ChatGPT hacks worth knowing aren't about secret prompts , they're about structure. The 3 methods that make the biggest difference: brief before generating, iterate in focused passes, and build reusable templates. At aidowith.me, the Practical Prompts route has 15 steps built around these methods. Users who run the route see a 50% or greater drop in editing time by the second session. The route takes about 75 minutes and produces 3 to 5 finished deliverables, so you're not just reading about hacks , you're applying them to real work. The brief-first method alone, which takes 3 minutes to set up, is responsible for most of the quality jump most users notice on their first structured session. Every method in the route is applied to a real task during the session, so you leave with working templates, not just notes about techniques you haven't tried yet.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- You read about ChatGPT hacks online but can't figure out how to apply them to actual work tasks.
- Your prompts produce the same mediocre output regardless of how you rephrase them.
- You spend more time tweaking ChatGPT's output than you would have spent writing it yourself.
With aidowith.me
- The brief-first hack: set context before generating, not after , this single change cuts editing time by half.
- The 3-pass iteration method that gets to polished output without burning 20 conversation turns.
- A template-building workflow so you only solve each prompting challenge once, then reuse forever.
Who Builds This With AI
Marketers
Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.
Sales & BizDev
Prep calls, draft outreach, research prospects in minutes.
Managers & Leads
Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.
How It Works
Add a role and constraint to every prompt
Tell ChatGPT your role, the audience, and the format before asking for content. 'Write an email' gets a generic draft. 'You're a B2B account manager writing to a CFO about a delayed renewal. Keep it under 100 words.' gets something you can send.
Use the 'what's missing' pass
After the first draft, ask: 'What's missing that would make this stronger?' This single follow-up prompt often catches the biggest weaknesses before you even read carefully.
Save every working prompt as a template
When a prompt produces great output, save it with brackets around the parts you'll swap out next time. This is how a 75-minute session becomes a 15-minute session the next time.
Put These ChatGPT Hacks to Work
The Practical Prompts route on aidowith.me applies all 3 methods to a real deliverable in one 75-minute session.
Start This Route →What You Walk Away With
Add a role and constraint to every prompt
Use the 'what's missing' pass
Save every working prompt as a template
A template-building workflow so you only solve each prompting challenge once, then reuse forever.
"The 'what's missing' prompt alone changed my whole workflow. I use it on everything now."- Operations manager, logistics company
Questions
The 3 that make the most difference: brief before generating (role, audience, format, constraints), the 'what's missing' review prompt, and building reusable templates from prompts that worked. The aidowith.me Practical Prompts route builds all 3 into a 15-step workflow you apply to a real work task. You'll apply all 3 to a real task in the session, not just read about them.
Because the problem is in the brief, not the prompt wording. ChatGPT produces what it's given context for. If you're not specifying audience, format, and purpose, rephrasing won't help. The first step in every aidowith.me route is a brief-building exercise that fixes this problem at the root of the session.
Build a brief template you fill in before every session. Include: your role, the deliverable, the audience, the key points to cover, the tone, and any hard constraints. Paste this at the start of every relevant chat. Consistency in the brief produces consistency in the output, across any task type.