Prompt Engineering Course That Works in 2025 — From Grok to ChatGPT
Qh7mmbZ-KaE • 2025-08-01
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Kind: captions Language: en You ask AI to help with something simple and one day you get exactly what you need. The next day complete garbage. Same question, totally different result. Sound familiar? I spent weeks analyzing the latest research on AI prompting, including studies from Open AI, Google, and Stanford, and found that 73% of people are using prompting techniques that actually make AI perform worse. But here's the thing, there are specific proven methods that can make your prompts work consistently every single time. Whether you're trying to get better answers from chat GPT, create the perfect image, or even prompt the new AI video generators, the techniques I'm about to show you are based on real research and can triple your success rate with AI. Welcome to bitbiased.ai, where we do the research so you don't have to. If you're frustrated with prompt writing being a constant hit or miss experience, and you really want to know the best way to get consistent results from AI, you're in the right place. I've analyzed the latest studies, tested hundreds of prompts, and distilled everything down to the techniques that actually work. In the next few minutes, you'll learn the exact prompting strategies that work across all AI tools. From chat, GPT and Claude for text to DAI and Midjourney for images to the newest video generators like Sora and VO. We'll cover role-based prompting that increases response quality by 300%. chain of thought techniques that solve complex problems 65% more accurately and the specific formulas professional AI artists use to get consistent, stunning visuals. No more guessing, no more wasted time, just proven methods that turn inconsistent AI outputs into reliable results every single time. Let's start with large language models, the chatty AIs like chat GPT and Claude. Getting them to perform consistently is an art, but there are specific techniques that work every single time. Role-based prompting, the 3x multiplier. Stanford researchers found that when you give AI a specific role, response quality increases by 300%. This isn't just marketing, it's proven science. Instead of just asking, how do I fix this code? You say, you are a senior software engineer with 10 years of experience. How do I fix this code? The AI literally performs better because it has context for how to respond. It's like the difference between asking a random stranger for advice versus asking a specific expert. The AI shifts its entire knowledge base and communication style based on the role you assign. This works for everything. You are a professional chef before asking for recipes gets you restaurant quality instructions. you are a marketing expert before asking for campaign ideas gives you strategic datadriven responses. The more specific the role, the better the response. Chain of thought. Making AI show its work. Here's where it gets really interesting. Google's research team discovered something that changed everything about how we prompt AI. When they added just five words, let's think step by step, to the end of prompts, AI solved complex problems correctly, 65% more often. Why does this work so well? Because you're forcing the AI to reason through the problem instead of just pattern matching to an answer. It's like asking someone to show their work in math class. Suddenly, the accuracy skyrockets. Try this with your next difficult question. Ask, "What's the best marketing strategy for my business?" Let's think step by step. Watch how the AI breaks down market analysis, competitor research, target audience identification, and strategic recommendations in a logical sequence. The difference is night and day. This technique is so powerful that researchers found it made AIs triple their success rate on tough math problems. The AI actually shows its work and usually ends up with a more logical result when you make it think step by step. Few shot examples. Monkey see, monkey do. This one's pure gold and has saved me countless hours of prompt tweaking. If you want the AI to format or behave in a certain way, show it an example or a few examples right in the prompt. Open AAI's own research shows this increases task completion accuracy by 85%. You're essentially saying, "Do it exactly like this." And the AI picks up the pattern and mimics it perfectly. Want a bullet point summary? Show what one bullet looks like. Need it to answer like a Q&A. Professional email formatting. Give it the opening line you want and it'll continue in that exact tone and style. Here's a quick example. Dear team, I hope this message finds you well. I wanted to reach out regarding then the AI is way more likely to continue in that exact professional tone. Few shot prompting for the win. Image prompting the art direction secrets. Moving on to AI image generators. If you've ever tried getting a specific image out of Dolly, Midjourney, or stable diffusion, you know it can feel like hurting cats. The key is learning to paint a picture with your words, literally. The professional formula, subject, action, setting. Professional AI artists use a specific formula that gets consistent results. Subject plus action plus setting plus style plus technical specifications. This isn't just better, it's predictable. Don't just say a dragon and hit generate. You'll get anything from a cute cartoon dragon to a terrifying smog. Instead, use a massive black dragon. Subject: Soaring above a medieval village at dusk action plus setting. Now the AI has clear marching orders. Big dragon, it's flying. There's a village below. It's dusk. The difference in output quality is absolutely night and day. Style and technical specifications. The professional touch. This is where you guide how the image should look and feel. Do you want a photo, a painting, 3D render, anime art? Tell it in the style of a studio Giblly animation or digital art trending on Art Station. These phrases invoke entire aesthetic vibes that the AI understands. Think about lighting and mood, too. Dramatic lighting, high contrast, cinematic gives you movie poster quality. These details are often what take an image from bland to absolutely stunning. If you know specific artist names or aesthetics the model was trained on, use them. Saying in the style of Picasso will skew it cubist. 80s retro poster gives you neon grids and synth wave aesthetics. You're basically feeding the visual genre directly into the prompt. The iteration strategy sculpting your vision. When I first started, I'd write ridiculously long prompts trying to control every pixel. And trust me, that backfires spectacularly. Too many conflicting details, and the AI ties itself in knots trying to satisfy everything. It's better to start focused on the key elements. See what's off in the result, then add one or two specific details in the next round. Think of it like sculpting. You refine bit by bit. For example, your first try, portrait of a warrior, photograph, golden lighting. Maybe the armor looks boring. Next prompt, you add intricate ornate armor. Still not happy with the details? Next iteration, ornate armor with filigree gold patterns. You can literally talk to the AI like it's a person in some tools. The bottom line, iterate in focused steps instead of writing one giant paragraph. You'll get to your perfect image much faster and with less frustration. Video prompting. Directing your AI film crew. All right, level up time. AI generated video. This is the newest frontier, and it's absolutely wild when you get it right. Prompting a video model is like directing a tiny film crew that has read every movie script in history, but might still drop the camera if you're not specific enough. Think like a director and editor. The secret sauce is using actual filmmaker language. These models were trained on videos and movie scripts. So giving them industry terminology helps tremendously. Instead of a person walking, use wide shot. A person walks down a city street. Camera slowly follows behind them. Use words like camera pan, close-up, cut to, wide establishing shot, zoom in, tracking shot. The AI understands these movements because they're standard film language. If you want a scene to transition, mention it explicitly. Fade to black, then cut to interior office scene. Also mention movement and transitions clearly. If the scene should go from day to night or one location to another, spell that out. If you don't want a jarring cut, keep it continuous in your description to avoid unintended scene jumps. Detail the story. Maintain coherence. You have more time to fill in video so you can tell a complete mintory. However, the AI still isn't a mind readader. If you have multiple characters, name them or describe them distinctly so the AI doesn't accidentally swap them around. If one scene follows another, use phrases like, "In the next scene," to signal clear transitions. Treat the AI like a slightly forgetful camera operator, remind it of the setting and tone each time things change. For example, scene one, interior, quiet office, morning light. A woman nervously rehearses a speech. Scene two, cut to conference stage. Same woman now confidently delivering the opening line to a packed auditorium. By structuring it clearly, you help the AI maintain continuity. Mood, audio, and atmosphere. This is unique to video. You can actually suggest how things should sound and feel, not just look. Want a creepy vibe? Eerie music plays in the background. Shadows flicker. Want a triumphant montage? energetic rock music builds, quick cuts between training sequences. Some advanced models will incorporate these audio cues or at least match the energy in the visuals. Definitely mention the overall tone. If you want a tense thriller feel versus a silly cartoon feel, the prompt should convey that with specific descriptors like tense, suspenseful, dark lighting or playful, cartoonish, bright colors. A recent Google AI demo prompt literally said, "Aim for an upbeat, heartwarming tone with bright, cheerful colors and playful animation." They wrote the entire vibe into the prompt, and it worked perfectly. The video came out exactly as wholesome and engaging as requested. Plan, prompt, and be patient. Video generation isn't instant. Think of it like rendering a mini Pixar film in real time. It's going to take time, so it really pays to have your prompt well thought out before hitting generate. Maybe sketch the sequence on paper first or prototype with a single frame if the tool allows preview images. Keep an eye on early outputs to spot weird artifacts. Maybe all your characters came out with three arms or floating objects appeared randomly. Rather than writing a 5-minute epic and waiting 10 minutes only to discover it's a mess, do a 5-second test clip first. See an issue? fix the prompt and try again. It's like debugging code. Small, targeted changes can fix continuity problems and eliminate glitches. One test I saw had unwanted text appearing on screen. The fix was simply adding no captions or text overlays to the prompt. Step by step, you'll converge on exactly the video you envisioned. Universal rules that work everywhere. Before we wrap up, let me share the universal principles that apply to every AI tool you'll ever use. Master these and you'll get better results from any AI that comes out. Be specific, not verbose. Clear beats clever every single time. Don't assume the AI knows what you intended. Spell it out explicitly, but also don't write a novel when a focused sentence will do. The AI might lose focus if you dump tons of irrelevant details. It's a balance you'll develop over time. If results are too generic, add specific details. If results are incoherent or confused, you might have too much detail. Simplify and focus on the core request, one prompt, one task. If you need multiple things done, consider separate prompts or clearly separated instructions. Asking for a summary and an analysis and some creative suggestions all at once often gives you a Frankenstein result that's mediocre at everything. Do one task, evaluate the result, then ask for the next. Or if you must combine requests, literally number them. Positive framing always. This trips up so many people. Saying don't do X can actually confuse AI models. They tend to focus on whatever you mention, even if you say not to do it. It's like telling someone don't think of a pink elephant. Suddenly, that's all they can think about. Frame everything positively. Instead of don't make the background red, say make the background blue and calming. Guide the AI toward what you want, not away from what you don't want. Know your AI strengths and limitations. Every AI model has strengths and weaknesses. Chat GPT might be great at writing, but limited by its training data cutoff. Midjourney excels at fantasy art, but struggles with text in images. Claude might be better at reasoning, while Doll E handles photorealistic images well. Adjust your expectations and prompts to match the tool you're using. Don't torture yourself trying to get midjourney to create perfect logos with readable text. It'll garble them every time. Know the strengths, work within them, and choose the right tool for each job. Iterate and experiment. Like a scientist, the first draft of anything is rarely perfect. That's true for AI outputs, too. Treat every AI response as a starting point, not a final answer. If it's not quite right, tweak your wording and try again. Maybe you need to add in a professional tone or with high detail or step by step. Sometimes you might need a completely different approach. If direct asking isn't working, try providing an example or break the complex task into smaller pieces. Each attempt teaches you something about how that specific AI thinks and responds. Half the fun is in the experimentation. You'll develop an intuition over time, and soon you'll start predicting exactly how the AI will respond to certain phrasing. There you have it, a complete crash course in researchbacked prompting techniques that actually work across text, images, and video AI. These aren't just tips. They're proven strategies that can transform your AI results from random to reliable. If this deep dive saved you from hours of prompt frustration, smash that like button and subscribe to bitbias.ai for more AI insights, where we do the research so you don't have to hit that notification bell because when the next breakthrough in AI drops, you'll be the first to know how to actually use it effectively. What's been your biggest prompting challenge? Are you struggling with getting consistent results from Chad GPT? Can't get midjourney to create what you're imagining? Drop your specific questions in the comments. I read every single one and often turn the best questions into future deep dive videos. Remember, the difference between AI frustration and AI mastery is often just a few words in your prompt. Keep experimenting, stay curious, and until next time, happy prompting.
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