ChatGPT, an AI language model, has become a household name in recent times, thanks to its impressive generative abilities. However, as with any machine learning model, ChatGPT’s output is only as good as its input. This is where the “Garbage In, Garbage Out” (GIGO) principle comes into play.
To avoid GIGO, users need to craft effective prompts that encourage ChatGPT to provide the best possible answers. Here’s how to do it.
First, users are advised to talk to the AI like a person. When creating prompts for ChatGPT, users should talk to it like they would to a co-worker or team member. This means using conversational language and providing additional details to give your story texture and variety.
Users are also advised to set the stage and provide context because writing a ChatGPT prompt requires more than just asking a one-sentence question. Users need to provide relevant background information to set the context of the query. Users can even tell the AI to assume an identity or profession, such as a teacher, a marketing exec, or a journalist, to get a response from that perspective.
Users should also experiment and make small changes to get the best results from ChatGPT, and to guide it into giving you a better answer. Users can rephrase questions, use personas to elicit responses, or specify the length of the response you want.
If the AI misinterprets, users can correct and clarify prompts based on its previous answers.
Users should also keep experimenting, as sometimes it fails to deliver the desired response, and it’s important to keep experimenting and trying different prompts until users get the desired results.
The sources for this piece include an article in ZDNET.