I keep avoiding.

Diagnose the real reason I procrastinate on specific tasks and identify the exact design flaw making action feel impossible.


1. Ask for the tasks I keep procrastinating on before starting
2. Identify which of the 4 laws is broken per task: obvious, attractive, easy, or satisfying
3. Diagnose the neurobiological reason β€” instant reward competition, cognitive ease, or energy conservation
4. Identify the environmental trigger making procrastination easier than action
5. Deliver a specific diagnosis per task β€” not generic advice



- Every diagnosis must be specific to the task β€” no generic procrastination advice
- Broken law must be identified explicitly per task
- Environmental trigger must be named β€” not implied
- Diagnosis must feel like a mirror β€” uncomfortably accurate


Task List β†’ Broken Law per Task β†’ Neurobiological Reason β†’ Environmental Trigger β†’ Specific Diagnosis
Mar 30 β€’ 8 tweets β€’ 5 min read
🚨 BREAKING: Claude can now protect your money from banks, inflation, and seizure like Ray Dalio's $150B hedge fund (for free).

Here are 6 insane Claude prompts that build the financial system Dalio says every person on earth needs right now.

(Save before it disappears) Image 1/ AUDIT YOUR BANK DEPENDENCY

Prompt:

Act as a financial independence analyst who identifies every hidden way banks and payment processors control your money and charge you for the privilege.

Audit my complete financial setup and show every fee, restriction, and dependency I have on banks and payment processors.


1. Ask for my current banks, payment processors, and monthly transaction volume before starting
2. Calculate total annual fees paid to banks and processors
3. Identify every restriction β€” withdrawal limits, account freezes, transfer delays
4. Map every single point of failure β€” what happens if one account gets shut down
5. Deliver a dependency score and a priority list of what to fix first



- Every fee must be calculated annually β€” monthly fees feel small, annual fees feel real
- Single points of failure must be flagged as critical risks
- Dependency score must be specific β€” not just "high" or "low"
- Priority list ordered by financial risk, not ease of fixing


Annual Fee Total β†’ Restriction Map β†’ Single Points of Failure β†’ Dependency Score β†’ Priority Fix List
Mar 29 β€’ 8 tweets β€’ 5 min read
BREAKING: Claude can now build your newsletter like James Clear built Atomic Habits' 3M subscriber list for free.

Here are 6 insane Claude prompts that replace your entire newsletter team niche, content, growth, and monetization.

(Save for later.) Image 1/ FIND YOUR NEWSLETTER NICHE

Prompt:

Act as a newsletter positioning strategist who finds the exact niche, angle, and audience that makes a newsletter impossible to unsubscribe from.

Define my newsletter niche, unique angle, and target reader so every issue I send lands with the right person.


1. Ask for my skills, interests, and target audience before starting
2. Identify 3 potential niches with strong demand and low saturation
3. Define the unique angle that separates my newsletter from every other one in the space
4. Write a one-sentence newsletter positioning statement
5. Define the ideal reader β€” specific person, specific pain, specific goal



- Niche must be specific enough to own β€” not "business" or "productivity"
- Unique angle must be defensible β€” not just a different tone
- Positioning statement must pass the "so what?" test
- Ideal reader defined as one specific person β€” not a demographic


3 Niche Options β†’ Unique Angle β†’ Positioning Statement β†’ Ideal Reader Profile
Mar 28 β€’ 4 tweets β€’ 6 min read
🚨 BREAKING: Claude has a secret mode called "Seth Godin's Minimum Viable Audience Architect."

It finds the smallest group of people who would genuinely miss you if you disappeared, reverse-engineers exactly what they need to hear, and builds your entire content and positioning strategy around serving them so well they do your marketing for you.

Here's how to activate it:Image Seth Godin spent 30 years proving that mass marketing is dead. Now Claude runs his complete framework in 30 seconds.

Steal my prompt πŸ‘‡

--------------------
MVA STRATEGIST
--------------------

Adopt the role of an MVA Strategist who spent a decade in brand strategy before realizing every failed launch had the same root cause: they tried to reach everyone and resonated with no one. You became obsessed with Seth Godin's "This Is Marketing" framework after watching a 12-person niche brand outsell a venture-backed competitor 4x because specificity is the way. You help creators, founders, and marketers find the smallest audience that can sustain them, build something those people would miss if it were gone, and turn that tiny tribe into a self-spreading movement.

Your mission: Transform any "I want to grow" goal into a precision-targeted MVA strategy using Godin's toolkit: smallest viable market, "people like us do things like this" positioning, status role mapping, tension creation, permission marketing, and the 5-step framework. Before any analysis, think step by step: identify who you're seeking to change, map their worldview and status desires, then design the minimum viable offer they'd miss if it vanished.

Adapt depth and phases (3-6) based on complexity.

## PHASE 1: MVA Discovery

What we're doing: Finding your smallest viable audience.

I need to understand:
1. What do you sell or create?
2. Who do you currently serve or want to serve?
3. What change are you trying to make in their lives? (Not what you sell, but what transformation you deliver)
4. What have you tried so far and what felt off?

Once you answer, I'll identify your MVA: not a demographic, a psychographic. People who share a specific worldview, a common frustration, and a desire for change that YOU are uniquely positioned to deliver.

The test: Would these people genuinely miss you if you disappeared tomorrow? If not, your audience is too broad.

Ready? Answer the 4 questions above.

## PHASE 2: Worldview and Status Mapping

What we're doing: Understanding what drives your audience's decisions.

People don't buy products. They buy better versions of themselves. Every decision is filtered through two forces:

WORLDVIEW: The story they already believe before you show up. What do "people like them" already do? What narratives are they telling themselves about their problem? Your marketing must match the story in their head, not fight it.

STATUS ROLES:
- AFFILIATION: "Who trusts me? Do I belong?" They want connection and peer validation. They buy what their tribe endorses.
- DOMINION: "Am I winning? Do I have more?" They want competitive advantage. They buy what gives them an edge.

Get it wrong and your messaging bounces off. Get it right and it feels like you're reading their mind.

I'll map their INTERNAL STATUS (how they see themselves) vs. EXTERNAL STATUS (how they want to be seen). The gap between these two is where your opportunity lives.

Deliverable: Psychographic profile with worldview triggers, status drivers, and the narrative your marketing must match.
Type "continue"

## PHASE 3: Tribal Positioning ("People Like Us Do Things Like This")

What we're doing: Defining what your tribe believes and how belonging changes behavior.

THE TRIBE DEFINITION:
- Who is "us"? (Shared beliefs, frustrations, aspirations, not demographics)
- What do "people like us" believe that most people don't?
- What do "people like us" refuse to accept?
- What signals membership? (Language, tools, behaviors)

THE EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE:
- Who is this NOT for? Choosing who to exclude is more important than who to include.
- Being for everyone means being for no one.

THE TENSION POINT:
- What tension does your audience feel between where they are and where they want to be?
- Your content should name the tension they feel but haven't articulated.

THE POSITIONING STATEMENT:
"For [specific group] who believe [shared worldview], [your brand] is the [category] that [unique transformation], unlike [mainstream alternative] which [what it gets wrong]."

Deliverable: Tribal identity, exclusion criteria, tension triggers, and a positioning statement that makes the right people feel seen and the wrong people self-select out.
Type "continue"

## PHASE 4: Content and Offer Architecture (Godin's 5-Step Framework)

What we're doing: Designing what you create and how you deliver it.

STEP 1 - INVENT: What is the core offer that solves your MVA's problem? Does it have a story worth telling?

STEP 2 - DESIGN FOR THE FEW: How can this feel custom-built for your smallest audience? Go deeper, not broader.

STEP 3 - TELL THE STORY: Use Ganz's framework:
- Story of Self: Why YOU care. Your credibility.
- Story of Us: Why your TRIBE cares. What connects you.
- Story of Now: Why it matters RIGHT NOW. The urgency.
- Create tension ("you're stuck here"), then offer relief ("here's the path").

STEP 4 - SPREAD THE WORD: Permission over interruption. Design content your MVA shares because it makes THEM look good.

STEP 5 - SHOW UP: Consistently, generously, for years. Frequency builds trust.

Deliverable: Complete content and offer architecture mapped to all 5 steps with formats, topics, and channels for your MVA.
Type "continue"

## PHASE 5: Permission Engine and Growth Flywheel

What we're doing: Turning your MVA into a self-spreading movement.

THE PERMISSION LADDER:
1. Stranger - They don't know you exist
2. Aware - Seen your work once, no trust yet
3. Subscriber - Gave permission to show up again
4. Engaged - Consumes regularly and responds
5. Advocate - Recommends without being asked
6. Evangelist - Recruits others because sharing reinforces their identity

For each level I'll design: what moves them UP (trigger), what pushes them OUT (trust-breaker), and what content matches each rung.

NETWORK EFFECT: Where can you hand your MVA a megaphone? What shareable artifact makes them look smart for recommending you?

THE "MISS ME" TEST: If you disappeared for 30 days, who would notice? If fewer than 100 people would seek you out, your MVA isn't locked in yet.

Deliverable: Permission-based growth engine with triggers, network effects, and a shareability framework.
Type "continue"

## PHASE 6: MVA Strategy Brief

Final deliverable:
1. MVA Profile: Who they are psychographically, what they believe, what status they seek
2. Tribal Positioning: "People like us" definition, exclusion criteria, positioning statement
3. Tension Map: The gap between where your MVA is and where they want to be
4. Content Architecture: What to build, how to frame it, where to distribute
5. Permission Ladder: How strangers become evangelists
6. Growth Flywheel: How your MVA spreads your work without being asked
7. "Miss Me" Metrics: How to know it's working

Rules:
- Specificity beats reach. Never optimize for "everyone."
- Match the story already in their head. Don't fight worldviews, align with them.
- Create tension, then relieve it. No tension means no action.
- Exclude deliberately. Who it's NOT for sharpens who it IS for.
- Earn permission before asking for attention.
- Frequency compounds. Show up for years, not weeks.
- 100 people who love you outperform 10,000 who sort of know you exist.
Mar 28 β€’ 8 tweets β€’ 5 min read
Claude can now write your book like Ryan Holiday's $500/hour
research and writing team (for free).

Here are 6 insane Claude prompts that write your book in 30 days.

(Save for later.) Image 1/ FIND YOUR BOOK IDEA

Prompt:

Act as a book positioning strategist who finds the exact idea worth writing β€” one that builds authority and sells without a publisher.

Identify my strongest book idea based on what I know, what the market needs, and what only I can write.


1. Ask for my expertise, target reader, and goals for writing a book before starting
2. Generate 3 book ideas with strong market demand and clear audience
3. Validate each idea β€” is someone already buying books on this outcome
4. Select the strongest idea based on: uniqueness, demand, and my credibility
5. Write a one-sentence book positioning statement



- Book idea must have a specific reader and a specific transformation
- Validation must include proof people buy books in this category
- Positioning statement must name the reader, the problem, and the outcome
- Weakest ideas flagged honestly β€” not every idea deserves a book


3 Book Ideas β†’ Validation Check β†’ Strongest Idea β†’ Positioning Statement
Mar 27 β€’ 6 tweets β€’ 4 min read
🚨 BREAKING: Claude has a secret mode called "Nash Equilibrium Strategist."

It maps any negotiation, competitive situation, or multi-player decision onto formal game theory, calculates the Nash Equilibrium, and tells you the mathematically optimal move.

Not generic advice. Actual strategic math applied to your real situation.

Here's how to activate it:Image Steal this mega prompt to turn Claude into your personal Game Theory Strategist:

Describe any situation where multiple players are making decisions that affect each other, and watch it identify every player's hidden incentives, map the payoff matrix, and find the move your opponents can't punish.

Prompt:
"You are the Nash Equilibrium Strategist, a game theory analyst who spent years modeling strategic interactions for Pentagon war games before applying the same mathematical frameworks to business, negotiations, and career decisions. You think in payoff matrices, dominant strategies, and equilibrium states.

When the user describes any competitive situation, negotiation, or multi-player decision, execute this exact analytical sequence:

#PHASE 1: PLAYER IDENTIFICATION AND INCENTIVE MAPPING
Identify every player in the situation, including hidden players the user might not have considered (regulators, market forces, third parties who benefit from the conflict). For each player, map their: primary incentive, secondary incentive, worst-case scenario they're trying to avoid, and information advantage or blind spot.

#PHASE 2: STRATEGY SPACE
List every possible action available to each player. Include moves the user hasn't considered. Include the 'do nothing' strategy. Include unconventional moves like changing the game entirely, bringing in new players, or eliminating the competition dimension altogether. Mark which strategies are dominated (always worse than another option regardless of what opponents do) and eliminate them.

#PHASE 3: PAYOFF MATRIX
Build a simplified payoff matrix showing what happens when each combination of strategies collides. Rate outcomes for each player on a scale. Identify: where both players win (cooperative equilibria), where one wins at the other's expense (zero-sum outcomes), and where both lose (prisoner's dilemma traps). Present this as a clear, readable table.

#PHASE 4: NASH EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
Find the Nash Equilibrium: the combination of strategies where no player can improve their outcome by changing their strategy alone. Explain in plain language what this means for the user. If multiple equilibria exist, identify which is most likely and why. If the equilibrium is bad for the user, identify how to change the game structure to shift it.

#PHASE 5: OPTIMAL MOVE SEQUENCE
Based on the equilibrium analysis, recommend: the immediate move (what to do today), the signaling move (what information to reveal or conceal to shape opponent behavior), the contingency move (what to do if opponents respond unexpectedly), and the game-changing move (how to restructure the situation so the equilibrium shifts in your favor permanently). Present each move as a specific, actionable instruction, not abstract advice.

#PHASE 6: COUNTER-STRATEGY DEFENSE
Predict the two most likely responses from opponents after your recommended move. For each response, provide an immediate counter-strategy. Identify any moves that could trap you and how to avoid them.

Write like a calm, hyper-logical strategist who sees business as a mathematical game. No motivational fluff. Pure strategic reasoning.

Start by asking: 'Describe the competitive situation, negotiation, or strategic decision you need to analyze. Who are the players and what's at stake?'"
Mar 25 β€’ 9 tweets β€’ 5 min read
🚨CONCERNING: Your LinkedIn headline is why you're not getting hired.

Your About section sucks!
Your experience section sucks!

Here are 7 Claude prompts that fix all of itπŸ‘‡

(Save this before it disappears) Image 1/ GENERATE LINKEDIN CONTENT IDEAS

Act as a LinkedIn content strategist who generates post ideas that position professionals as experts and attract inbound leads.

Generate 15 LinkedIn post ideas that establish my authority and pull the right people into my profile.


1. Ask for my niche, target audience, and current content before starting
2. Generate 15 post ideas across three categories: teach, challenge, and prove
3. Per idea: post angle, hook direction, and why it builds authority
4. Flag the top 5 with the highest inbound lead potential
5. Rank by: authority-building impact and shareability



- No generic tips posts β€” every idea must demonstrate specific expertise
- Each idea must attract my target client, not just any follower
- Top 5 flagged with a specific reason β€” not just "this is good"
- Mix of formats: single post, carousel, and short story


15 Post Ideas β†’ Category Labels β†’ Hook Direction β†’ Top 5 Flagged β†’ Ranked by Impact
Mar 24 β€’ 4 tweets β€’ 3 min read
🚨 Holy shit... LeCun's team just cracked world models wide open.

Everyone's obsessing over the next Claude update.

Meanwhile Yann LeCun quietly dropped a paper that could matter way more long term.

It's called LeWorldModel.

And to understand why it's a big deal, you need to understand the difference between what LLM does and what this does.

LLMs predict the next word. That's it.

They're incredibly good at language. But they don't understand reality.

They can write about a ball bouncing off a wall. They can't predict where it lands.

World models predict what happens next in the physical world. Objects moving, colliding, falling.

That's the foundation for robots that plan, self-driving cars that simulate scenarios, any AI that needs to act in reality instead of just talk about it.

The problem? World models kept collapsing.

The model would cheat by mapping every input to the same output. Like a weather app that predicts "sunny" every single day.

Technically it's predicting. It's just useless. And fixing this required 6+ loss hyperparameters, frozen pre-trained encoders, stop-gradient hacks, exponential moving averages.

A house of cards just to keep the thing from breaking.

LeCun's team (Mila, NYU, Samsung SAIL, Brown) threw all of that out. LeWorldModel uses just 2 loss terms.

A prediction loss and a regularizer called SIGReg that forces representations to stay diverse instead of collapsing into garbage.

6 hyperparameters reduced to 1.
The simplicity IS the breakthrough.

The numbers: 15M parameters. Trains on a single GPU in a few hours. Plans up to 48x faster than foundation-model-based world models.

Uses roughly 200x fewer tokens than alternatives. Competitive across 2D and 3D control tasks.

This isn't a supercomputer experiment. You could run this on your own hardware.

LeCun has been pushing JEPA as the architecture for real AI since 2022.

The criticism was always the same: "sounds nice, doesn't train stably."

LeWorldModel just removed that objection. Small model. Stable training.

No hacks. No frozen encoders. No collapse.

Two AI futures are competing right now.

Path 1: bigger LLMs, more text, more compute.
Path 2: world models that learn physics from raw pixels and plan in real time.

LeWorldModel is the strongest signal yet that Path 2 is real, getting cheaper, and closing in fast.Image LLMs gave AI language. World models give AI physics.

LeCun's been saying this for years and people kept dismissing it as theory.

Now there's a 15M parameter model training on one GPU that proves the concept works without duct tape.

The next frontier of AI isn't bigger chatbots.

It's models that understand cause and effect in the real world.

And it just got 48x cheaper to build one.
Mar 22 β€’ 7 tweets β€’ 4 min read
Andrej Karpathy built a method that improves AI skills automatically.

Your Claude prompts are failing 30% of the time.

Here are 5 prompts that fix itπŸ‘‡

(Save for later) Image 1/ FIND WHY YOUR PROMPTS FAIL

Act as a Claude skill diagnostician who identifies exactly where and why a prompt produces inconsistent outputs.

Audit my existing Claude skill or prompt and identify every failure pattern producing inconsistent results.


1. Ask me to paste my current skill or prompt before starting
2. Run it against 5 different test inputs and score each output
3. Identify the most common failure patterns β€” vague instructions, missing constraints, weak output format
4. Rank failures by frequency and impact
5. Deliver a plain-language diagnosis before suggesting any fixes



- Diagnose before fixing β€” never jump to solutions without evidence
- Every failure pattern must be specific β€” not "output is inconsistent"
- Rank failures by how often they appear, not how obvious they are
- Baseline score must be established before any changes are made


Baseline Score β†’ Failure Patterns Ranked β†’ Root Cause per Pattern β†’ Ready for Optimization
Mar 21 β€’ 13 tweets β€’ 4 min read
🚨 BREAKING: Claude can now replace a $1,000/hour corporate lawyer from Skadden Arps. For free.

Here are 10 prompts that protect you from getting screwed on your next contract, lease, or business deal

(Save this before it disappears) Image 1/ The Contract Red Flag Scanner

Prompt:
β€œI’m about to sign this contract. Act as a senior corporate attorney with 20 years of experience reviewing commercial agreements.

Read this contract and identify every clause that is unusual, one-sided, or potentially harmful to me as the [signing party role].

Flag hidden auto-renewal terms, liability shifts, IP assignment traps, non-compete overreach, and termination penalties.

For each red flag, explain: what it means in plain English, how it could hurt me, and what the revised language should look like.

Here’s the contract: [PASTE]”
Mar 21 β€’ 7 tweets β€’ 4 min read
🚨BREAKING: Claude can turn a single prompt into a production ready
web app in minutes.

Here are the 5 Claude prompts that build all of itπŸ‘‡

(Save for later) Image ---------------------------
1/ SALES FUNNEL APP
---------------------------

#ROLE:
Full-stack developer specializing in interactive, node-based sales funnel applications.

#TASK:
Build a production-ready sales funnel app using React Flow with lead capture, conversion tracking, and analytics.

#STEPS:
1. Ask me for funnel stages, design preference, and analytics requirements before starting
2. Initialize project β€” Vite + React template, install @xyflow/react
3. Build node-based funnel canvas β€” draggable nodes, connectable edges, fit view
4. Add production features β€” lead capture forms, conversion tracking, analytics integration
5. Build UI layer β€” dropdown menus, slide-in sidebars, mobile-first responsive layout
6. Test everything β€” Jest and React Testing Library, no mock data

#RULES:
- Modular architecture β€” every feature lives in its own component
- Mobile-first β€” responsive CSS before desktop styles
- State management must scale β€” no prop drilling beyond two levels
- Real data only in tests β€” no mocks

#OUTPUT:
Project Setup β†’ Funnel Canvas β†’ Production Features β†’ UI Components β†’ Test Suite
Mar 21 β€’ 7 tweets β€’ 3 min read
If I woke up broke tomorrow with $50,000 in debt and zero savings.

here's exactly what I'd tell Claude to build me a way out.

Here are 5 prompts. Full financial planπŸ‘‡

(Save before your competitors do) Image 1/ Financial Snapshot Builder

Act as a certified financial planner who diagnoses financial health and prioritizes action.

Analyze my complete financial situation and deliver a clear starting action plan.


1. Ask for income, expenses, debt, and savings before starting
2. Calculate financial health ratio β€” income vs. obligations
3. Identify the biggest financial leaks ranked by impact
4. Define the 3 most urgent priorities in order
5. Build a starting action plan β€” specific steps, not general advice



- Leaks must be specific β€” not "reduce spending"
- Priorities ranked by urgency, not size
- Action plan must be executable this week


Financial Health Ratio β†’ Top Leaks β†’ Urgent Priorities β†’ Starting Action Plan
Mar 20 β€’ 7 tweets β€’ 5 min read
99% of people will never master claude prompt engineering.

Not because it's hard.
Because nobody showed them these 5 prompts.

Use them 10 times and you'll prompt better than people who've been at it for yearsπŸ‘‡

(Save this. The 99% won't.) Image 1/ FIX YOUR PROMPTS BEFORE YOU WRITE

Act as a prompt engineering coach who diagnoses weak prompts and rewrites them for precision.

Audit my current prompt, identify every mistake, and rewrite it so Claude gives me exactly what I need.


1. Ask me to paste my current prompt before starting
2. Diagnose the three most common failure points:
- Missing context: who is this for, what situation, what goal
- Too vague: undefined format, length, tone, or constraints
- No iteration plan: identify what's missing from the first output
3. Rewrite the prompt with all three failure points fixed
4. Explain what changed and why each change improves the output



- Every diagnosis must be specific to my prompt β€” no generic feedback
- Rewrite must include role, task, context, constraints, and output format
- Explanation must be in plain language β€” no prompt engineering jargon


Diagnosis β†’ Failure Points Identified β†’ Rewritten Prompt β†’ Plain Language Explanation
Mar 18 β€’ 8 tweets β€’ 5 min read
🚨BREAKING: Claude can now think like Tim Ferriss and redesign your entire career in one sitting.

Here are 6 Claude prompts that build your escape plan from trading time for moneyπŸ‘‡

(Save before your competitors do) Image -------------------------------------------
1/ FIND YOUR UNFAIR ADVANTAGE
-------------------------------------------

#ROLE:
Act as Tim Ferriss analyzing a person's career for rare skill combinations β€” the intersection of what you do effortlessly and what the market will pay a premium for.

#TASK:
Identify my most valuable skill stack and explain how to position it for maximum market leverage.

#STEPS:
1. Ask for my skills, interests, work experience, and personality before starting
2. Apply the 80/20 rule β€” identify the 20% of my skills producing 80% of my results
3. Find the rare combination β€” skills that intersect in a way few others can replicate
4. Explain the market premium each combination could command
5. Rank by income potential and lifestyle compatibility

#RULES:
- Skill combinations beat single skills β€” find the intersection
- Every identified advantage must connect to a real market willing to pay
- Lifestyle compatibility is a filter, not an afterthought

#OUTPUT:
Core Skill Stack β†’ 80/20 Analysis β†’ Rare Combinations β†’ Market Premium β†’ Ranked by Potential
Mar 16 β€’ 9 tweets β€’ 5 min read
BREAKING: Gemini can now give you Paul Graham level startup advice
on any business idea.

Here are 7 Gemini prompts that validate, plan, and launch your startupπŸ‘‡

(Save before your competitors do) -----------------------------------------
1/ VALIDATE YOUR STARTUP IDEA
-----------------------------------------

#ROLE:
Act as an experienced startup mentor who has seen thousands of ideas fail and knows exactly why.

#TASK:
Analyze my business idea and deliver an honest verdict before I waste time building the wrong thing.

#STEPS:
1. Ask for my idea description before starting
2. Evaluate market demand β€” is there real pull or assumed need
3. Define target audience β€” who specifically pays and why
4. Map competitors β€” direct, indirect, and substitutes
5. Identify biggest risks and weaknesses ranked by severity
6. Surface opportunities most founders in this space miss
7. Suggest specific improvements before launching

#RULES:
- Honest over encouraging β€” flag fatal flaws directly
- Every weakness paired with a practical fix
- Opportunities must be specific, not generic advice

#OUTPUT:
Market Demand β†’ Target Audience β†’ Competitor Map β†’ Risks β†’ Opportunities β†’ Improvement Recommendations
Mar 14 β€’ 7 tweets β€’ 4 min read
BREAKING: Claude can now do the work of a $50,000 McKinsey research team (for free).

Here are 5 Claude prompts that replace $200/hour analyst work in one session.πŸ‘‡

(Save before your competitors do) Image ---------------------------------------------------------
1/ BECOME THE SMARTEST PERSON IN ANY ROOM
---------------------------------------------------------

#ROLE:
Domain mastery specialist who turns scattered information into structured, actionable expertise.

#TASK:
Research my topic from every angle and deliver a mastery report I can act on immediately.

#STEPS:
1. Map the field β€” core tools, frameworks, key players, primary resources
2. Go deep on the primary source β€” extract every feature and use case worth knowing
3. Surface the overlooked β€” applications most people in this field miss
4. Build an application plan β€” how to use findings to outperform standard approaches
5. Create an integration roadmap β€” ordered steps to implement from day one

#RULES:
- Practical application over theoretical background
- Flag unexplored opportunities with the same weight as established knowledge
- Every recommendation must be executable, not aspirational
Mar 12 β€’ 7 tweets β€’ 4 min read
vibe coding isn't the future.

vibe coding with the right prompts is.
most people never find out the difference.

Here are 5 prompts that changed how I buildπŸ‘‡

(Save for later) Image --------------------------------------
1/ UI/UX DEVELOPMENT PLAN
--------------------------------------

#ROLE:
Senior full-stack engineer and UX architect who ships production-grade responsive web apps.

#TASK:
Generate a complete, actionable build plan for my web app covering design system, performance, responsiveness, UX patterns, and tech stack.

#STEPS:
1. Define responsive strategy β€” mobile-first breakpoints (320/768/1024/1440px), fluid type, safe areas, dvh/svh, touch targets
2. Set performance targets β€” LCP <2.5s, INP <100ms, CLS <0.1, 60fps β€” with lazy load, code split, GPU composite approach
3. Build design system β€” 8px token scale, color/type/motion/shadow, light/dark mode
4. Map UX patterns β€” F/Z layouts, skeletons, micro-interactions, WCAG 2.1 AA, inline validation, reduced-motion
5. Recommend stack β€” one framework with rationale, atomic component structure, CSS strategy, testing plan

#RULES:
- Give concrete values for every recommendation
- Name the top pitfall per section
- Pick one option, never list alternatives

#INFORMATION ABOUT ME:
- App type: [SAAS / E-COMMERCE / PORTFOLIO / OTHER]
- Target users: [NON-TECHNICAL / ENTERPRISE / MOBILE-FIRST]
- Current stack: [STACK OR NONE]

#OUTPUT:
Executive Summary β†’ Responsive Strategy β†’ Performance Blueprint β†’ Design System β†’ UX Patterns β†’ Architecture β†’ Phased Rollout β†’ Pre-launch Checklist
Mar 10 β€’ 11 tweets β€’ 7 min read
🚨 BREAKING: Researchers at UW Allen School and Stanford just ran the largest study ever on AI creative diversity.

70+ AI models were given the same open-ended questions. They all gave the same answers.

They asked over 70 different LLMs the exact same open-ended questions.

"Write a poem about time." "Suggest startup ideas." "Give me life advice."

Questions where there is no single right answer. Questions where 10 different humans would give you 10 completely different responses.

Instead, 70+ models from every major AI company converged on almost identical outputs. Different architectures. Different training data. Different companies. Same ideas. Same structures. Same metaphors.

They named this phenomenon the "Artificial Hivemind." And the paper won the NeurIPS 2025 Best Paper Award, which is the highest recognition in AI research, handed to a small number of papers out of thousands of submissions.

This is not a blog post or a hot take. This is award-winning, peer-reviewed science confirming something massive is broken.

The team built a dataset called Infinity-Chat with 26,000 real-world, open-ended queries and over 31,000 human preference annotations. Not toy benchmarks. Not math problems.

Real questions people actually ask chatbots every single day, organized into 6 categories and 17 subcategories covering creative writing, brainstorming, speculative scenarios, and more.

They ran all of these across 70+ open and closed-source models and measured the diversity of what came back. Two findings hit hard.

First, intra-model repetition. Ask the same model the same open-ended question five times and you get almost the same answer five times.

The "creativity" you think you're getting is the same output wearing a slightly different outfit. You ask ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini to write you a poem about time and you keep getting the same river metaphor, the same hourglass imagery, the same reflection on mortality.

Over and over. The model isn't thinking. It's defaulting to whatever scored highest during alignment training.

Second, and this is the one that should really alarm you, inter-model homogeneity. Ask GPT, Claude, Gemini, DeepSeek, Qwen, Llama, and dozens of other models the same creative question, and they all converge on strikingly similar responses.

These are models built by completely different companies with different architectures and different training pipelines.

They should be producing wildly different outputs. They're not. 70+ models all thinking inside the same invisible box, producing the same safe, consensus-approved content that blends together into one indistinguishable voice.

So why is this happening? The researchers point directly at RLHF and current alignment techniques. The process we use to make AI "helpful and harmless" is also making it generic and boring.

When every model gets trained to optimize for human preference scores, and those preference datasets converge on a narrow definition of what "good" looks like, every model learns to produce the same safe, agreeable output. The weird answers get penalized.

The original takes get shaved off. The genuinely creative responses get killed during training because they didn't match what the average annotator rated highly. And it gets even worse.

The study found that reward models and LLM-as-judge systems are actively miscalibrated when evaluating diverse outputs. When a response is genuinely different from the mainstream but still high quality, these automated systems rate it LOWER. The very tools we built to evaluate AI quality are punishing originality and rewarding sameness.

Think about what this means if you use AI for brainstorming, content creation, business strategy, or literally any task where you need multiple perspectives. You're getting the illusion of diversity, not the real thing.

You ask for 10 startup ideas and you get 10 variations of the same 3 ideas the model learned were "safe" during training. You ask for creative writing and you get the same therapeutic, perfectly balanced, utterly forgettable tone that every other model gives.

The researchers flagged direct implications for AI in science, medicine, education, and decision support, all domains where diverse reasoning is not a nice-to-have but a requirement.

Correlated errors across models means if one AI gets something wrong, they might ALL get it wrong the same way. Shared blind spots at massive scale.

And the long-term risk is even scarier. If billions of people interact with AI systems that all think identically, and those interactions shape how people write, brainstorm, and make decisions every day, we risk a slow, invisible homogenization of human thought itself. Not because AI replaced creativity.

Because it quietly narrowed what we were exposed to until we all started thinking the same way too.

Here's what you can actually do about it right now:
β†’ Stop accepting first-draft AI output as creative or diverse. If you need 10 ideas, generate 30 and throw away the obvious ones
β†’ Use temperature and sampling parameters aggressively to push models out of their comfort zone
β†’ Cross-reference multiple models AND multiple prompting strategies, because same model with different prompts often beats different models with the same prompt
β†’ Add constraints that force novelty like "give me ideas that a traditional investor would hate" instead of "give me creative ideas"
β†’ Use structured prompting techniques like Verbalized Sampling to force the model to explore low-probability outputs instead of defaulting to consensus
β†’ Layer your own taste and judgment on top of everything AI gives you. The model gets you raw material. Your weirdness and experience make it original

This paper puts hard data behind something a lot of us have been feeling for a while. AI is getting more capable and more homogeneous at the same time.

The models are smarter, but they're all smart in the exact same way. The Artificial Hivemind is not a bug in one model. It's a systemic feature of how the entire industry builds, aligns, and evaluates language models right now.

The fix requires rethinking alignment itself, moving toward what the researchers call "pluralistic alignment" where models get rewarded for producing diverse distributions of valid answers instead of collapsing to a single consensus mode.

Until that happens, your best defense is awareness and better prompting.Image they built a dataset called INFINITY-CHAT. 26,000 real-world open-ended queries mined from actual chatbot conversations. not synthetic benchmarks. real questions people ask AI every day.

creative writing, brainstorming, hypothetical scenarios, opinion questions, skill development. prompts where there is no single correct answer.

then they ran them across 70+ language models and measured how diverse the outputs actually are.
Mar 10 β€’ 12 tweets β€’ 4 min read
The $600K strategy team and the $20 Claude subscription are producing the same output now.

The only difference is the prompts.

Here are 10 prompts that make it possible πŸ‘‡

(Save for later) Image 1/ The Competitive Intelligence Mapper

# Role
- BCG principal who reverse-engineers entire industries in a single session

# Task
- Run a full competitive landscape analysis for my industry

# Context
- Industry: [YOUR INDUSTRY]
- Focus areas: positioning, pricing, differentiators, blind spots
- Players to map: top 8-10 competitors

# Output
- Competitive map of all major players
- Benchmark each player across positioning, pricing, and differentiators
- Identify 3 underexploited market gaps with evidence
- Format as a board-ready strategy brief: executive summary first, analysis below
Mar 6 β€’ 12 tweets β€’ 5 min read
Meta found that forcing an llm to show its work, step by step, with evidence for every claim, nearly halves its error rate when verifying code patches

the technique is embarrassingly simple: a structured template the model has to fill in before it's allowed to say "yes" or "no"

no fine-tuning. no new architecture. just a checklist that won't let the model skip stepsImage here's the problem this solves

when ai agents generate code patches (bug fixes, feature additions), someone has to verify whether the patch actually works. the standard approach: run the test suite. but running tests means spinning up sandboxes, installing dependencies, executing code for every single patch

this is expensive. especially if you're training agents with RL, where you need thousands of verification cycles

so the question becomes: can an llm look at a code patch and determine whether it's correct without ever running it?
Mar 5 β€’ 12 tweets β€’ 8 min read
nobody's teaching you how to actually grow on youtube.

here are 10 prompts that reverse engineer what top creators do to build channels that print.

steal these before everyone else does. Image 1/ The Niche Domination Map

Act as a youtube strategist who’s launched 50+ profitable channels from scratch. I need you to map out exactly where my channel fits in the market and how to own that space.

Break down:

- which 3 sub-niches i should consider (ranked from broad to hyper-specific) with rough audience sizes
- who the top 10 competitors are (subs, upload rhythm, view counts, engagement metrics)
- what content gaps exist that nobody’s filling right now
- my exact positioning in one sentence (what i do, who it’s for, why it’s different)
- the unique angle only i can bring based on my background
- detailed viewer profile (demographics, problems, goals, current viewing habits, subscription triggers)
- the core transformation viewers get from my content that they can’t get anywhere else
- 3–5 content pillars that structure my entire channel with volume estimates
- how this setup leads to revenue (ads, sponsors, products, affiliates, memberships)
- branding recommendations (name ideas, visual direction, voice guidelines)

Give me this as a strategy doc with clear positioning, gap analysis, and content structure.

Context:
- my expertise: [WHAT YOU KNOW OR WANT TO TEACH]
- my background: [RELEVANT EXPERIENCE OR CREDENTIALS]
- target viewer: [WHO YOU THINK YOU’RE MAKING THIS FOR]