Type one vague line, get bland output. This course fixes that for good — you build one reusable five-box prompt template you own and point at any task, in any AI tool.
You type a line or two into the AI, get something bland, and either give up or wrestle it for twenty minutes. The problem was never the tool. It was the asking.
This is a build course. Instead of handing you clever tricks or a list of prompts to copy, it walks you through building one thing you keep: a five-box template that turns any vague request into a specific brief. You fill it in once per task, and the same tool that gave you beige filler gives you output that sounds like you meant it.
You'll build the five boxes one at a time — Role (who the AI should be), Context (what it needs to know), Task (the one specific job), Format (what the answer should look like), and Examples (a sample of good) — filling each one in for a real task of your own as you go. The final lesson assembles them into a working prompt, runs it, and shows you the one follow-up move that carries a draft the rest of the way.
The template is yours and it's portable. It doesn't expire, it isn't tied to one app, and it works the same in every AI tool you'll ever open. You leave with a skeleton you point at anything: an email, a plan, a post, a hard reply.
The underwhelmed: you've tried AI, the output was generic, and you assumed that was as good as it gets. It wasn't — you were giving it one line.
Busy owners and operators: you want repeatable, not clever. A template you fill in beats reinventing a prompt every time.
Anyone who's copied prompts that didn't fit: a prompt built for someone else's task won't open your lock. This teaches you to build your own.