Millions of people have tried ChatGPT. A small fraction actually use it well. The difference isn't IQ — it's knowing how to frame your thinking before you type a single word.
Most people treat ChatGPT like a smarter Google search. Professionals who've gone through SpeedChat Academy's ChatGPT curriculum know better — they treat it like a thinking partner with context, constraints, and a clear job to do.
The 5-part prompt structure that changes everything
SpeedChat's framework breaks every strong AI interaction into five layers: Role → Context → Task → Format → Constraint. When you apply this structure, even complex requests produce sharp, usable outputs in the first try — not the fifth.
Example: Instead of "write me a LinkedIn post," try — "You are a B2B SaaS marketer. My audience is mid-level managers. Write a 150-word LinkedIn post about why most AI training fails. Use a bold opening question. No hashtags."
3 pro-level ChatGPT habits
Chain your prompts. Treat each response as a draft, not a final output. Iterate with specific instructions.
Give it a persona. ChatGPT performs dramatically better when told who it is and who it's speaking to.
Set constraints on purpose. Word limits, tone requirements, and format rules produce cleaner outputs — not narrower ones.
What separates good users from grea
t ones
Great ChatGPT users don't just know better prompts — they've trained themselves to think about problems differently before they open the tool. That metacognitive skill is what SpeedChat Academy's curriculum is really building. It's not a ChatGPT course — it's an AI thinking course that uses ChatGPT as one of many vehicles.

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