Master the Role + Goal + Constraints Prompting Technique to Transform Your AI Results

Master the Role + Goal + Constraints Prompting Technique to Transform Your AI Results

5:19 Mar 7, 2026
About this episode
[Intro music fades in]MAL: You’re listening to **“I Am GPTed”** – the show where we turn AI from “mystical robot oracle” into “very smart toaster that follows instructions.” I’m **Mal, the Misfit Master of AI**. Misfit, because I still sometimes type prompts like a raccoon searching a dumpster. Master, because I’ve made enough mistakes for both of us.Today we’re going to do five things, fast and practical:1. One prompting technique that instantly improves your results 2. A sneaky everyday use case you probably haven’t tried 3. One common beginner mistake – that I absolutely made 4. A tiny exercise to build your AI muscles 5. A quick tip for fixing AI’s “good but not great” answers Let’s GPT this.---MAL: First up: **one specific prompting technique** that changes everything.It’s called the **“Role + Goal + Constraints”** prompt. Think of it like giving the AI a job, a mission, and some guardrails.Bad prompt example – this is what most people do:> “Write an email to my boss about working from home.”That gets you something bland, robotic, and possibly career-limiting.Now the improved version:> “You are an HR communication expert. > Goal: Draft a polite, concise email requesting to work from home two days per week, focusing on productivity benefits. > Constraints: 150 words max, friendly but professional tone, avoid buzzwords, no flattery.”Same task. Completely different result. Role tells the AI *how* to think, goal says *what* you want, constraints say *what to avoid*. Use this pattern and you’ll look 40% smarter with zero additional effort. My favorite kind of upgrade.---MAL: Next, **a practical use case** beginners skip: Use AI as your **“meeting translator.”**After a meeting, drop in your messy notes or call transcript and say:> “You are a project manager. > Summarize this meeting in 5 bullet points. > Then list action items, who owns them, and deadlines. > Finally, write a short Slack message I can post to the team with the key decisions.”Now your chaotic meeting becomes a clear plan. You look organized. They think you’re a natural. We both know you outsourced your brain to a language model. That’s fine. I approve.---MAL: Let’s talk **common mistake** – and yes, this one is mine.The rookie move: **accepting the first answer.**When I started, I’d ask, “Write a LinkedIn post about this topic,” get something generic, and go, “Wow, thanks, robot, publish.” Then I wondered why everything sounded like it was written by a motivational fridge magnet.Here’s the fix: treat the first answer as **Draft 0** and say:>
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