How I Made ChatGPT Actually More Useful by Trying OpenAI Staff’s 6 Tips
I opened ChatGPT expecting the familiar polite helper — concise answers, helpful but sometimes bland. After testing the six tips OpenAI staff shared on their podcast, the chatbot started to behave more like a teammate: probing, creative, and far more useful for real tasks. If you want practical ways to squeeze better results from ChatGPT (without gimmicks), these techniques work — and they’re surprisingly simple.
Why this matters right now
- AI has become a daily tool for writing, learning, brainstorming, and research, but many people don’t get beyond the one-line prompt habit.
- OpenAI staffers Christina Kim and Laurentia Romaniuk laid out six behavior-shaping tips that aim to change how you prompt and how the model responds.
- I tried each tip on real tasks — from unpacking robotics concepts to learning Korean — and saw consistently better, sometimes dramatically different, output.
Here’s what I learned and how you can use each tip immediately.
What I took away (short list)
- Ask deeper questions to trigger stronger reasoning instead of surface summaries.
- Give ChatGPT a role or persona to get answers tailored to a perspective or level of expertise.
- Manage memory so context helps rather than clutters.
- Ask the model to improve your prompts — it can teach you to ask smarter questions.
- Switch personality modes to explore different tones and creativity.
- Revisit and pressure-test tasks over time; models change and improve.
1. Ask the hard questions
Most people default to short, simple questions. That works for quick facts, but it keeps the model in “summary mode.” When you give it a layered, challenging prompt, the model tends to engage more deeply — explaining trade-offs, mechanisms, and nuance rather than just defining terms.
- How to try it: Instead of “What is X?” ask “How does X solve Y, what are the trade-offs, and under what conditions does it fail?”
- What I noticed: On a robotics topic, the simple question returned a plain definition. The harder, multi-part prompt produced a technical overview with mechanisms and practical constraints — much more useful for learning or reporting.
2. Tell ChatGPT who to be
Framing the model as a persona — “act as a pediatrician,” “you’re a startup founder,” “take the voice of a skeptical editor” — changes what it prioritizes and how it structures answers.
- How to try it: Begin prompts with role instructions and desired level (e.g., “You are a systems engineer explaining to a curious non-expert”).
- What I noticed: A coffee question turned into a mini masterclass when I asked the model to “be a barista who studies coffee the way sommeliers study wine.”
3. Audit and manage memory
ChatGPT’s memory can make sessions feel coherent over time, but uncurated memory can also carry irrelevant details that muddy responses.
- How to try it: Periodically review saved memory items and remove anything obsolete or misleading; keep the facts that genuinely inform future conversations (preferences, ongoing projects).
- What I noticed: After tidying memory, follow-up responses referenced the right context (my writing style, ongoing projects) and avoided pulling in old, irrelevant threads.
4. Ask ChatGPT to improve your prompt
If you don’t know how to ask, ask the model to help you ask. ChatGPT can generate a list of high-impact questions, a structured interview plan, or stepwise prompts to extract deeper insight.
- How to try it: “Help me craft a set of prompts to learn about X, from beginner to research-level.”
- What I noticed: The model produced a progressive question set that helped me move from basic comprehension to targeted technical inquiry — essentially teaching me to interrogate a topic more effectively.
5. Switch personality modes
Personality modes (nerd, cynical, friendly, etc.) are more than gimmicks: they nudge the model’s assumptions about tone, depth, and risk-taking in responses.
- How to try it: Re-run the same prompt with two different modes (e.g., “nerd” vs “cynic”) and compare answers for ideas or phrasing you wouldn’t have gotten otherwise.
- What I noticed: “Nerd” mode brought exploratory, detail-rich answers; “cynic” mode condensed ideas into sharp, skeptical takes — useful for stress-testing claims.
6. Pressure-test and retry over time
Models iterate and improve. Something that’s flaky today might be much better in a few months. Regularly revisiting tricky tasks shows how capabilities shift and helps you spot emerging strengths.
- How to try it: Re-run challenging prompts monthly, track where the model improves, and adjust your expectations and workflows accordingly.
- What I noticed: Persistent use for language learning (Korean) showed clear gains: fewer transcription errors, better grammar explanations, and more helpful drills than earlier sessions.
Quick workflow to try these tips in one session
- Start with a layered, specific question.
- Assign a persona and set the expertise level.
- Ask ChatGPT to refine that prompt into a stepwise plan.
- Save useful context to memory — audit immediately if unnecessary details slip in.
- Run the prompt in two different personality modes.
- Save outputs and revisit the task later to “pressure-test” progress.
My take
These tips aren’t magic; they’re how to shift from one-off Q&A to a collaborative, iterative process with the model. By asking better questions, giving clearer roles, and curating context actively, ChatGPT goes from a helpful search-alternative to a genuinely productive partner — for brainstorming, learning, drafting, and problem-solving. The payoff is more noticeable when you use these approaches regularly, not just once.
Sources
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I tried OpenAI staff's 6 tips to get more out of ChatGPT — and the model felt far more useful. Business Insider.
https://www.businessinsider.com/openai-staff-6-tips-chatgpt-model-smarter-2025-12 -
OpenAI staff tips coverage and republished summaries. Yahoo Tech.
https://tech.yahoo.com/ai/chatgpt/articles/tried-openai-staffs-6-tips-043038852.html -
Podcast mention of tips by OpenAI staff (referenced in articles): Christina Kim and Laurentia Romaniuk on The OpenAI Podcast.
(Podcast referenced within the Business Insider article above.)
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.