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eoYRgHu7n38 • Mastering Grok AI (2025) — DeepSearch, Models, Custom Instructions & Pro Tips!
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Kind: captions Language: en You're probably clicking around Grock's interface wondering what half these buttons actually do. Maybe even frustrated that you're not getting the answers you expected. Well, I spent weeks testing every single feature in Grock's interface. From the mysterious deep search button to those confusing model modes, and here's what surprised me. Most people are using maybe 20% of what Grock can actually do. And that changes today. Welcome back to bitbiased.ai, AI, where we do the research so you don't have to. Join our community of AI enthusiasts. Click the newsletter link in the description for weekly analysis delivered straight to your inbox. So, in this video, I'm walking you through every visible feature in the Gro interface, explaining exactly what each one does, when to use it, and how to get dramatically better answers. By the end, you'll know how to match the right tool to your task. Whether that's lightning fast responses or deep research that pulls from dozens of sources in seconds. First up, let's start where every Grock interaction begins. That search bar at the top, the search bar, where it all begins. Now, the search bar might look simple, almost boring even. But here's where things get interesting. This isn't just a text box. It's a smart prompt field that understands context in ways that will surprise you. Think of it as your direct line to one of the most advanced AI systems available right now. Developed by XAI to push the boundaries of what conversational AI can do. Here's how it actually works. You click into that bar and type whatever's on your mind. Could be a factual question like, "What are neural networks?" or something more creative like, "Write me a short story about time travel. The beauty is in what happens next because Grock doesn't just answer and forget. It remembers your conversation, building on what you've already discussed without making you repeat yourself every single time. Let me give you a real example of why this matters. Say you start with that neural networks question. Grock gives you an explanation. Then you follow up with, great, now explain it with an analogy. And here's the magic. You didn't have to say explain neural networks with an analogy. Grock knew what it meant because it's tracking your conversation thread. This multi-turn memory means you can have an actual dialogue, not just a series of disconnected questions. Now, when should you use the search bar? The answer is pretty much always. Whether you need a quick fact, detailed coding help, creative writing assistance, or just want to chat about philosophy at 2 in the morning, this is your starting point. And if you're on mobile, some versions even let you speak your queries instead of typing. Perfect for when you're driving or your hands are full. But here's what most people don't realize. How you phrase your question in this search bar can completely change the quality of answer you get. We'll talk more about that when we get to prompting techniques, but for now, just know this simple box is more powerful than it looks. The real benefit, speed and accessibility. The search bar is always there, always ready, connected to real-time data from X, formerly Twitter, and the broader web. So, when you ask Grock something, you're not just getting canned responses from old training data. You're tapping into current information, often with that signature wit and humor Grock is known for. It makes the whole experience feel less like querying a machine and more like chatting with a really knowledgeable friend who happens to have the entire internet at their fingertips. Deep search. When you need more than surface level answers, all right, next to that search bar, you'll spot something called deep search. And trust me, this is where Grock starts to feel less like a chatbot and more like your personal research assistant. Most AI tools will give you a quick answer and call it a day. But what if you need more? What if you want the full story backed by multiple sources synthesized into something you can actually use? That's exactly what Deep Search does. When you click this button, you're telling Grock to stop playing it safe with quick responses and instead go allin on your question. It scour the internet, pulls from dozens of credible sources, analyzes current discussions on X, and then presents you with a comprehensive report. We're talking the kind of research that would take you an hour of Googling and tab switching delivered in about a minute. Here's a scenario where this becomes absolutely game-changing. Let's say you're researching the latest developments in renewable energy storage. Without deep search, you might get a decent overview based on Grock's training data. But with deep search activated, Grock goes out and finds recent news articles, research papers, expert commentary, trending discussions, everything relevant, and synthesizes it into one coherent answer. One user reported getting a detailed report citing 22 different sources in just over 60 seconds. Try doing that manually and see how long it takes you. But here's what I love most about deep search. Transparency. Grock doesn't just dump information on you and expect you to trust it blindly. It shows you where the information came from. You get citations, references, the whole nine yards. This means you can verify facts, dig deeper into specific sources if you want, and actually trust what you're reading. It's like having a research assistant who not only does the work, but shows their receipts. Now, when should you use deep search? Think of it this way. If your question starts with phrases like research, summarize, what are the latest, or compare different perspectives on, hit that deep search button. It's perfect for current events, broad topics that need multiple viewpoints, or anytime you're working on something that requires depth. On the flip side, if you're asking, "What's 2 plus 2?" or "Who wrote 1984?" Save yourself the time. Regular mode is plenty fast and accurate for straightforward queries. To activate it, just type your question, click the deep search button before you send it, and let Grock work its magic. Some interfaces even have preset research prompts that automatically enable this feature. You'll see a little progress indicator as Grock pulls information from across the web and then boom, detailed answer with sources. It's like the difference between asking someone for quick directions versus asking them to plan your entire road trip with alternate routes, gas stations, and scenic stops. Both are useful, but one goes way deeper. create image. Turning your words into visuals. Right next to deep search, there's another feature that's honestly just fun to play with. The create image button. [clears throat] And while it's fun, it's also genuinely useful if you know when to deploy it. This feature taps into Grock's image generation capabilities, letting you describe something in words and watch it come to life visually. Here's how it works. When you click create image, Grock switches into what they call imagine mode. Instead of responding with text, it fires up its image generation engine, code named Aurora for the base version with an enhanced imagine model for premium users and creates a picture based on your prompt. Want to see a futuristic city skyline at sunset? Type that, hit create image, and within seconds, you're looking at a digital rendering that can be surprisingly photorealistic. But wait, before you think this is just a toy for making random pictures, let me show you the practical side. Say you're a teacher trying to explain the solar system. You could describe it in words, or you could ask Grock to create an image of the solar system with labeled planets. Boom. Instant visual aid. Content creators use this for concept art, social media graphics, design inspiration. Marketers might generate logo concepts. Generate a logo for a cafe named Lunar Coffee featuring a moon and coffee cup. Even if the first result isn't perfect, it gives you something to iterate on, to refine, to spark ideas. The beauty of having this integrated into the same chat interface means you don't need to bounce between tools. You're already working with Grock for textbased answers and suddenly you need a visual to illustrate your point. Just switch modes. Want a fantasy landscape with floating islands? A diagram comparing electric car battery ranges, a visual metaphor of a neural network as a futuristic city? All of this is possible with a well-crafted prompt. And speaking of prompts, this is where specificity really pays off. The more detail you include in your image prompt, the better the result. Don't just say, "Draw a landscape." Say, draw a fantasy landscape with floating islands connected by rope bridges, waterfalls cascading into clouds below, and a sunset casting orange and purple hues across the sky. See the difference? You're painting a picture with words, and Grock is bringing that picture to life. Color, style, perspective, mood. The more you specify, the closer you get to your vision. When should you use create image? Anytime words aren't enough, visualization exercises, design mock-ups, educational diagrams, creative storytelling, brainstorming sessions where you need to see your ideas. And if the first image isn't quite right, no problem. Tweak your prompt and try again. It's an iterative process, just like refining a text answer. The feature is there to enhance your workflow, to add a visual dimension to your AI assisted work. Don't sleep on it. Model selector. Choosing your intelligence level. Now we're getting to one of the most powerful parts of the Gro interface, the model selector. This is where you actually control what's happening under the hood. Choosing the AI model that'll handle your query. And here's what most people miss. Different tasks need different levels of AI horsepower. Sometimes you want fast, sometimes you want smart, sometimes you want both. The model selector gives you that control. Let me break down your options. Auto, fast, expert, Grock 4, fast, and heavy. Each one represents a different trade-off between speed and depth. Think of it like gears in a car. You wouldn't drive on the highway in first gear, and you wouldn't climb a steep hill in fifth. Same principle here. Match the mode to your task for the best results. Let's start with auto mode. If you're not sure which model to pick, this is your safe bet. Grock automatically decides what's appropriate for your question, balancing speed and sophistication on the fly. Simple factual question. Auto might use a faster model complex reasoning task. It'll switch to something more advanced. The benefit here is convenience. You don't have to think about it. and Grock handles the decision-m most casual users probably leave it on auto and never think twice. And honestly, that's fine. But then there's fast mode. This is where you prioritize speed above all else. Fast mode uses lighter models, typically Gro 3 or Gro 3 Mini, to get you answers almost instantly. Perfect for straightforward questions like, "What's the capital of France?" or define polymorphism in programming. You're on your phone with a slow connection. Fast mode saves data and time. The answer might be slightly less nuanced than what you'd get in expert mode, but for simple queries, you won't notice the difference. Speed is the name of the game here. Now, when you want quality over speed, you switch to expert mode. This engages Grock 4, a more advanced model that provides detailed, nuanced responses. Think of it as telling Grock to take its time and be thorough. Ask about the significance of the Higs Boson. An expert mode will give you a carefully structured explanation that breaks down the concept thoughtfully. It's ideal for complex questions, research tasks, creative projects, or anything where the quality of the answer actually matters. The trade-off, it might take a few extra seconds, but the depth you get is usually worth the wait. Then there's Gro 4 fast, and this is where things get interesting. It's essentially a lighter, quicker version of Gro 4. You get GPT4 level intelligence, but with faster responses and slightly less compute intensity. One source noted it uses about 40% fewer reasoning tokens than full Gro 4, which translates to speed without sacrificing too much quality. This is the sweet spot for many tasks. Detailed enough to handle moderately complex questions, fast enough that you're not sitting around waiting. If you have access to this mode, it's great for things like compare electric cars and hydrogen fuel cell cars in terms of efficiency, cost, and infrastructure. where fast mode wouldn't give you enough depth, but you also don't want to wait for heavy mode. And speaking of heavy mode, this is the beast. Gro 4. Heavy is the most powerful model in the ecosystem. Described by some users as a computational powerhouse. It's a multi-agent enhanced version with expanded memory. We're talking up to 128,000 tokens or more. What does that mean in practice? You can feed it entire documents, large code bases, lengthy conversations, and it'll remember and analyze all of it. Heavy mode is for when nothing else will do. Complex math proofs, analyzing legal contracts, debugging massive code files, designing detailed strategic plans. It uses advanced reasoning strategies, sometimes showing you step by step how it arrived at an answer, which is incredibly valuable for learning or verification. But here's the catch. Heavy mode is premium. You need a super grock subscription to access it and it's slower because it's doing serious computational heavy lifting. Think of heavy as the mode you save for your toughest challenges when you need the smartest possible AI assistant and you're willing to wait a bit for that next level insight. One user described trying to get Gro 4 heavy to tackle problems that few other models could handle and it delivered. That's the power you're dealing with. So, how do you choose? For everyday questions, stick with auto or fast. For important work that needs quality, go expert or Grock 4 fast. For the absolute toughest tasks, research papers, complex coding, strategic analysis, breakout heavy mode if you have access. The model selector is all about control. Don't just leave it on default and forget about it. Think about what you're asking. Choose accordingly and watch your results improve dramatically. Custom instructions making Grock truly yours. Now, let's get into something that can dramatically improve your experience, but that a lot of people overlook. Custom instructions. This is typically found in a settings menu or gear icon, and it's essentially your chance to teach Grock about you and how you like to work. Here's the concept. Every time you start a new conversation, Grock doesn't know anything about you by default. But with custom instructions, you can give Grock a bit of permanent context that it'll remember for all future chats. It's like onboarding a new assistant with exactly what they need to know to work with you effectively. When you open the custom instructions section, you'll see prompts like, "What would you like Grock to know about you?" and "How would you like Grock to respond?" These are your opportunity to set the ground rules in the first field. Tell Grock about yourself. Are you a beginner programmer learning Python for data science? Say so. Now Grock knows to keep explanations simple. Use beginner-friendly terminology. Maybe focus examples on data science applications. Are you a marketing professional who needs business focused insights? Mention that. You can even describe ongoing projects or specific interests. In the second field, you set the tone and style. Maybe you want concise, formal answers. Tell Grock that. Maybe you prefer conversational responses with humor and step-by-step solutions. Also fine. You can specify formatting preferences, use bullet points when listing items, or always site sources when possible, or avoid technical jargon unless necessary. Essentially, these instructions become your personalized rule book, so you don't have to repeat the same requests in every single conversation. The benefits here are huge. First, it saves time. No more typing, explain like I'm a beginner or keep it concise every time you ask a question. You set it once, Grock remembers, and every answer is automatically tailored to your preferences. Second, it improves consistency. If you're using Grock for a specific project or role, custom instructions ensure the responses stay aligned with your needs. Third, for professionals, writers, analysts, content creators, it guarantees a consistent style. Imagine a copywriter telling Grock to always write in AP style and avoid cliches. Now, every output is already in the right format, ready to use. And here's something for the AI enthusiasts watching. Custom instructions are also a playground. You can experiment with how different instructions affect outputs. Try telling Grock to be more creative or stricter with logic or to always challenge your assumptions. See how the responses change. It's a fascinating way to understand how these models respond to meta instructions and it helps you refine exactly what you want from your AI assistant. When should you use custom instructions? Honestly, right now when you first start with Grock, spend 5 minutes setting these up. You'll thank yourself later. Update them whenever your needs change. New project, different focus, refined style. If you notice Grock's answers aren't quite hitting the mark, that's your cue to revisit and tweak your instructions. It's a living document that should evolve with how you use the tool. In the same menu, you might also find a model section where you can set defaults like always starting chats in expert mode or enabling deep search for certain types of queries. The models menu might also show which models you have access to with premium ones locked if you're not subscribed. Bottom line, custom instructions transform Grock from a generic chatbot into your customized AI assistant. It's personalization at its best. And honestly, it's one of those features that once you start using it properly, you'll wonder how you ever managed without it. Don't skip this. A few minutes of setup can make every subsequent interaction smoother, faster, and more relevant. Prompting techniques, getting the best answers. All right, we've covered all the interface features, the buttons, modes, settings. But here's the thing. Even with the most advanced AI, the quality of your answer depends heavily on how you ask the question. That's where prompting techniques come in. Think of it like this. Grock is an incredibly powerful tool, but you're the one steering it. The better you steer, the better your destination. Be clear and specific. Let's start with the golden rule, clarity. A well-phred, specific question gets you a much better answer than something vague or generic. Why? Because AI models respond based on the input you give them. Vague in, vague out, specific in, specific out. Here's an example. If you ask, "Tell me about climate change," you're going to get a broad answer that might not address what you actually care about. It could cover causes, effects, politics, science, too much all at once and probably not in depth on the part you wanted. But if you ask, discuss the economic impacts of climate change on agriculture in Africa over the next 20 years, now you've given Grock a clear target. The answer becomes focused, detailed, relevant. How do you build specificity into your prompts? Include details about what exactly you want. If there are multiple parts to your question, break them out. Specify the format if needed in three bullet points as a step-by-step guide in simple terms. Give concrete parameters. Instead of some examples, say three examples. Instead of recent, say since 2020. The less guesswork Grock has to do, the better the output. Here's another comparison. Vague. Tell me about neural networks. Could go anywhere. History, technical details, applications, specific. Explain how neural networks work in simple terms using an analogy and keep it to one paragraph. Now, Grock knows you want a basic analogydriven explanation briefly. Or consider this. vague. Write a report on renewable energy. Specific. Write a 200word summary of the benefits and challenges of solar and wind energy in Europe, comparing their growth over the last decade. Clear direction, specific scope, region, length, all defined. The benefit is you direct the model's focus and reduce irrelevant information. Grock produces more targeted useful responses and you avoid misunderstandings. If Grock doesn't have to guess what you meant, it's less likely to wander off track. One guide puts it perfectly. The granularity of your input is directly proportional to the utility of the output. In other words, the more specific you are, the more useful the answer becomes. Don't be afraid to spell out exactly what you need. Provide context and constraints. Next up, context. Grock has been trained on a massive amount of information, but it doesn't inherently know what's relevant to you right now. By providing context, you frame the question and guide how Grock approaches it. It's like talking to a person. If you ask a question out of nowhere, they might not know which angle matters to you. But if you set the scene first, the conversation flows much better. How do you add context? A few techniques. One, set a role or persona. Tell Grock who it is for this task. You are a financial adviser with expertise in retirement planning. Given this client profile, suggest an investment strategy. This frames the response from that expert perspective. Two, give background information. If your question depends on previous data, include it. Based on the summary I just provided, what are the key risks? Or using your last answer about X, now explain why. Three, specify your audience or style. explain this in layman's terms or give a business executive summary or the classic explain it like I'm five years old. You can also include constraints, limits or formats for the answer. List five bullet points. No more than three sentences. If the information isn't available, say you don't know instead of guessing. Constraints help shape the output so it fits your needs right away, saving you from having to edit it afterward. Here's a real example with context. Instead of just asking, when is the best time to visit New England for fall colors, add this. You are an experienced wildlife biologist specializing in trees. Based on recent weather patterns, predict the best time this year for peak fall foliage in New England and explain it in simple terms. Now you've given Grock a role, a task, and a style. The answer becomes more insightful, probably referencing how weather affects leaf color. Because you set that context, the benefit, more accurate, more relevant answers tailored to your scenario. The tone and complexity come out just right for your audience. If you say explain to a kindergarten class versus explain to a panel of PhD scientists, you'll get vastly different answers, each appropriate for those listeners. Constraints ensure the format fits your requirements. Context and constraints act as guard rails, steering gro in the exact direction you want without it having to second guessess your intentions. Use follow-ups and refinement. One of the best things about chatbased AI is that you don't have to nail the prompt perfectly on the first try. You can iterate. Ask something, get an answer, then refine or dig deeper with follow-up prompts. This iterative process can significantly improve the quality of information you get. And honestly, it feels more natural, like having a real conversation. Here's how it works. Grock remembers the context of your conversation within its memory limits. So, if you ask a question and then ask a related follow-up, it knows what you're referring to. For example, you might say, "Explain how solar panels work." Grock gives you an explanation, then you follow up. Great. Now, how does weather affect their efficiency? And make it a bit simpler. Notice you didn't have to say solar panels again. Grock knows we're still on that topic. And you added a new instruction to simplify, so the answer adjusts accordingly. Some strategies for effective follow-ups. Ask for clarification if something's confusing. Can you clarify what you meant by X? Or could you explain that in more detail? Request a different format. Could you list those points as bullet points or put that information into a table? Dig deeper on a subtopic. You mentioned quantum efficiency in solar cells. Could you elaborate on that? This turns a general answer into a deep dive exactly where you're curious. Correct or refocus if the answer missed the mark. That's not quite what I was looking for. I meant more about the policy side. Can you answer from that angle? Grock will adjust and try again. You can even use make it better prompts. Things like make it funnier, simplify this further or give me an example to illustrate that. These piggyback on the previous answer and tweak it in the way you specify got a dry explanation. Make it funnier might add an analogy or a joke to lighten it up. The benefit of this approach is you sculpt the answer to be exactly what you need piece by piece. It's like having a dialogue with an expert. You keep asking until you're satisfied. Often the first answer is decent, but the second or third exchange is where Grock really nails it because you've given more direction or allowed for course correction. And here's the thing, you don't have to cram everything into one mega prompt, which can be hard to construct. Start simple, add detail iteratively. It feels more natural and often works better. One tip, if your conversation gets really long or shifts topics significantly, you might need to provide context again or even start a fresh chat to avoid confusion. But for a focused thread, Grock keeps the history in mind. And if Grock produces a really long answer, use a follow-up to condense it. Summarize the above in three key points or explain the last part in simpler words. You're essentially using Grock to refine its own output. Think of follow-ups as an interview. You're the interviewer. Keep probing until you get that perfect insight or explanation you're after. Keep experimenting. And here's a bonus tip for the AI enthusiasts out there. Prompting is an evolving art. Grock is updated frequently and gains new capabilities. So, my final piece of advice is stay curious and keep experimenting. Try those preset prompt buttons in the interface, things like brainstorm or summarize to see how they structure queries. Learn from them. Adapt their style to your own needs. If Grock introduces new features like video generation or advanced voice modes or whatever comes next, give them a shot. Each new tool might open up creative ways to interact that you hadn't considered before. And remember, prompt engineering is part science, part art. the guidelines we've covered. Be clear, provide context, iterate, use the right tools. These set you on the right path, but you won't always get it perfect on the first try, and that's fine. Keep refining, keep adjusting, and use those features we've talked about over time. You'll develop an intuition for what works, and Grock will become an even more powerful collaborator in your work. So, there you have it. The complete tour of Grock's interface and how to use it like a pro. We walked through the search bar, your gateway to every interaction we explored. Deep search for those moments when you need serious sourced research delivered fast. We played with create image to turn your ideas into visuals. We broke down the model selector auto fast expert Grock 4 fast heavy giving you control over speed and intelligence based on your task. We talked about the Super Grock upgrade, which unlocks advanced models, think mode, expanded memory, and a whole suite of premium features that turn Grock from good to exceptional. And we covered custom instructions, your chance to personalize how Grock responds so every answer feels tailored to you. Then we dove into prompting techniques, being clear and specific with your questions, providing context and constraints to guide the AI, using follow-ups to refine answers iteratively, and leveraging Gro's modes and tools strategically for different tasks. These aren't just tips. They're the difference between getting generic responses and getting answers that genuinely solve your problems, inspire your creativity, or deepen your understanding. Look, whether you're brainstorming, learning something new, solving a complex coding challenge, or conducting research, Gro's interface gives you the tools. Your prompting provides the direction. When you combine the two skillfully, it's like having a genius collaborator available 24/7. Someone who never gets tired, never judges your questions, and is always ready to help you push boundaries and explore ideas. So, go ahead, experiment with these features. Click deep search when you've got tough questions. Generate some images to visualize your ideas or just for fun. Tweak those custom instructions until Grock responds exactly how you want. Switch between model modes based on whether you need speed or depth. And most importantly, ask your questions with precision and context. Grock is designed to learn from your input and iteratively help you reach better outcomes. Use that conversational flow to your advantage. If this walkthrough helped you understand Grock better, consider dropping a like or leaving a comment with what feature you're most excited to try. And hey, if you've got questions or want to share your own Grock tips, the comment section is all yours. Let's keep the conversation going. With these tools and techniques in hand, you're ready to master Grock and unlock everything this AI assistant has to offer. Happy Grocking, and I'll see you in the next video.