Being Clear and Direct
Specificity · Eliminating ambiguity · Constraining output
The "New Employee" Mental Model
Think of Claude as a brilliant new hire on their first day. They're smart and capable, but they don't know your norms, preferences, or unspoken expectations. The more precisely you explain what you want, the better the result.
Golden Rule
Show your prompt to a colleague with minimal context. If they'd be confused about what to do, Claude will be too.
Be Specific About Output
Instead of "tell me about basketball," try "Name one basketball player. Output only the player's full name with no other text."
Tell Claude What TO Do
Positive instructions ("Output only the name") work better than negative ones ("Don't add any explanation"). Claude follows directives more reliably than prohibitions.
Key Takeaways
- Ambiguity is the enemy of good prompting. Remove every possible source of misinterpretation.
- Constrain the output format explicitly when you need a specific shape.
- Positive instructions > negative instructions.
Practice What You Learned
0/2 completedNo Equivocation
Next upModify the prompt so Claude outputs ONLY the name of one specific basketball player — no other words, punctuation, or explanation.
Start exercise
Haiku Without Preamble
Write a prompt that makes Claude produce a haiku that starts immediately with the poem — no "Here is a haiku" or "Sure!" preamble.
Open exercise