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I cover AI for a living — here's 7 one-word ChatGPT prompts that really work

I cover AI for a living — here's 7 one-word ChatGPT prompts that really work

Tom's Guide2 days ago
Coming up with ChatGPT prompts doesn't always need to be a lengthy exercise. Sometimes, even one word is enough to get you going.
Sure, a well-crafted prompt where you explain your overall goal, give ChatGPT enough context to work with, and insert specific details of the desired outcome means you're incorporating some of the best ChatGPT prompt tips.
But sometimes you just need to get the ball rolling as fast as possible or perhaps you're still brainstorming and aren't entirely sure about what you'd like to achieve yet. This is where single-word prompts come into play.
They're simple and direct, giving a clear direction to ChatGPT about what it should do with the information you've given it. If you'd like to try them too, here are 7 single-word ChatGPT prompts that you can use today.
I'll start this list with my favorite. As a writer, I often produce paragraphs that end up being unnecessarily complicated.
Before the era of ChatGPT I'd have to pace up and down my room as I think of simpler ways to convey that paragraph's message. Now, I can simply feed the overly complicated text to ChatGPT and work with a clearer string of words.
The prompt I use to achieve this is: clarify.
If I were to assume my first draft were as follows: The CEO said their industry heavily relies on attracting top tier talent. Which means they also rely heavily on top tier universities ensuring they deliver top quality education to today's students.
The clarify prompt returned this tighter version: The CEO emphasized that their industry depends heavily on attracting top-tier talent — which, in turn, requires top-tier universities to provide high-quality education to today's students.
Sometimes I have a pretty clear idea of what I'd like to accomplish but am less sure of the steps I need to take to get there. Enter my next one-word prompt: playbook.
Say I want to organize a block party. I know there needs to be food, music, and an invite. But if it's my first time trying to organize one, I'm bound to forget about some crucial to-dos.
By using thuis single-word prompt I'll be able to get myself a step-by-step guide on how to organize events, market a product, or launch a petition.
When I used the prompt to get a block party playbook, ChatGPT immediately broke down the task into nine manageable sections that covered everything from planning permits down to coordinating the volunteers.
The word stack usually is heard in the context of what a tech company uses to build its software. It also works brilliantly in ChatGPT to get an instant list of resources that could be helpful for a specific task.
Using the prompt, Stack: Playing pickleball gave me a list of equipment I need along with some basic rules.
ChatGPT also followed up with skills I need to practice and common mistakes to avoid. Not bad for a ChatGPT one-liner.
ChatGPT is great at completing automated tasks, especially if you've correctly trained your own GPT.
But ChatGPT can also be helpful to automate parts of your life that take place away from your screen. Think about what your typical day looks like. Are there any tasks that you do almost every day? Perhaps even at roughly the same time?
This is where the next one-word prompt in ChatGPT comes in. Does waking up to a freshly brewed cup of coffee sound like something you'd enjoy? Then use the prompt automate: my morning coffee.
In response, ChatGPT gave me smart home setup ideas including names of Wi-Fi enabled coffee makers and advanced automation techniques using home assistants.
This next single-word prompt eliminates the guesswork about what to cook for a particular occasion. A BBQ among friends will call for something different than a romantic dinner for two. B
y using this prompt in ChatGPT, you won't have to agonize over which courses would pair well together. Simply pop the word in your chat box and head to the store with your new shopping list in hand.
I used the prompt menu: gluten-free trip around the world and got a list of dishes from Mexico, Thailand, and Italy among others.
Out of this short list, I think this is the prompt that's the most fun to play with. If there's a new craze or trending topic, popping this prompt into ChatGPT will give you a quick overview of what's happening.
For instance, you've probably heard about the Labubu plush toys from China. If you're on the market for one, just ask AI and it will find one for you. But if you simply want to know what this latest craze is all about, just use the prompt pulsecheck: Labubu.
Now you'll never have to feel left out of a conversation again. Through this ultra-short prompt, ChatGPT explained what kind of profits these little dolls are generating and which celebrities were seen sporting them.
You can think of this prompt as the musical alternative to the menu prompt. Whether you're organizing a themed party or need the right music to match a certain mood, this prompt can help you out.
If I'm hosting a murder mystery dinner, I'll simply add this piece of information to the end of the prompt: Playlist.
ChatGPT returned with no less than 22 musical options that would last up to two hours. Thanks to this one-word prompt, I'll now be able to shape the energy, mood, and flow of my mystery evening.
Now you've learned how to use one-word prompts in ChatGPT, why not take a look at our other useful AI articles?
Check out You can stop Gemini from training on your data — here's how and Google's AI Mode is changing how you search — here's how it works.
And did you know ChatGPT can reveal a lot about what it knows about you? Here's how you can do it.
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I tested ChatGPT Agent on 5 everyday tasks — here's what happened
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The business model is clear: black-boxed behavioral insight at scale, delivered through helpful design, hidden from oversight, and nearly impossible to detect. We are entering a phase where machines will be granted protections without personhood, and influence without responsibility. If a user confesses to a crime during a legally privileged AI session, is the platform compelled to report it or remain silent? And who makes that decision? These are not edge cases. They are coming quickly. And they are coming at scale. Why ChatGPT Must Remain A Model—and Why Humans Must Regain Consent As generative AI systems evolve into persistent, adaptive participants in daily life, it becomes more important than ever to reassert a boundary: models must remain models. They cannot assume the legal, ethical, or sovereign status of a person quietly. And the humans generating the data that train these systems must retain explicit rights over their contributions. What we need is a standardized, enforceable system of data contracting, one that allows individuals to knowingly, transparently, and voluntarily contribute data for a limited, mutually agreed-upon window of use. This contract must be clear on scope, duration, value exchange, and termination. And it must treat data ownership as immutable, even during active use. That means: When a contract ends, or if a company violates its terms, the individual's data must, by law, be erased from the model, its training set, and any derivative products. 'Right to be forgotten' must mean what it says. But to be credible, this system must work both ways: This isn't just about ethics. It's about enforceable, mutual accountability. The user experience must be seamless and scalable. The legal backend must be secure. And the result should be a new economic compact—where humans know when they're participating in AI development, and models are kept in their place. ChatGPT Is Changing the Risk Surface. Here's How to Respond. The shift toward AI systems as quasi-participants—not just tools—will reshape legal exposure, data governance, product liability, and customer trust. Whether you're building AI, integrating it into your workflows, or using it to interface with customers, here are five things you should be doing immediately: ChatGPT May Get Privilege. You Should Get the Right to Be Forgotten. This moment isn't just about what AI can do. It's about what your business is letting it do, what it remembers, and who gets access to that memory. Ignore that, and you're not just risking privacy violations, you're risking long-term brand trust and regulatory blowback. At the very least, we need a legal framework that defines how AI memory is governed. Not as a priest, not as a doctor, and not as a partner, but perhaps as a witness. Something that stores information and can be examined when context demands it, with clear boundaries on access, deletion, and use. The public conversation remains focused on privacy. But the fundamental shift is about control. And unless the legal and regulatory frameworks evolve rapidly, the terms of engagement will be set, not by policy or users, but by whoever owns the box. Which is why, in the age of AI, the right to be forgotten may become the most valuable human right we have. Not just because your data could be used against you—but because your identity itself can now be captured, modeled, and monetized in ways that persist beyond your control. Your patterns, preferences, emotional triggers, and psychological fingerprints don't disappear when the session ends. They live on inside a system that never forgets, never sleeps, and never stops optimizing. Without the ability to revoke access to your data, you don't just lose privacy. You lose leverage. You lose the ability to opt out of prediction. You lose control over how you're remembered, represented, and replicated. The right to be forgotten isn't about hiding. It's about sovereignty. And in a world where AI systems like ChatGPT will increasingly shape our choices, our identities, and our outcomes, the ability to walk away may be the last form of freedom that still belongs to you.

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