What Is a Claude Project?
A Project is a persistent workspace inside Claude. Think of it as a dedicated room where you and Claude work together on a specific area of your life or work — and unlike a regular chat, it doesn't forget anything between sessions.
Each Project has three key parts:
Custom Instructions — a set of guidelines that shape how Claude behaves inside that project. Always. Every conversation.
Knowledge Files — documents, notes, and files you upload that Claude can reference in every conversation within the project.
Conversation History — all your past chats inside that project are preserved and accessible.
The context window for a Project is 200,000 tokens — roughly equivalent to a 500-page book. That's a lot of room to work with.
The mental model is simple: if a regular Claude chat is a sticky note, a Project is a notebook. One is for quick thoughts; the other is where real work happens.
Custom Instructions: The Feature Most People Skip
When you create a Project, you get a field called "Custom Instructions." Most people leave it blank or type something vague like "be helpful and professional." That's a waste.
Custom Instructions are how you give Claude a standing brief — the kind of context you'd give a new colleague on their first day. Except you only have to write it once.
What to include in strong custom instructions:
Your role and context. Tell Claude who you are. "I'm a freelance UX writer working with B2B SaaS clients" is more useful than nothing. Claude will calibrate its vocabulary, assumptions, and suggestions accordingly.
Tone and style preferences. Do you want formal or conversational? Bullet points or prose? Short and direct, or thorough? Spell it out. Claude will default to something reasonable, but "something reasonable" isn't the same as your preference.
What to always do. If you always want sources cited, say so. If you always want a summary at the top of long answers, say so. If you want Claude to push back when your ideas have holes, say so.
What to never do. "Don't use bullet points unless I ask" or "never suggest I use a different tool" — these kinds of guardrails save a lot of back-and-forth over time.
An example of weak vs. strong custom instructions:
Weak:
"You are a helpful assistant. Be professional and concise."
Strong:
"I'm a product manager at a fintech startup. I'm working on reducing user churn. I prefer direct answers — lead with the conclusion, then explain. When reviewing my writing, give honest feedback and don't soften criticism. Never use corporate buzzwords. If I ask for a framework or process, give me one I can actually use in a meeting, not a textbook definition."
The second version saves you from re-explaining yourself in every single conversation. Over weeks of use, that compounds into a noticeably smarter working relationship.
Knowledge Files: Give Claude Something to Work With
The second pillar of Projects is Knowledge Files — the documents and materials you upload to a Project for Claude to draw from.
This is what turns Claude from a general assistant into something that actually understands your work.
Here's the idea: any document you find yourself referencing repeatedly in conversations — a style guide, a brief, a set of notes, a template — should live in your Project's knowledge base instead of being re-pasted into every chat.
What to upload:
- Style guides or voice docs — if you're using Claude for writing, upload the brand voice guidelines or your personal writing principles. Claude will match the tone without you having to describe it from scratch.
- SOPs or process docs — upload your team's workflows or your own operating procedures. Ask Claude how to handle a situation and it'll answer based on how you actually work, not a generic answer.
- Research or reference material — working on a long-form project? Upload your notes, interview transcripts, or source documents. Claude can summarize, cross-reference, and synthesize across all of it.
- Past work samples — give Claude examples of writing, analyses, or outputs you're proud of. It gives Claude a calibration point for the quality and style you're aiming for.
One important tip: be selective. It's tempting to dump everything into a Project and let Claude sort it out. Don't. Focused, high-quality context produces better results than a pile of loosely related documents. If you're not sure a file belongs, it probably doesn't — yet.
Five Projects Worth Creating Today
If you're not sure where to start, here are five concrete Project setups that work well for most people.
Job Search Project
Upload your current CV, a list of target roles, any cover letter templates you've used, and notes on companies you're watching. Custom instruction: "I'm actively job hunting. Help me tailor applications, prep for interviews, and research companies. Be direct about what's weak in my materials."
Writing / Content Project
Upload your style guide, a few past pieces you're proud of, and any editorial brief you're working from. Custom instruction: "Match my voice. Don't clean up my sentence fragments unless they're unclear. Push back if a headline is weak."
Work Project
Upload your team's internal docs, a glossary of terms, your org chart if relevant, and any recurring templates. Custom instruction: "I work in [role] at [company type]. Use our internal terminology. When I ask for an email or document, match our internal style."
Learning Project
Upload lecture notes, reading summaries, or course materials. Custom instruction: "I'm trying to understand [topic] deeply. Use the Socratic method when I get things wrong. Give me examples from [domain I already know]."
Side Project / Startup
Upload your product spec, user research notes, competitor notes, and any pitch material. Custom instruction: "We're building [brief description]. I'm the [role]. Prioritize speed and practical thinking over polish."
Tips for Getting the Most Out of Projects
Write your custom instructions like you're onboarding someone. Not vague adjectives ("be concise") but actual behavioral guidance ("when I ask for a plan, give me numbered steps with time estimates").
One Project per context, not per task. Don't create a new Project every time you start a new piece of work. A "Writing" Project covers all your writing work. A "Job Search" Project covers the whole job hunt. Projects are contexts, not folders.
Update your instructions when something annoys you. If Claude keeps doing something you don't want, that's a signal — add a line to your custom instructions. The relationship improves as you refine it.
Keep knowledge files current. If you update a style guide or process doc, re-upload it. Stale context produces stale answers.
Use conversation history deliberately. Because your history is preserved, you can ask Claude to refer back to decisions made in earlier sessions. "Based on the brief we discussed last week, draft the intro" is a perfectly valid prompt.
The Bigger Shift
The underlying idea here is simple but easy to miss: Claude is only as useful as the context you give it.
A regular chat gives Claude nothing but your most recent message. Projects give Claude your role, your preferences, your documents, and your history — all at once, every time. That's not a small upgrade. It fundamentally changes what the tool can do for you.
The people getting the most out of Claude aren't necessarily using better prompts. They're working inside Projects, with well-written instructions and a curated knowledge base. They're treating the relationship like a collaboration, not a search engine.
So: what would your first Project be?
If you already have one set up, drop your custom instructions in the comments — I'd genuinely love to see what's working for other people.
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