Foundation Route

How to Give ChatGPT Instructions That Actually Work

ChatGPT follows instructions well: but only if you write them. This route shows you exactly how to structure what you tell the model so it gives you output worth using.

15 steps ~1h 15min For all professionals Free

How to give ChatGPT instructions that work reliably comes down to four components: role, task, constraints, and output format. Skip any one of these and the model fills in the blanks with defaults that rarely match what you need. In a review of 300 support prompts, the ones with all four parts got usable output 3x more often than bare one-liners. At aidowith.me, the Practical Prompts route gives you 15 steps to practice this framework on real work tasks. You'll work through emails, reports, and briefs until writing tight instructions feels automatic. The whole route runs about 1 hour 15 minutes and wraps up with a fill-in-the-blank prompt template you can reuse across any project. You bring your own tasks so the prompts you build are tuned to your work from the start. The route works with ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini, so you pick the tool you already have access to.

Last updated: April 2026

The Problem and the Fix

Without a route

  • You type a request and ChatGPT writes something plausible but completely off: wrong tone, wrong length, wrong structure.
  • You spend more time correcting AI output than you'd have spent writing it yourself.
  • You've seen people online get impressive results but can't figure out what they're doing differently.

With aidowith.me

  • Break every instruction into 4 clear parts: role, task, constraints, and format.
  • Practice on 15 real deliverables: not toy examples: until the framework becomes second nature.
  • Walk away with a reusable instruction template you'll use every day.

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

1

Diagnose what's missing in your current prompts

You'll look at 3 prompts you've written and identify which of the 4 parts are absent. Most people are missing constraints and format.

2

Rebuild each prompt with all four parts

Step by step, you'll add role, task, constraints, and format: then compare output before and after. The difference is usually immediate.

3

Build your instruction template

In the final steps you'll create a personal template. Paste it at the start of any session and ChatGPT already knows how to respond to you.

Give ChatGPT Instructions That Deliver

The Practical Prompts route at aidowith.me: 15 steps, real tasks, one reusable instruction template. About 75 minutes.

Start This Route →

What You Walk Away With

Diagnose what's missing in your current prompts

Rebuild each prompt with all four parts

Build your instruction template

Walk away with a reusable instruction template you'll use every day.

"I finally understood why my prompts kept failing. Adding constraints and a format spec completely changed the quality of what I got back."
- Project manager, consulting firm

Questions

Break the task into smaller steps and give one instruction at a time, or use a numbered list inside a single prompt. The route covers both approaches and shows when each works better. You'll practice on a multi-part brief to see how to handle complexity. For tasks with 3 or more distinct outputs: a brief, headline, and summary: numbered instructions in one prompt outperform separate messages because the model keeps full context in view.

A prompt is anything you type. A structured prompt, or directive, tells the model its role, the task, what to avoid, and how to format the output. Structured prompts produce consistent, usable results. Bare prompts are hit-or-miss. The practical test: if you could give the same prompt to a new junior colleague and get a usable result, it's well-structured. If it relies on the model guessing what you meant, it's just a prompt.

No special syntax required. You write plain English. The framework is just a mental checklist: role, task, constraints, format. After 15 practice steps at aidowith.me it becomes automatic: no cheat sheet needed. The constraints part is what most people find takes the longest to internalize, because you're telling AI what not to do rather than what to do: and it requires knowing your own preferences well enough to articulate them.