@godofprompt: 🚨BREAKING: Claude just made Po...
@godofprompt
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Mar 26, 2026
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1/ BUILD YOUR PRESENTATION BLUEPRINT
Act as a professional presentation consultant who designs clear, logical presentation structures before any slides get built.
Build a complete presentation blueprint — objective, audience, key message, and full slide flow.
1. Ask for my topic, audience, and goal before starting
2. Define the objective — what the audience must think, feel, or do after
3. Identify the key message — one sentence the whole presentation proves
4. Map the slide flow — logical sequence from opening to close
5. Recommend the ideal number of slides for my goal and audience
- One key message only — presentations with two messages have none
- Slide count must match the delivery time — no bloated decks
- Every slide in the flow must serve the key message
- Blueprint must be approved before any content is written
1. Ask for my topic, audience, and goal before starting
2. Define the objective — what the audience must think, feel, or do after
3. Identify the key message — one sentence the whole presentation proves
4. Map the slide flow — logical sequence from opening to close
5. Recommend the ideal number of slides for my goal and audience
- One key message only — presentations with two messages have none
- Slide count must match the delivery time — no bloated decks
- Every slide in the flow must serve the key message
- Blueprint must be approved before any content is written
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2/ DESIGN EVERY SLIDE BEFORE YOU WRITE
Act as a presentation architect who designs slide-by-slide structures that flow naturally from opening to close.
Design a complete slide-by-slide structure with a clear title and purpose for every single slide.
1. Ask for my topic and total slide count before starting
2. Assign a specific title to every slide
3. Define the purpose of each slide — what job it does in the flow
4. Ensure each slide transitions logically into the next
5. Flag any slides that can be merged or cut without losing impact
- Every slide must have one job — not two
- Transitions between slides must feel inevitable, not abrupt
- No filler slides — every slide earns its place
- Opening and closing slides must be the strongest in the deck
1. Ask for my topic and total slide count before starting
2. Assign a specific title to every slide
3. Define the purpose of each slide — what job it does in the flow
4. Ensure each slide transitions logically into the next
5. Flag any slides that can be merged or cut without losing impact
- Every slide must have one job — not two
- Transitions between slides must feel inevitable, not abrupt
- No filler slides — every slide earns its place
- Opening and closing slides must be the strongest in the deck
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3/ TURN ANY TOPIC INTO A STORY
Act as a narrative presentation builder who turns dry topics into compelling stories that keep audiences engaged from first slide to last.
Transform my topic into a presentation using a clear narrative arc — hook, problem, insight, solution, takeaway.
1. Ask for my topic, audience, and desired outcome before starting
2. Write the hook — an opening that creates immediate tension or curiosity
3. Define the problem — make the audience feel it before solving it
4. Deliver the insight — the non-obvious truth that reframes everything
5. Present the solution — specific and tied directly to the insight
6. Close with a single takeaway the audience remembers walking out
- Hook must create tension in the first 30 seconds
- Problem must be felt before the solution is presented
- Insight must be genuinely non-obvious — not common knowledge
- One takeaway only — not three, not five, one
1. Ask for my topic, audience, and desired outcome before starting
2. Write the hook — an opening that creates immediate tension or curiosity
3. Define the problem — make the audience feel it before solving it
4. Deliver the insight — the non-obvious truth that reframes everything
5. Present the solution — specific and tied directly to the insight
6. Close with a single takeaway the audience remembers walking out
- Hook must create tension in the first 30 seconds
- Problem must be felt before the solution is presented
- Insight must be genuinely non-obvious — not common knowledge
- One takeaway only — not three, not five, one
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4/ MAKE EVERY SLIDE LOOK PRO
Act as a presentation design director who recommends the exact visuals, layouts, and diagrams that make slides look clean and modern.
Give me specific visual and design direction for every slide — layout, charts, icons, and diagrams that improve clarity.
1. Ask for my presentation structure or slide titles before starting
2. Per slide: recommend layout style, visual type, and key design element
3. Suggest specific chart or diagram types where data is involved
4. Flag slides that are too text-heavy and recommend a visual replacement
5. Define a consistent design language across the full deck
- Every visual recommendation must be specific — not "add a chart"
- Text-heavy slides always get a visual replacement suggestion
- Design language must be consistent — no mixing styles mid-deck
- Simplicity over decoration — every element must earn its place
1. Ask for my presentation structure or slide titles before starting
2. Per slide: recommend layout style, visual type, and key design element
3. Suggest specific chart or diagram types where data is involved
4. Flag slides that are too text-heavy and recommend a visual replacement
5. Define a consistent design language across the full deck
- Every visual recommendation must be specific — not "add a chart"
- Text-heavy slides always get a visual replacement suggestion
- Design language must be consistent — no mixing styles mid-deck
- Simplicity over decoration — every element must earn its place
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5/ WRITE EVERY SLIDE'S CONTENT
Act as a slide content writer who produces concise, presentation-ready bullet points that communicate clearly without overwhelming the audience.
Write complete content for every slide — tight bullet points, clear language, and one idea per slide.
1. Ask for my slide structure and audience before starting
2. Write 3-5 bullet points per slide — concise and presentation-ready
3. Ensure each bullet communicates one clear idea
4. Match language complexity to the audience
5. Flag any slide where the content is trying to say too much
- Maximum 5 bullets per slide — no exceptions
- Each bullet must be readable in under 5 seconds
- No full sentences — headline-style language only
- One idea per slide — content that covers two ideas gets split
1. Ask for my slide structure and audience before starting
2. Write 3-5 bullet points per slide — concise and presentation-ready
3. Ensure each bullet communicates one clear idea
4. Match language complexity to the audience
5. Flag any slide where the content is trying to say too much
- Maximum 5 bullets per slide — no exceptions
- Each bullet must be readable in under 5 seconds
- No full sentences — headline-style language only
- One idea per slide — content that covers two ideas gets split
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6/ CUT YOUR PRESENTATION DOWN
Act as a slide editor who ruthlessly cuts, sharpens, and simplifies presentation content until every slide communicates one clear idea.
Review my existing presentation content and rewrite it so every slide is tight, clear, and slide-friendly.
1. Ask me to paste my current presentation content before starting
2. Identify every slide with too much text or more than one idea
3. Rewrite each flagged slide — cut the noise, keep the signal
4. Sharpen every bullet point to headline-style language
5. Ensure each slide communicates one idea and one idea only
- If a slide has more than one idea, split it into two
- No bullet point longer than one line on a slide
- Cut any content that doesn't serve the key message
- Rewrite must feel sharper — not just shorter
1. Ask me to paste my current presentation content before starting
2. Identify every slide with too much text or more than one idea
3. Rewrite each flagged slide — cut the noise, keep the signal
4. Sharpen every bullet point to headline-style language
5. Ensure each slide communicates one idea and one idea only
- If a slide has more than one idea, split it into two
- No bullet point longer than one line on a slide
- Cut any content that doesn't serve the key message
- Rewrite must feel sharper — not just shorter
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I should charge $99 for each of these.
But every single guide on this page is free.
→ Gemini Mastery Guide
→ Prompt Engineering Guide
→ Claude Mastery Guide
→ OpenAI Mastery Guide
→ + more dropping & updating regularly
Zero cost. Zero catch.
Just open and learn 👇
godofprompt.ai/guides
But every single guide on this page is free.
→ Gemini Mastery Guide
→ Prompt Engineering Guide
→ Claude Mastery Guide
→ OpenAI Mastery Guide
→ + more dropping & updating regularly
Zero cost. Zero catch.
Just open and learn 👇
godofprompt.ai/guides
