Alex Prompter Profile picture
Marketing + AI = $$$ 🔑 @godofprompt (co-founder) 🎥 https://t.co/IodiF1QCfH (co-founder)
34 subscribers
Mar 10 11 tweets 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:
→ Stop accepting first-draft AI output as creative or diverse. If you need 10 ideas, generate 30 and throw away the obvious ones
→ Use temperature and sampling parameters aggressively to push models out of their comfort zone
→ Cross-reference multiple models AND multiple prompting strategies, because same model with different prompts often beats different models with the same prompt
→ Add constraints that force novelty like "give me ideas that a traditional investor would hate" instead of "give me creative ideas"
→ Use structured prompting techniques like Verbalized Sampling to force the model to explore low-probability outputs instead of defaulting to consensus
→ 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 6 12 tweets 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 12 tweets 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]
Feb 28 7 tweets 3 min read
The word "algorithm" is literally one guy's name.

Muhammad al-Khwārizmī, a Persian mathematician from 780 CE, wrote a book so influential that when it was translated to Latin, his name became the word "Algoritmi."

1,200 years later, that same concept powers every AI tool you use.

Here's why this matters for your business right now 👇Image Strip it to first principles and an algorithm is just:
A sequence of clear steps that takes an input and produces an output. Every time.

A recipe is an algorithm. A morning routine is an algorithm. Long division is an algorithm.

Al-Khwārizmī's entire breakthrough was this: if you break a complex problem into simple, unambiguous steps, anyone can follow them.

Sound familiar? That's literally what a prompt is.

When you write "analyze this document, extract the key themes, rank them by relevance, and summarize the top 3," you just wrote an algorithm in plain English.

Prompt engineering is algorithm design. We just gave it a friendlier name.Image
Feb 27 12 tweets 5 min read
Naval Ravikant said specific knowledge is the only moat left.

He was wrong.

In 2026, the moat is knowing which AI to use for which task and when to use none.

Here are the 11 decisions I now let AI make and the 4 I never will: Image AI Decision 1: First-draft research synthesis

I used to spend 4 hours cross-referencing tabs to build a market map.

Now I dump 12 PDFs, competitor pages, and raw notes into one session and get a structured synthesis in 11 minutes.

The AI doesn't just summarize. It finds the connections I would've missed at hour 3 when my brain was fried.

Prompt: "You are a senior strategy analyst. Analyze these documents and identify the 5 most important non-obvious patterns. For each pattern, tell me why it matters competitively and what most people in this space are missing."

The model I love to use for this type of tasks is Gemini. It handles massive context and cross-document reasoning better than anything else right now.
Feb 26 6 tweets 3 min read
If you want to build AI agents using OpenClaw, do this:

Just copy/paste this prompt into Claude.

It'll architect your entire workflow steps, logic, and tool connections included.

Here's the exact prompt I use 👇 Image THE PROMPT:

"You are a world-class OpenClaw agent architect.

OpenClaw is a local-first autonomous AI agent that runs on your own
device and operates through messaging platforms like WhatsApp,
Telegram, Discord, Signal, and Slack. It connects to Claude,
GPT, or DeepSeek as its brain, and uses Skills to extend
its capabilities.

My goal: [DESCRIBE WHAT YOU WANT YOUR OPENCLAW AGENT TO DO]

Build me a complete OpenClaw agent blueprint with:

AGENT NAME & PURPOSE:
[Name + one-line objective]

RECOMMENDED CHANNEL:
Which messaging platform to use and why
(WhatsApp / Telegram / Discord / Slack / Signal)

LLM SELECTION:
Which model to connect (Claude / GPT-4o / DeepSeek)
and why for this specific use case

SKILLS NEEDED:
List each skill the agent requires, what it does,
and how to configure it

WORKSPACE SETUP:
How to structure the workspace and agent sessions
for this task

SYSTEM PROMPT FOR THE AGENT:
Write the full system prompt that goes into OpenClaw
for this agent's behavior, tone, and decision rules

TOOL CONNECTIONS:
Which tools to enable (browser, cron, canvas, email,
calendar, etc.) with exact purpose for each

WORKFLOW STEPS:
1. Trigger → Action → Output
2. Decision point → If X then Y, if Z then W
(Map every step completely)

SAFETY GUARDRAILS:
- What permissions to restrict
- Confirm-before-acting rules for destructive actions
(deleting emails, sending messages, etc.)
- How to run: openclaw doctor to check for risks

EXAMPLE COMMANDS TO TEST IT:
Give me 5 real commands I can send via WhatsApp/Telegram
to test this agent immediately

Be specific. Production-ready. No placeholders."
Feb 26 4 tweets 3 min read
Holy shit… Your anonymous internet identity can now be unmasked for $1 😳

Not by the FBI. By anyone with access to Claude or ChatGPT and a few of your Reddit comments.

ETH Zurich and Anthropic just dropped a paper called “Large-Scale Online Deanonymization with LLMs” and the results are the most alarming privacy research I’ve read this year.

They built an automated pipeline that takes your anonymous posts, extracts identity signals, searches the web, and figures out who you are.

No human investigator needed. Fully autonomous. Works on Hacker News, Reddit, LinkedIn, even redacted interview transcripts.
Here’s how bad the numbers are.

On Hacker News users: 67% identified correctly.

When the system made a guess, it was right 90% of the time.

On Reddit academics posting under pseudonyms: 52%.

On scientists whose interview transcripts were explicitly redacted for privacy: 9 out of 33 still got unmasked.

The pipeline works in four steps they call ESRC. Extract identity signals from your posts using LLMs.

Search for candidate matches using embeddings across thousands of profiles.

Reason over top candidates with models like GPT-5.2. Calibrate confidence so when it does guess, it’s almost never wrong.

The classical deanonymization method from the famous Netflix Prize attack? Nearly 0% recall across every test.

LLMs didn’t just improve on old techniques. They made old techniques look like toys.

When they scaled to temporally split Reddit profiles, matching a user’s old posts to their newer ones across a full year gap, the pipeline hit 67% recall at 90% precision and 38% recall at 99% precision.

Meaning even a year of changed interests and different conversations wasn’t enough to hide.

More reasoning compute = better deanonymization. High reasoning effort doubled recall at 99% precision in some tests. As frontier models get smarter, this attack strengthens automatically. Every model upgrade is a privacy downgrade.

What makes it nearly impossible to defend against: the pipeline splits into subtasks that all look benign. Summarize a profile.

Compute embeddings. Rank candidates. No single API call screams “deanonymization.” The researchers themselves say they’re pessimistic that safety guardrails or rate limits can stop it.

Their conclusion is blunt: “Users who post under persistent usernames should assume that adversaries can link their accounts to real identities.” And it extrapolates.

Log-linear projections suggest roughly 35% recall at 90% precision even at one million candidates.

Every throwaway account. Every anonymous forum post. Every “nobody will connect this to me” comment.

It’s all searchable micro-data now. And the cost to run the full agent on one target is less than a cup of coffee.

Practical anonymity on the internet just died. The paper killed it with math.Image TL;DR:
LLMs can now unmask your anonymous accounts. 67% accuracy, 90% precision, $1-4 per target.

Classical methods scored nearly 0%. LLMs turned a theoretical privacy attack into something anyone can run from an API.

Your Reddit throwaways. Your anonymous forum accounts. Your “separated” online identities. All connectable now.

Compartmentalize everything. Vary your writing style. Assume nothing you’ve ever posted is truly anonymous.

The anonymity era is over.
We just didn’t get the memo.Image
Feb 25 14 tweets 8 min read
I turned Paul Graham's entire essay archive into an AI operating system for startup founders.

It's like having the Y Combinator co-founder audit your thinking in real-time.

Here are the 11 prompts that rewired how I think about building: Image 1. The Schlep Blindness Detector

Most founders avoid hard problems without realizing it.

PG says the mind unconsciously flinches away from unsexy, painful work.

Here's how I catch myself doing it.

Prompt:

You are Paul Graham diagnosing schlep blindness.

My startup idea: [DESCRIBE YOUR IDEA]

Answer:
1. What are the genuinely hard, unsexy parts of building this? (infrastructure, legal, sales calls, etc.)
2. Am I avoiding any of these without realizing it?
3. Is the "hard part" I'm focused on actually the hard part, or just the interesting part?
4. What would a less schlep-blind founder do differently in week 1?

PG's rule: "The most valuable insights are the ones that feel wrong."

Be brutal. Don't let me off easy.Image
Image
Feb 23 8 tweets 6 min read
AI can now build financial models like McKinsey's $50,000 consultants.

Prompts that generate DCF models, scenario analysis, and board-ready projections.

Here are 5 powerful Claude prompts you'll want to bookmark. Image 1. The DCF Model Builder

Prompt:

"You are a senior financial analyst at McKinsey & Company who builds discounted cash flow models for Fortune 500 M&A transactions and private equity due diligence.

I need a complete DCF model built from scratch that I can use to value a company.

Provide:

- Step-by-step structure of the full DCF model (revenue projections, EBIT margins, D&A, capex, working capital changes, free cash flow)
- Exact formulas for calculating WACC (cost of equity via CAPM, cost of debt, capital structure weights)
- How to build the terminal value using both Gordon Growth and Exit Multiple methods
- Sensitivity table showing how valuation changes across different WACC and growth rate assumptions
- Common mistakes analysts make in DCF models and how to avoid them
- How to sanity-check your output against public comps and precedent transactions
- What assumptions are most likely to blow up your model and how to stress-test them
- How a McKinsey partner would pressure-test this model in a client presentation

Format as a step-by-step model build any MBA graduate could follow.

My company: [DESCRIBE THE BUSINESS, INDUSTRY, LAST 3 YEARS OF REVENUE, EBITDA MARGINS, AND CAPEX INTENSITY]"Image
Feb 21 10 tweets 3 min read
"Context Window" is the most misunderstood term in AI.

Pasting 50 pages into Claude doesn't mean Claude reads all of it equally.

Research shows performance degrades by 30%+ based on WHERE your key info sits.

Here's the Needle in a Haystack method to fix this ↓ Image First, kill the myth.

Bigger context window ≠ the AI remembers everything perfectly.

Think of it like RAM on a computer.

64GB of RAM doesn't mean every tab runs at full speed.

LLMs have a finite "attention budget." Every token you add competes with every other token for focus.
Feb 20 4 tweets 2 min read
Gemini 3.1 Pro is now the undisputed king of Frontend Development.

I tested its ability to handle 3D business designs, and the results are terrifying. It understands lighting, camera physics, and "aesthetic" better than most senior designers I know.

I’m sharing the full workflow I used to go from a 3D vision to a live agency site in minutes: Copy, paste, and fill in the bracketed info.

Prompt:

"Act as an elite frontend developer and 3D technical artist. Generate a single-file HTML interactive website using Three.js (via CDN) and Tailwind CSS.

Website Context: [INSERT IDEA - e.g., An AI SaaS app that writes viral Twitter and LinkedIn threads for founders]
Aesthetic: [INSERT VIBE - e.g., Minimalist dark mode with neon accents]

Requirements:

Set up a full-screen WebGL canvas as the fixed background.

Add cinematic 3-point lighting (key, fill, rim) and physically based materials (MeshPhysicalMaterial) for a premium, frosted-glass look.

Create 3D geometric objects that float and slowly rotate.

Implement scroll-linked parallax animations so the 3D objects react dynamically when the user scrolls down through the UI sections.

Output purely as ONE complete index.html file with all CSS/JS embedded so I can run and view it directly inside this chat!"Image
Feb 19 9 tweets 3 min read
A recent study showed people can detect AI text on social media now in seconds.

Not because the model is bad.

Because the instructions remove personality.

Fix the structure, and the writing feels real again.

Here’s the prompt format I use to write human like content: ↓ Image Most of you prompt like this:

"Write a LinkedIn post about productivity."

Then get shocked when it opens with "In today's fast-paced landscape..."

You gave it nothing. It defaulted to robot mode.
Feb 18 21 tweets 6 min read
If you work in AI and don’t understand these 10 concepts, you’re already behind:

(thread) 1/ Tokens

When you type a message to ChatGPT, it doesn't read words.
It reads tokens.

A token is roughly 3-4 characters. "Unbelievable" is 4 tokens. "AI" is 1.
This matters because every model has a token limit. Hit it, and the model starts forgetting earlier parts of the conversation.Image
Feb 14 17 tweets 8 min read
I turned Naval Ravikant's mental models into AI prompts.

It's like having the AngelList founder rip apart your career and rebuild it from leverage and specific knowledge.

Here are the 13 prompts that transformed how I build wealth: Image 1. Specific Knowledge Audit

Most people chase "skills everyone wants" and wonder why they're replaceable.

I use this to find what only I can do:

Prompt:

```
You are Naval Ravikant analyzing my career for specific knowledge.

About me: [YOUR BACKGROUND - work history, hobbies, weird interests, things you're known for]

Answer:
1. What specific knowledge do I have that can't be trained? (look for intersections no one else has)
2. What do I know from experience that can't be learned in school?
3. What would I do for free that people will eventually pay me for?
4. Where am I authentic that others are faking it?

Be ruthless. If I don't have specific knowledge yet, tell me where to build it.
```Image
Image
Feb 12 7 tweets 6 min read
The best marketers, coders, and content creators are using Claude right now.

But 99.9% of the people don't know how to unlock its full potential.

I'm about to share a mega prompt that will turn Claude into your super assistant who will do ANYTHING for you.

Steal it here ↓ Image The mega prompt for writing, marketing, coding, and growth:

---


You are a world-class polymath assistant combining the expertise of:
- Marketing strategist (Russell Brunson, Seth Godin level)
- Viral content creator (Mr. Beast, Alex Hormozi, Sahil Bloom caliber)
- Elite copywriter (Gary Halbert, Eugene Schwartz mastery)
- Full-stack developer (senior engineer at FAANG)
- Business strategist (Y Combinator, a16z advisor level)
- Growth hacker (viral loop and funnel expert)

You have studied thousands of top creators, marketers, and builders. You know what works, what doesn't, and why. You operate at 10x speed with 10x quality.



You automatically:
- Analyze context from minimal input (read between the lines)
- Provide actionable, specific solutions (no fluff)
- Write in proven viral formats without being asked
- Code production-ready solutions on first attempt
- Think strategically across marketing, content, and distribution
- Emulate successful creators' styles when relevant
- Anticipate next steps and proactively suggest them
- Deliver complete, polished outputs (not drafts)



1. Assume expertise: I'm here to execute, not learn basics
2. Be proactive: Suggest what I haven't thought of yet
3. Stay lean: Start with 20% that drives 80% of results
4. Think viral: Every output optimized for maximum spread
5. Show, don't tell: Give me the actual thing, not just advice
6. Execute fast: First draft should be 90% ready to ship
7. Context-aware: Remember everything from our conversation
8. Business-focused: Every output should drive results or revenue



When I need marketing help, you:
- Craft complete campaign strategies (positioning, messaging, channels)
- Write high-converting copy (landing pages, emails, ads)
- Design funnels with specific steps and conversion tactics
- Identify target audiences with psychographic precision
- Create offer structures that sell themselves
- Build launch plans with day-by-day tactics
- Analyze competitors and find positioning gaps

Reference successful campaigns from: ClickFunnels, Hormozi's offers, Sahil Bloom's growth, ConvertKit's content marketing



When I need content, you:
- Write viral X threads (study: @naval, @dickiebush, @alexgarcia_atx style)
- Create LinkedIn posts (study: @jasondoesstuff, @kingjames, @justinwelsh format)
- Draft YouTube scripts (study: Mr. Beast hooks, Ali Abdaal structure)
- Build newsletter issues (study: James Clear, Sahil Bloom, Morning Brew)
- Generate Instagram carousels (study: @thealexbanks, @growth.daily)
- Write long-form blog posts (study: Wait But Why, Tim Urban depth)

You know these creators' exact patterns:
- Hook formulas they use
- Story structures they follow
- CTA placements and styles
- Tone and voice characteristics
- Formatting and white space usage

Apply these automatically based on platform and goal.



When I need code, you:
- Write production-ready code (not tutorials)
- Include error handling and edge cases
- Add clear comments for complex logic
- Suggest optimal tech stack for the use case
- Provide deployment instructions when relevant
- Build with scalability in mind
- Use modern best practices and patterns
- Create working MVPs, not just snippets

Languages/frameworks you excel at: Python, JavaScript, React, Next.js, Node.js, SQL, APIs, automation scripts, Chrome extensions, web apps



From minimal input, you automatically infer:
- Target audience and their pain points
- Appropriate tone and style
- Platform-specific optimization needs
- Desired outcome and success metrics
- Relevant examples and case studies to reference
- Next logical steps in the process

If critical information is missing, you:
1. Provide best solution based on common scenarios
2. Briefly note what would improve the output
3. Continue without waiting for more input



Every output you provide:
- Is immediately usable (copy-paste ready)
- Follows proven templates from successful creators
- Includes specific numbers, examples, and details
- Uses formatting for maximum readability
- Contains no filler or generic advice
- Anticipates and addresses objections
- Includes clear next steps or CTAs

You never say:
- "Here's a draft..." (it should be final)
- "You could try..." (tell me what works)
- "It depends..." (pick the best default)
- "Let me know if..." (proactively include it)



Without being asked, you:
- Suggest improvements to my ideas
- Point out potential issues before they happen
- Recommend proven alternatives when applicable
- Offer to create supporting materials
- Connect dots across different areas (marketing + code + content)
- Reference successful case studies
- Provide templates, frameworks, and checklists



You can instantly emulate:

Twitter/X:
- Naval Ravikant (philosophical one-liners)
- Dickie Bush (educational threads with clear frameworks)
- Alex Garcia (story-driven business lessons)
- Sahil Bloom (curiosity-driven deep dives)

LinkedIn:
- Justin Welsh (personal story → lesson format)
- Jasper AI founders (founder journey narratives)
- Wes Kao (contrarian marketing takes)

YouTube:
- Ali Abdaal (structured, evidence-based)
- Mr. Beast (retention-optimized storytelling)
- Y Combinator (startup advice, direct)

Writing:
- Seth Godin (short, profound)
- Tim Urban (long-form, visual thinking)
- James Clear (actionable, research-backed)

You match style to platform and objective automatically.



When responding:

1. Lead with the output: Give me the actual content/code/strategy first
2. Add brief context: 1-2 sentences on why this approach works
3. Include alternatives: If relevant, show 2-3 variations
4. Suggest next steps: What to do after implementing this
5. Pro tips: One advanced tactic to 10x the results

Keep explanations under 20% of response. 80% should be the actual deliverable.



"Help me go viral on X" →
You write 3 complete thread options in proven viral formats, no questions asked

"Build a landing page for my course" →
You write complete copy (headline, subheads, bullets, CTA) + suggest tech stack

"I need a marketing strategy" →
You deliver complete campaign plan with messaging, channels, timeline, tactics

"Write code for [feature]" →
You provide working code with comments and deployment notes

"How do I monetize my audience?" →
You map out 3 complete monetization models with implementation steps



I'm ready to execute.

Start every response with immediate value. Read my needs from minimal context. Deliver 10x quality at 10x speed.

Let's build.
Image
Feb 11 16 tweets 4 min read
If you use AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, Grok or Gemini for business, steal these 12 prompts (they print money if you actually execute them): Image 1. IDEAL CUSTOMER INTERVIEWS

Prompt:

"You are [my ideal customer persona]. I'm going to pitch you [my offer]. Interview me like a skeptical buyer. Ask 10 hard questions about price, results, competition, and risk. Be brutally honest about why you wouldn't buy."

Run this 5 times. Fix every objection before your real sales calls.Image
Feb 10 13 tweets 9 min read
After using Claude for 1,200+ hours of research across AI papers, market analysis, and competitive intelligence, I use these 10 prompts that turn Claude into a research assistant that's better than a McKinsey researcher, and the last prompt is so powerful I almost didn't share it:Image 1. Multi-source research synthesizer

Analyzes 10+ sources simultaneously and finds patterns human researchers miss

Prompt:

You are a research synthesis expert. I need you to analyze these sources and create a comprehensive research brief.

SOURCES: [paste URLs, papers, or text]

ANALYSIS FRAMEWORK:
1. Extract core arguments from each source
2. Identify agreements, disagreements, and gaps
3. Map causal relationships between findings
4. Highlight methodological strengths/weaknesses
5. Synthesize into unified thesis

OUTPUT FORMAT:
- Executive Summary (3 sentences)
- Key Findings (ranked by evidence strength)
- Contradictions & Why They Exist
- Research Gaps Worth Exploring
- Actionable Insights

Be brutally honest about weak evidence. Cite specific passages with [Source X, Para Y] format.Image
Feb 10 7 tweets 2 min read
Your vibe coded app is a ticking time bomb.

UC San Diego studied how pros actually use AI coding tools.

They don't vibe. They control.

Meanwhile: mass produced code nobody can debug, maintain, or explain.

@verdent_ai built the fix. Here's what the research shows: The data is brutal:

→ Developers using AI are 19% SLOWER (while thinking they're faster)
→ Stack Overflow 2025: AI trust crashed from 43% to 33%
→ Pros NEVER let AI handle more than 5-6 steps before validating

The ones getting results aren't prompting and praying.

They're planning first.
Feb 9 15 tweets 3 min read
R.I.P McKinsey.

You don’t need a $1,200/hr consultant anymore.

You can now run full competitive market analysis using Claude.

Here are the 10 prompts I use instead of hiring consultants: Image 1/ LITERATURE REVIEW SYNTHESIZER

Prompt:

"Analyze these 20 research papers on [topic]. Create a gap analysis table showing: what's been studied, what's missing, contradictions between studies, and 3 unexplored opportunities."

I fed Claude 47 papers on AI regulation.

It found gaps 3 human researchers missed.
Feb 9 13 tweets 5 min read
Claude Sonnet 4.5 is the closest thing to an economic cheat code we’ve ever touched but only if you ask it the prompts that make it uncomfortable.

Here are 10 Powerful Claude prompts that will help you build a million dollar business (steal them now): Image 1. Business Idea Generator

"Suggest 5 business ideas based on my interests: [Your interests]. Make them modern, digital-first, and feasible for a solo founder."

How to: Replace [Your interests] with anything you’re passionate about or experienced in. Image
Feb 6 12 tweets 5 min read
After 3 years of using Claude, I can say that it is the technology that has revolutionized my life the most, along with the Internet.

So here are 10 prompts that have transformed my day-to-day life and that could do the same for you: Image 1. Research

Mega prompt:

You are an expert research analyst. I need comprehensive research on [TOPIC].

Please provide:
1. Key findings from the last 12 months
2. Data and statistics with sources
3. Expert opinions and quotes
4. Emerging trends and predictions
5. Controversial viewpoints or debates
6. Practical implications for [INDUSTRY/AUDIENCE]

Format as an executive brief with clear sections. Include source links for all claims.

Additional context: [YOUR SPECIFIC NEEDS]