Mastering ChatGPT: Advanced techniques for workplace communication and productivity | Hiten Shah

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I want to learn how to use chat GBT the right way. So you gave us one tip which was be thoughtful about its memories. But what else? What are your tips? I usually won't start anything without a ton of context or with the intention of giving it context over time. Just show it what great looks like. It's like a human. If a human doesn't know what great looks like, they're not going to know what great looks like. You do have an example of something that you think is great, which is your boss's operating manual. My boss's name is Morgan, so it's what would Morgan do. So, I'm going to create the project and then I'm going to add these files here. I want to pitch Morgan the craziest product idea I can think of. What is the best way to pitch it to him so we can go after it? Now, it's like this is what you want Morgan to say. Yeah, that sounds like him. This is a tip for all the IC's out there. Go and replicate your boss and prep for conversations with them. Welcome back to How I AI. I'm Claire Vo, product leader and AI obsessive here on a mission to help you build better with these new tools. Today we have a great conversation with Hiten Shaw, who's been building B2B SAS for over 20 years. Not only is he a great founder and product thinker, but he is by my estimation a total Chad GBT power user. He has figured out how to load up Chat GBT projects with information about yourself and about your boss to figure out the best way to communicate with each other and get work done. Let's get to it. This episode is brought to you by Paragon, the integration infrastructure for AI SAS companies. Our AI features on your 2025 product roadmap. Whether you need to ingest data for rag from your users's external apps like Google Drive files, Gong transcripts, or Jira tickets, or build AI agents that automate work across your users various tools, integrations are key to building useful AI features. However, building every one of these integrations costs months of engineering, time you simply can't afford given the rapid pace of AI advancement. Paragon is an all-in-one embedded integration platform for AI products. Industry leaders like AI21, u.com, and Copy AI use Paragon to connect over a hundred of their users SAS applications to ingest data for Rag and provide their AI agents with thousands of integration actions. They've accelerated their integration development velocity by up to 50x, allowing their engineering teams to focus on core product features. Want to fasttrack your integration roadmap this year? Visit useparagon.com/howi aai to learn how. That's useparagon p ag.com/howi ai. Thanks for being here. I am excited to talk about everybody's favorite friend, ChatGBT. Today is all about chat GBT, right? Yep. How did you get to ChatGBT being your your favorite? You know, it's it's really funny. I I obviously started using chat GPT first. It existed first. There's a bunch of experiments I did with the API and all that prior to ChatGpt itself. So with OpenAI's APIs and then when when when it came out started playing around with it, it really wasn't doing what I wanted in terms of my outputs that I was looking for. I think it was still helpful in a bunch of areas that we'll talk about today, but it wasn't quite getting there. So then I started using Claude when it came out and I was in the initial days of using this stuff, I was actually way more claude heavy by like more than 50%. Even though ChatgPT came out first, I had access, I upgraded and all that. And I think the turning point for me, which I can't prove because I don't know the dates, was when memories started working. And that made it so that and and I'm a very like um I don't try to talk to chat GPT about everything. And if I'm going to talk to it about things that are like a little random, I'll actually start a temporary session. I want to learn how to use chat GBT the right way. So you gave us one tip, which was be thoughtful about its memories, but what else? What are your tips? Uh, I'd love to see them. One of the biggest things here, we talked about memories, but temporary for things that you don't care for it to remember is really important. And then I'll archive chats because they they don't count, so to speak, in the memories from last I checked. You can also unarchive them. At one point, I actually archived all my chats and then I started pulling out the ones I liked. It was definitely a pain for a number of reasons cuz I have a lot of chats. I have like thousands and thousands. That's why we're not going into me chatpt today. I have a blank one with the $200 a month plan or whatever, which was also a game changer. Once chat GPT introduced that plan, it definitely changed a lot of things for me in terms of my usage. I still get limits with Claude. I barely get limits to ChatGpt, although I use projects a lot, so I definitely hit decent amount of limits. But Claude's limits were also another very like brutal thing for for when you're trying to use it and trying to get something out of it especially when you need it. Now I think my next point is something everybody knows and that's that context is everything. So for example I don't have it shared here but I have a project to make projects. I have a project to make deep research prompts. Well, this is this is some of the feedback that we've consistently gotten from guests, which is you can try to improve your output or you can try to improve your input. And everybody says improve your input and the output will come. And so they they really recommend, which I think you're going to show us, is how do you frontload the time to make sure your prompts make sense, that your projects are set up accurately, that your GPTs are well structured. If you can do that, then you're going to get that consistent high quality outcome. So, what are those kind of go-to practices that you think everybody should do as they're building these things? Yeah, you know, if you don't love frameworks, then you need to start loving frameworks. Um, I love frameworks. And I don't mean that in the oh, seeking wisdom, Warren Buffett's mental models and frameworks. Although I kind of do, but those are more like a bunch of tools. I think the strategy is if I'm trying to get something done, can I find something that's good enough or great that already works for other people and that someone's already shared? Oftentimes the models already know the framework. So now you're just trying to like tease them into the right spot or give them the framework itself. And then it sort of gets even more contextual about it. And I've just noticed this over and over again. So, I usually won't start anything without a ton of context or with the intention of giving it context over time because I don't want to say that like I won't just do a one sentence prompt. Yeah, I'm I do that all the time, but I don't expect that one sentence prompt to just magically work. I actually will even oftentimes be like, "What context do you need? This is what what my goal is." or and another one that like I don't see enough people doing is taking great outputs whether it's from AI or not from AI and using that to help AI codify that kind of output and it lets you build more outputs like that. That's probably one of the magical ones that I found which is just show it what great looks like. It's like a human. If a human doesn't know what great looks like, they're not going to know what great looks like. So then you're just get in in in some ways feedback hell so to speak of going back and forth until they get it or until you've put something together. But typically as a as a human if you give them an example and say hey this is what the thing I'd like from you they can do a pretty good job of filling in the blanks so to speak. I think AI can do a better job. So you do have an example of something that you think is great which is your boss's operating manual. So, could we use that as an example to get into exactly how you might do this? Yeah, we'll create the whole thing. So, I would first create a project and my boss's name is Morgan. So, it's what would Morgan do or what would Morgan say? So, it's WWMD. So, I'm going to create the project and then I'm going to add these files here. And so, he has an operating manual. Really a great human being. built this out, sent it over uh when he first joined the company and became my boss. And then I've been sending this to everyone and now everyone's already seen it, new people that join cuz someone else is sending it to them. Great. So that's his manual. And for anyone that doesn't know, these are things that oftent times, you know, it used to be a bigger thing back in the day, I think, where people would create their operating manual so you knew how to work with them. Now there's some other tactics and stuff that are actually part of other projects that we can talk about. Then he also tends to share a few different sort of docu uh not documents but like articles he likes. And so there's one he shared called job is communication. I'm sure it's out there somewhere in the world. Uh if it's not whatever. So I would put those two things in. That's the project files, right? Then I would add instructions. So I'm going to open a new chat and be like I I actually would do exactly this. I would add this add these two in here. So this is a chat. I'm going to keep stick to what I what I know which is 40 4. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Classic. Yeah. Yeah. I'm a I'm very classic on that. So, I'll do that. I'll pick 40. I really like 40, but all of them tend to work. 40 is just faster and and gets me what I want quicker. And so here I'll say I'm I'm creating project uh with these documents and I want to be able to converse with it with the project and simulate type of feedback or advice that my boss would give me. Can you create the instructions for that project knowing that I'll be using these files in the project? I love that you corrected your typo because I just roll right through it. That was very polite of you. I I It's funny like the way I type is always correcting anyway. So, it wasn't for chat DPT's sake. Uh because you know uh yeah. So, yeah. But that's great. So, okay. So, here it already gives me the objective. Fine. Bosses Morgan. Great. Uh system configuration personal. Okay. Okay. Interesting. It has not given me the actual instructions, right? Yeah. So, I'm like, okay, where are the actual instructions? So, I'm going to go and this this is like in another doc in there, which I call AI shaping because you're basically trying to shape it to get it what you want. So, this is a classic example of I could paste all this crap in there, so to speak, but and it says project setup, but it doesn't feel right. So, it's like, can you give me the specific instructions that I can use in the project so I can just paste those in there? So, I find this a useful kind of like prompt, which is just tell it where it's going to go and maybe it'll give you a little bit better. Oh, no, we got some Oh, well, there's some instructions. Yeah. So, usually what I've already done is uh and and this is another trick. I've done this in in several chats. So, when I find one where it actually did what I wanted, which yeah, we can argue. We'll we'll probably just try this one or I can copy one over if this doesn't work from where I have it. But this is what I find most useful. If I can get a good output, I will always try to get it to codify the output, especially if it's one where I'm going to have to do this over and over again. So, in this case, I said, "Hey, give me the instructions. I think just for shits and giggles, so to speak, I'm going to use these um because I think they might be good enough. Um, and I'm not trying to review it. And I also don't really care too much about this as long as it looks good enough because I can always iterate uh and do things. And I also use the word simulate. I don't always use the word. In this case, I felt like, okay, let's try it like this. So, there's just a lot of like, okay, we'll do it like that. But if this were really really good and I'm like, oh crap, this is impressive. I'd make it codify it and I'd turn it into I could turn it into a project or something. So, one thing I would do if I love this is, hey, can you help me create a project so I can create these type of instructions in the future? And that's what's got me a very good system of projects helping me use project for projects. Project for projects. Yeah, whatever. I know it's So, you're going to add the instructions right here. Right here. So, they're all in here. Cool. Let's say and then now I'm just going after it. I want to pitch I want to pitch Morgan the craziest product idea I can think of for us. What is the best way to to pitch it to him so we can go after it? Now it's like this is what you want Morgan to say. Oh yeah. It's like thank you. Okay. Yep. That sounds like him. Yep. And and this part this is key. So he's our VP of product and growth. I report to him. I'm a PM and this is this I know his manual. This is the type of stuff he would go for. So now it's like very specific lead with a personal AI first CRM whatever whatever crap right. So it basically gives me exactly what I should do when it comes to him and it even says what will he respect etc. Oh man. So, we've had a lot of people on the pod or a couple people who have explained how as a manager you can replicate yourself, but this is a tip for all the IC's out there. Go and replicate your boss and prep for conversations with them. And you know, it's funny. I I read this and I was thinking, "Oh, is this kind of generic?" And I was like, "Some of that would work on me, some of it wouldn't." But I bet people that work with me could pluck a couple artifacts and um make a make a project or a GPT that really does uh oh find out everything about me in a professional sense. There you go. So you're doing it. So what I would do if you were my boss is I would literally do this because I know there's enough about you out there. Now in another kind of example we can give or it'll be in the doc. I do the same for myself. if I call it like a personal OS and it has my personality type, any of the personality tests, MyersBriggs and everything and then it helps me a lot. But if I know that about you, so Morgan is actually an anyagram five, I'm an enagram 9. What I would actually do is feed that into the instructions in that as well if I want to make it specific to me and our relationship because these personality tests help you well any in particular helps you with relationships and how to sort of uh meet in the middle around communications and stuff like that. Yeah, that's actually a really great idea because I do all this when I start as a new leader on a team. I do the work of gathering you know has anybody in a dis or anyagram or any you know um MyersBriggs we kind of do that we also have this questionnaire which I'm happy to share in the show notes which is 10 questions about me what am I motivated by how do I like to receive feedback how do I work all this stuff and I actually do I have this repository in a Google drive file of everything I know about the team that they've been told or that they've told us theelves and I haven't yet put it in a GPT and that's so smart because then I could say, you know, and and sorry, sorry, Zach and Amanda. I can say, you know, if Zach and Amanda are not seeing eye to eye on Project X, what would be an effective way, given what you know about them to come to come together? So, this is a really interesting idea. Uh oh. Psychological warfare in the workplace, all for the greater all for the greater good. Empowered by open AI. So, we'll we'll we'll let it do its thing. It's what I'm doing is I'm doing research on you and I said to get stuff in the professional sense or whatever. Sometimes I'll even include hey she's blah blah blah at this place. That way it doesn't get the wrong person. So it might but we'll see. I don't think there's too many claros but maybe there are. So we should be good. Uh and then yeah. So we'll see what happens there. We can continue with whatever else. Great. So, I I love, you know, you you showed this about someone else and you're you're doing deep research on me, which, you know, is always going to be thrilling to watch on the other side. But I want to go back to this thing that you said about your personal OS, the self-aware, you know, addition. How did you build that? Why did you build that? Um, you know, who uses it? How are you adding to it? I'm so curious about this specific use case. So, I I have a bunch of these links. This one is the personal OS. So, I used my project creator to create this. Um, and it's basically a project description, what to use it for, and then these are the actual instructions, right? So, what I would do is basically take this or take the instructions here and put them into a project. So, we'll just go do that so that we can show not tell, right? And then it even says things like files to upload and then even has like a kickoff prompt if you want to play around or whatever. So, I will go here, make a new project. I don't need to put any files in there, but I'll probably do that, too. But what you'll notice is up here, it's like, what are these things, right? So, this is nine. This is one three. If you don't know human design, you should know human design, but I'm not going to do that because it's on the woo side. This is the third time human design has come up. I live in San Francisco. I don't know if this is an SF meme that's happening right now. Has come up in the last week. So, yes, it is quite woo woo. They'll send you a PDF for free, but why not? Yeah, I highly recommend. Um, okay. So, I also have a voice and tone guide that was made for me a long time ago cuz I used to write a lot more. And so, uh, I'll just put that in there just for shits and giggles, so to speak, although it probably isn't as relevant. So, here here we are with this. Let's let's play some games. So, I'm going to take Morgan's manual and basically talk to it as if I just got this boss cuz this is kind of what I did. So, this manual is from my boss, Morgan. Uh, I'm newly reporting to him and would love any and all advice on how best to work with him considering my own personality, etc. By the way, he's an anyagram type. So already it's like I didn't have to do the work and it's already giving me the contrast here. I would have to do a bunch of Google searches to be like type anyagram type five and type 9 relationship and then I got to wait right but this is kind of what's interesting where it started mixing in the one three from human design which I love and that's why I love giving it that context. Then there's like here's our working style alignments, right? All this is true. Like I I've done this before. I know. I know that this is all very accurate. And then this is where things start getting interesting because it starts coming up with Then that's why like the one sentence ones are great because it's like, wait, a check-in format, huh? So this is how I could give him a weekly update on whatever or this is how I could put our one-on-one doc and manage up and he's going to love it because this is how he thinks, right? Is this how how you what what you would like? Do you think it's accurate? Yeah, I've read his manual and it's I I know it by heart and this is this is like exactly it. And one of the big ones for him and again everyone will know this if they know how to lead, but that's a different story. But if you're a good manager, my opinion is that and so is Morgan's is that you're just unblocking all day. And and he said that in the manual. My job is to unblock you so we can get done. Not not in those words. Those are my words. So, yeah, this is perfect. This is exactly what he'd want because if there's a blocker, I know he's the first person I should hit up. If I can't solve it any other way, he will just solve it. Um, and so that's cool. There's some really interesting things around conversations. He does ask you to defend things, but he never makes you feel uh like you're offended when he asks you to defend things. So, he's always got a good way of doing it. So, that's an interesting point there. This is kind of interesting. This is interesting, right? So, this is in his doc. So, it's quot it's quoting directly from the manual. Yeah. And that's why I make these projects. So, Got it. If I didn't make it a project, which I've done before and done the same thing, I don't get this level of context coming back to me. Got it. I get more of like, oh, you put this in, I'm going to go fill in the blanks or I'm going to do something like that. Here, I get these kind of references and all that kind of stuff that I just it's just much harder to get that in a chat because I used to try this with a chat maybe before they had projects. I know they had and custom GPT is a whole another mess I don't like getting into but yeah so one of the things that that I noticed here that I want to call out is you said you like frameworks and so what I saw in some of this this prompting and is here are personality type frameworks or you know guides that have been well established or well documented the LLM's probably know probably know about you also listed a set of interpersonal dynamic or workplace dynamic frameworks for conversations in that list and then loaded that up with an individual's context and then you're able to in a pretty structured way address common workplace things whether I'm going to have a hard conversation I'm going to pitch something I'm in conflict with someone and I think that idea of mixing structure frameworks and personal context is really useful and one of the things that I'm really empathetic towards new leaders are I get lots of new leaders in in my organization they're in the biggest job of their career and they always ask, "Can I get coaching?" And I don't know if you've The coaches out there are really, you're really making money out there. Coaches are expensive. Good coaches are expensive, but a lot of times they're doing this work. They're doing 360s to gather information about you. They're applying frameworks to help you understand yourself and someone else. And then they're helping you get out of, you know, mental patterns or or giving you other ways to look at um problems in a structured way that allows you move forward. And I think you just basically built like both a kind of coach for you to work with your boss, but I can imagine just a coach for yourself. So if you loaded this up with your own personality, so this works like this is a coach for me, right? Like like I'm really mad right now about someone. Let's let's come up with a scenario. Uh let me make one up. someone trying to get control over one of the projects I'm working on because they are trying to lick the cookie as as I've been told happens. So I just did that without even giving it a bigger problem. And then this is where it gets interesting. This reaction makes perfect sense. Okay, fine. Chat GBT, you want to be positive? Cool. But then it tells me why, right? It threatens my control, not just my control, my integrity of what I'm building. And this is accurate. Like when someone says, "Oh, it's threatening your control." I'm like, "Yeah, I'm a control freak, but that's not the problem here." But then it said the integrity. There you go. Okay. So, you've done deep research on me. I'm going to give you my anagram and myersbrig. And because we're fun in my team, I'm a Sagittarius. So, we're to toss that into the mix. And I I just want to test I want to test if this passes my brand new to it sniff test. Okay. Well, while we're waiting for that to happen, let's switch over to one more use case, which is your sales use case, which I think is super interesting. Yeah, this one's really fun. Um, I find myself over over time getting really excited about frameworks that I have applied and work and also that the people who built them applied them and I can prove it. So whether that's lead startup from Eric Reese or I guess they call it the Sean Ellis score now it's it was always called the product man accurate fit score in my world but that and a bunch of these other frameworks. So when I landed on this winning by design framework I was like over the moon and so I did what a lot of people would do if you were really curious about it. So I did a siteon their website file type PDF in Google and this is before deep research and all that of course. So, I found all their PDFs, which was before AI, too. So, I was like, "Okay, great. Now I can use these and and do what I'm about to show you." It took hours to do this kind of stuff, and now I can do it in seconds, literally. So, basically, I have I have this entire kind of uh context put in. So, this one's already set up. I can obviously set it up again, but the deal is there's a bunch of these documents, and these documents are all about the framework and the various processes. These are all publicly available. They also have a bunch of private ones you can get if you go through their courses. Then I I use my instructions project. You got it. To basically build this. It's pretty simple and straightforward. It's not really crazy because a lot of the context is in the files. So, and again, this is easy to tweak anytime. This will be familiar to anybody that's in a revenue organization. All leaders come in and they have their favorite sales framework. Enable the field on it. you get a bunch of PDFs, but then I'm I'm hoping you're going to show us how to apply this consistently over time. Okay, great. So, I actually did this already. So, I actually asked it, what can you help me with? So, I didn't even want to like again I do a lot of that sometimes with these projects just because I want it to tell me what it thinks it can help me with just like a human, right? Like what can you do for me or what what's your best skill, whatever. So, it's like I can create and refine create or refine sales processes. Wow. Okay. So, I can build a discovery call script. Cool. Perfect discovery call playbook. Draft that. Cool. Design customercentric stories messaging. Run impact meetings. Coach your GTM team. Cool. Cool. Okay. Great. Where do I start? Okay. Can you create a spice discovery guide? And I did it for your product and it didn't know much about your product because it didn't I didn't go do a web search. I solved that problem too as you probably can guess. But and then it's basically like okay, VP of product, director of product management. Cool. This is a problem space. So now I know that if I give it this context myself, it will probably tweak things. So already I think I'm winning cuz I can I have now learned something of how to use this thing, which is another piece I go into. And then now it goes into situation because the whole premise of this framework is there are questions you should be asking on sales calls. So you're only demoing like five or 10 minutes of a 20 or 30 minute call. Not even five or 10, five minutes. So what you're trying to do is diagnose pain. So we imagine these are like those discovery calls. So these are a set of calls. uh or a set of questions which is like how many PMs are on your team whatever great I literally every time I do this I'm surprised by at least one or two questions in there which would have been super challenging for me to think of on my own. So that's where I find a lot of the value. Otherwise you can look at like yeah this is obvious. Yeah, a lot of it is but that's not the point. The point is that if you're going to go get on a call and you want to use this sales process you want to do a really good job hopefully. These questions help you figure out how to do that. Yeah, this question under pain I don't ask but I should which is where do things typically break down? I'm not good at at pain discovery. So this is already giving me giving me some ideas. Yeah, exactly. And so like and pain is like you know as you know one of the most important things when you're trying to actually do sales and then the impact questions are always valuable. But again this is part of the value of the framework. So I think the key thing to highlight is I love that you like that it makes perfect sense. It's the framework producing it. It's not chat GPT. I mean it is but it's that framework that taught chat GBT how to answer these questions very precisely because it has like 20 PDFs from these people you know um and then uh critical event is a big one so if you're in sales you know that you need to figure out if there is a date tied to the initi and there's an initiative tied to it so this is great so yeah I I had it do it right so then to your point oh maybe it doesn't have context maybe it doesn't know enough great you can imagine what I did I did uh a deep research prompt. I asked for a deep research prompt on it. I did it in the sales winning by design project on purpose. Even though the project is not meant for that, of course, it can do whatever the heck I try to get it to do, but I purposely did that because I wanted to improve the winning by design outputs. So, already did this yesterday. It's right here. So, I did some kind of analysis. It got me all kinds of things about your product, company, whatever's going on. I, you know, same prompt it gave me, did all the corrections. So now all I do, and this is how dummy I am about it because it usually works. I'll just copy the copy button. Don't even need to read it. I don't care. It's all good. Don't worry about that. Okay. Now, here is context on chat PRD in terms of the history, etc. of the product and research uh related to it. Fine. Whatever it could say, whatever. N I would probably go with N and say please improve the deliverable above using this this new cont this updated context. I am a dash carrot uh dash you know arrow little instructor as well all the time this arrow it just feels like it splits it up but it probably doesn't matter but I just want to do that. I love it. Agree. So this is this is my point about the memory right? It'll tell you when it does that. Yeah. So often times I'll sit there and just start pruning it. Y and so that's what I like about it is like just makes it really easy to go cut that out of the memory if I want to. I don't need that. Right. Exactly. So here you go. Purpose spice journey map. It did a little bit of a different thing which is fine. Like but at the end of the day it's even telling me what the gap analysis is. Maybe it got confused about something but I don't I don't know. Maybe not. But yeah that's that's the way I would do this stuff. And I'd probably prompt it a little differently and be like okay and I'm probably saying this. Can you get give me a demo script for the most relevant uh ICP persona whatever in case it doesn't get it that the research identified and I don't even know if the research identified this but you just click the copy button. Yes. Uh Savvy Sales did your Oh, interesting. Huh. Well, so I think what it did if I read above you didn't prompt it very well. No, which is it it tried to integrate the framework into my product as opposed to integrate the framework into the pitch. So, let's do it again. Yeah. But I this is one of the things I love about AI is, you know, imagine I told some research analyst, go do this for me. And they came back three days later and I was like, no, no, sweet child. Totally wrong. So expensive. You get this wrong, whatever. It's 90 seconds we just lost and we can just give it another go. Yep. Exactly. And I think this goes back to what you said at the beginning which was who cares if you have to reprompt it. It's so cheap. It's so fast. Like who cares if we have to do this again? It totally just works. Yeah. And I'll keep doing that. I don't care. Like it takes nothing, right? And I think that's great. Like I I kind of love the mistakes it makes. Actually, sometimes I learn all kinds of weird from the mistakes it makes. Yeah, it keeps saying RevOps and product persona, which is interesting. I know it should be Well, I think this gives us whether or not it gives us a good output, it gives us some good ideas. Let's see if our research u your deep research on Claire is done. I don't think there's actually that much um interesting about me on the internet. But let's we're about to find out. Yeah. Okay, let's Oh, we got it. Okay, so you got a novel. That was the point. I'm Claire. Yeah, I do have board rolls, so Oh, you do? Okay. Look at me. Okay. Okay. I just wanted to check. Okay. Yeah. No, I I'm never surprised at how much it gives me these days because it tends to give me a lot when I do these kind of prompts. I do these kind a lot. Okay. So, you're copying it. What is the best way we should do this? Should we make a project? Yeah, make a project. Okay. Clare. Okay. Clear. It's just clear. Yeah. Okay. Download that. Let me put that in here. Okay. Very exciting. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Clara is my boss. There is research on her from the internet in the project files. Want your help as I'm working with her with Okay. Okay. Anog one. Claire is an enog one. Okay. I'm a ENTP MyersBriggs. ENTP. Okay. Hard DISC. Hard Disc. Okay. Um, and a Sagittarius, of course. Fire sign. Sagittar. I us something like that. Close. Okay. Double D. All right. Yeah. There you go. I don't know any Sagittarius, obviously. Wait, did we get it right? Okay, we got it right. Might as well capitalize it. Okay, cool. What do you want to ask it? I have to tell Claire no on a road map item she wants. Like I don't even know if this will work. Well, we're going to find out. Yeah. Well, this is because it's just so dirty with the research, right? And then but we did get the enagram. So, okay. So, now you're going to have to judge this one. Okay. I'm going to judge it. All right. Let's see if we She's known to empower strong convictions. They're backed by evidence and framed in terms of business fact. Okay. I want to be upfront. I do like I want to be upfront. That's great. Um I famously though, this is very meta for this conversation, famously hate frameworks. So that framework prioritization framework is not going to work for me. Okay, it doesn't meet the bar. Yep, that's good. If helpful, I'd like to set it up as a structured experiment totally would work on me. Lightweight experiments, that's the easiest way to get to get what I want. Yeah, use experimentation language. It opens the door without giving false hope. Sure. Hope springs eternal. This is I don't know. You know, it it doesn't it's decent advice. It would probably work on me. That's kind of my point, right? So, now here's another little fun one I did. I actually did this. I did deep research on myself and I happen to have it sitting there and I happen to be at dinner with a very uh old friend of mine from college and um and and I did something like this. I don't remember the exact prompt and I basically took my deep research and said please describe he oh good goodness right and then I just showed him because I wanted to show him the power of this thing and he's like that's you like literally everything it said was me I am pragmatic uh okay leadership style high velocity that's the one I want when people ask what it's like to work with me I say I go very fast so that really got me. Okay, let's go. Product philosophy. Let's see if this one gets right. Um, crossf functional by design. Yeah, I think that's right. Yeah. Okay, let's go to my core traits. Oh, they got me right. Builder at heart. That's the one I want. Be like the the quote is ridiculous. We'll highlight this on the podcast. Be more entitled. I I have found this to work for pretty much everyone I've done as long as it's the right person. Yeah. Okay. This was this was great. Okay. So, you've shown us I just I'm going through everything you've shown us. You've shown us how to make projects to make projects or prompts to make prompts. You showed us how to manage knowledge and prune knowledge as you say, which I think is a really useful tactic. you've given us a lot of great GBT frameworks for knowing thyself, knowing your manager, knowing each other, and using that to um give feedback to each other. And then you've shown us that despite my personal anti-framework bias, this has actually compelled me to think maybe I'm just applying frameworks the wrong way and if I had an easy tool where somebody else did it for me, I would use it. So you've you've shown how you can scale sort of like training and frameworks into always on GPTs or models. Um, so this is it's been all about chat GPT, but it's been super useful. Uh, we're going to do a couple lightning round questions and then I'm going to I'm going to get you out of here. So, question number one, you said that most of your AI usage is Chad GBT. You mentioned um Claude a little bit. What else is in your stack? I use AI 3 to six hours a day is what I'm clocking in at. It's always three at the minimum. Used to be about two. And the specific tools are chat GBT and claude. The most useful tool I use is not public so I can't talk about it or the name. It's actually a desktop app. Um and and that's outside of chat GBT. Uh outside of that, I try probably 10 to 20 new tools a week. I guess here's what I'll say. Yep. I I think the tools are fine. Yeah. But when I go back to AI tools, nothing beats a blank canvas for me from chat GPT today. And there's a bunch of reasons why, but the one that I keep coming back to that I see people making a big mistake of, which we kind of did here to to demonstrate it, which is so many people try to go to automation when I need to understand what's the prompting that's going to work and how do I get this thing to spit out reliable prompts. Again, we call it evals and stuff in the product world, which I have lots of opinions on, but the bare metal, the chat, messing with that, like right now in five minutes, I could fix that sales winning by design thing. So, it actually gives the output we want is probably the instructions. It probably doesn't understand that when I give it context, it needs to use the context and nothing else. Right? Simple thing. I could fix it. If I tried to automate that and say, I want to do automated sales scripts where I just toss it in and do it and use one of these automated tools. I know there's all these fancy awesome ones, even Zap year, etc. I'm probably going to be stuck with all the output suck, okay? And then I'm done, but I don't want to be done. I want to go build the plan on how to build the automation, and the only way to build the plan is to manually do it repeatedly. Then there's the which model and all that, which is a whole another can of worms. uh because like you use the API for obvious reasons with the product you're building. You have a specific model that you know every time you throw the prompts at it that you like to throw at it, it gives you the output that the customers like. So I think people are erasing the automation and that's a mistake. Yeah. And I I'll just call out my friend Pete Kumman at YC did this article basically begging begging a AI product people to let users manage the problems a little bit better. So yeah, I I have so many opinions on that. and and yes and no. I think the big one that I would point people to if they need actual true good inspiration on that is a product called Lex Lex.page lex. They've instrumented the whole product so you can tear up all the prompting, make it your own, etc. in a very impressive way. So the yes and no is like some products it makes sense. I think others it will lead you in a bad direction. And I haven't told Pete this yet, but I've read his whole thing and I have similar thoughts in general. some of the products we're building, the Lex model makes sense. And I call it the Lex model because Nathan's one of the best product people out there. Don't tell him I said that, although he's gonna hear it from Yeah. So, so, but the way he thinks about this is very much aligned with what Pete was saying. I would just advise people that some products don't make sense to make the user see all that or do all that kind of work. Yep. So, then the onus is back on us product people. So, all right. And then uh speaking of work, I am going to wrap with my final question, which is when Chad GPT is not working for you. Yes, you're a prompt master, but if you need to get inside I I won't ask you what anyagram chip is, but if you need to get inside its head, what's your prompting technique? Do you get mad? Do you do all caps? Do you offer money? Yeah, I know people like to treat it like a human and that's because the interface is making us treat it like a human, not because it is a human. And I think there's a whole world out there to talk about that would that would take us many many hours um and a bunch of drinks, but high level I bluntly just say this is incorrect. So right now I would say hey this is incorrect. your instructions must be wrong because I'll give it an assumption of mine of what's wrong. Please blah blah blah or do blah blah blah, but I don't like try to bribe it or any of that. I know those tricks work, but to me that feels artificial and I'd instead like to find a the same the same way to get what I want without the bribe. Just like with a human, I wouldn't want to bribe them all the time because they're going to get trained on wanting the bribe. And I know chat GPT with the memories and all that is going to get trained on your bribing. So, please don't bribe it unless you want to head down that path just like with a human. And so, I guess the the TLDDR is if you're going to treat it like a human, think about incentives. You are this. This just made me think of my 8-year-old and my six-year-old. And you're right. The second they know a bribe works, they look for the bribe. Okay, this has been so great. Very useful. Where can we find you and how can we be helpful? I'm on Twitter. Hna. HNS H. I tweet way too much. Um, yeah, that's it. like whatever else. Like just ju just a person that's been in tech probably way too long and loves playing with these things. Uh but more importantly, I think we're we're everyone says we're in an incredible time and this and that, but it's like if you have access to the tool, you should use the tool and if you need help using the tool, like hit me up. I don't know. Most of my friends hit me up and I build things for them, but like that's why, you know, thank you for having me on here. I love it. Well, thank you so much. Thank you, Claire. Thanks so much for watching. If you enjoyed this show, please like and subscribe here on YouTube, or even better, leave us a comment with your thoughts. You can also find this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Please consider leaving us a rating and review, which will help others find the show. You can see all our episodes and learn more about the show at howiaipod.com. See you next time.

Summary

Hiten Shah shares advanced ChatGPT techniques for workplace productivity, focusing on using projects, context, and personal frameworks to simulate interactions with bosses and improve communication, while emphasizing the importance of prompting, iteration, and avoiding premature automation.

Key Points

  • Hiten Shah demonstrates how to use ChatGPT projects to simulate conversations with a boss by providing context like an operating manual and personality frameworks.
  • He emphasizes the importance of giving AI context and showing it 'what great looks like' to generate high-quality outputs.
  • The core technique involves creating structured projects with files, instructions, and specific prompts to simulate desired interactions.
  • Shah uses frameworks like Enneagram, Myers-Briggs, and Human Design to understand personal and interpersonal dynamics for better communication.
  • He showcases using AI for deep research on people and products to generate tailored advice, scripts, and strategies.
  • The approach involves iterative prompting and refinement, treating AI like a human assistant to get better results over time.
  • Shah warns against automating complex tasks too early, advocating for manual prompting to understand and perfect the desired output first.
  • He recommends using a blank canvas ChatGPT session for rapid experimentation and problem-solving before building automated solutions.
  • The key is to use AI to understand and replicate human behaviors and communication styles for better workplace outcomes.

Key Takeaways

  • Create structured ChatGPT projects with relevant files and instructions to simulate conversations with your boss or colleagues.
  • Show AI examples of 'great' outputs to guide it towards producing desired results, just like you would with a human.
  • Use personality frameworks (Enneagram, Myers-Briggs, etc.) to understand communication styles and improve interactions.
  • Leverage deep research prompts to gather context about people or products before generating specific outputs.
  • Iterate on prompts and outputs manually to understand what works before automating the process.

Primary Category

AI Tools & Frameworks

Secondary Categories

AI Business & Strategy AI Engineering Machine Learning

Topics

ChatGPT AI productivity workplace communication AI coaching personal AI prompt engineering context management AI projects sales frameworks discovery call scripts

Entities

people
Hiten Shah Claire Vo
organizations
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products
technologies
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technologies products frameworks

Sentiment

0.85 (Positive)

Content Type

interview

Difficulty

intermediate

Tone

educational instructional entertaining technical motivational