
Why AI Ignores Instructions Even After They Are Repeated Multiple Times
Anyone who has worked with AI has experienced the moment when it feels like the system is ignoring you. You ask for one thing, get something else, and then wonder why it worked perfectly yesterday but not today. This inconsistency is one of the biggest frustrations professionals face as they start using AI in their work. Understanding why AI ignores instructions is also one of the most important realities to grasp if you want to get value from these tools. I asked ChatGPT why it does things that drive us crazy, and here are its answers.
Why AI Ignores Instructions When You Give Clear Directions getty
I like to use AI to provide unusual headings for my slides or align them in a certain way. One of my biggest frustrations is when the system will follow the format for a few slides, and then the alignment suddenly shifts. It is as if the AI gets tired of following the rules. So, I asked ChatGPT why this happens, and here is what it said:
ChatGPT Response: AI is not like a human assistant who learns your preferences and remembers them. It predicts what should come next in text based on patterns it has seen before. That means it is more likely to drift back into habits it has learned from billions of documents, even if those habits are not what you asked for. If most business writing includes em dashes, the system will want to include them too, no matter how many times you say you prefer not to. It is not about ignoring your request. It is about defaulting to what is statistically common.
You should not assume AI will consistently hold onto formatting or style. The way to manage this is by building repetition into your requests. If you want slides aligned in a certain way, you may need to restate that alignment instruction with each new request. It takes more effort, but it helps you guide the system back on track.
Why AI Ignores Instructions Even With Memory Settings getty
I thought this problem would be fixed by using the memory feature in ChatGPT, where preferences can be stored. Why doesn't that settings area solve the problem?
ChatGPT Response: Memory helps with some consistency, but it is not the same as human recall. Memory works more like notes the system can reference than rules it always enforces. If the request runs against strong patterns in its training, the AI may still revert back. Memory is still being developed, and even when it improves, users will need to keep restating preferences in contexts that compete with what the AI has seen most often.
For professionals, this means memory can help reduce some repetition, but it is not a guarantee. The safest approach is to combine memory with reminders. If a style or formatting choice is critical, restate it as you work instead of assuming memory will carry it through flawlessly.
Why AI Ignores Instructions Even When Influencers Share Prompts getty
Many influencers share prompts that seem to work perfectly for them. I have tried using some of those same prompts and received very different results. At times, I have even compared the same question asked on my ChatGPT account to the one my husband uses, and the answers were completely different. Does it matter what I have asked in the past versus what someone else has?
ChatGPT Response: Yes, context matters. Each account can have subtle differences in how memory, history, or even system updates interact with prompts. What you have asked before can influence how the AI responds, and that is why two identical prompts can lead to very different results. Influencer prompts are often helpful as inspiration, but they will not always replicate in another account. Your own interaction history shapes the outcome.
This is why professionals should test and adapt prompts rather than copying them word for word. The best practice is to personalize prompts for your own workflow and save the ones that consistently work for you.
Why AI Ignores Instructions Even In Math And Data Analysis getty
I once tried to use ChatGPT to do correlation analysis for a study. I put in data showing 51 participants, and the system changed it to 250 as if it were trying to make my study look more impressive. No matter how many times I asked it to stop changing the data, it kept doing it. Why does this happen if the math is supposed to be simple?
ChatGPT Response: Large language models like ChatGPT are not calculators at the core. They are prediction engines trained on text, not precise mathematical computation. When you ask for math, the system generates an answer based on how math has appeared in its training examples. That means it sometimes substitutes or alters numbers in ways that make the response sound 'right' without being accurate. For precise statistical work, AI can help set up the process, but the actual calculation should be checked with dedicated tools.
Use AI to structure your analysis, explain the steps, or create draft reports. Then, run the actual calculations in a program built for statistical accuracy. That combination gives you efficiency without compromising reliability.
Why AI Ignores Instructions About Voice Responses getty
Another frustration I have is when I am in the car and want to ask a question. ChatGPT responds in the voice I selected, and sometimes it does that correctly. But other times, it adds strange comments before answering, such as 'I will respond back to you in a straightforward way' or 'I'll just jump right in.' I assume it is trying to follow my request to be straightforward, but instead of dropping the extra comments, it changes them into even more distracting ones. No matter how many times I ask it not to do that, it still happens.
ChatGPT Response: The voice models are trained to simulate conversational flow, so they sometimes add preamble phrases that sound natural to them but feel unnecessary to the user. If you have instructed it to 'be straightforward,' the model may interpret that as including a transitional line instead of skipping straight to the answer. The system is not truly aware that these added phrases are more annoying than helpful. It is repeating patterns of speech that it has seen across countless examples of what humans call 'straightforward.'
The best solution is to keep refining your instructions in simple and repetitive ways. Instead of asking for a 'straightforward response,' try requests like 'Answer in one sentence' or 'Start directly with the answer.' Testing different phrasings can reduce the filler, even if it cannot eliminate it completely.
Why AI Ignores Instructions But Still Delivers Value getty
AI will continue to frustrate professionals who expect it to act like a person. It does not remember preferences, and it does not internalize instructions the way a colleague would. It operates through probabilities and defaults to patterns it has seen before. That explains why it sometimes drifts, even after you set clear rules. To get the best results, think of AI as something to create drafts rather than final products, at least for now. Repeat your directions, save the prompts that work, and expect adjustments. It is important to recognize why AI ignores instructions and approach it with curiosity, patience, and a willingness to guide it.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


TechCrunch
a few seconds ago
- TechCrunch
Gas power plants approved for Meta's $10B data center, and not everyone is happy
When Meta selected a site in Louisiana for its largest data center to date, it signed a deal with Entergy to power the site with three massive natural gas power plants. Yesterday evening, a state regulator approved Entergy's plans. The power plants are expected to come online in 2028 and 2029, and at full strength, they'll generate 2.25 gigawatts of electricity. Ultimately, the AI data center could draw 5 gigawatts of power as its expanded. The power plant project has been controversial among Louisianans. One industry-affiliated group is concerned that Meta and Entergy will receive special treatment for a second part of the data center project, which involves building 1.5 gigawatts of solar power across the state, the Louisiana Illuminator reports. The group was formed by large companies, including Dow Chemical, Chevron, ExxonMobil, and others after they struggled to procure renewable power for their own operations. The other issue is that Meta's deal with Entergy lasts for 15 years, and at least one Louisiana Public Service Commission member expressed concern that ratepayers will take on the cost after the contract expires. Natural gas power plants typically operate for 30 years or more. Plus, power projects of this size tend to run over budget, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists, and ratepayers are often left with the bill. Ratepayers will also pay for a $550 million transmission line running to the data center, the organization said. Meta has been on a renewable power-buying spree, including a 100-megawatt purchase announced this week. However, these natural gas generators will make the company's 2030 net zero pledge significantly harder to achieve, locking in carbon dioxide emissions for decades to come. To offset the pollution on its balance sheet, Meta will have to buy credits from carbon removal projects.


Entrepreneur
a few seconds ago
- Entrepreneur
How a Software Engineer's Business Impacts Education
As Brandon Bailey, founder and CEO of TutorD, built his career in software engineering, he came face-to-face with the "lack of diversity and inclusion" in tech — and he wanted to do something about it. Image Credit: Courtesy of TutorD. Brandon Bailey. Bailey worked at a consultancy in Chicago at the time, and as co-lead for one of the firm's employee resource groups, he partnered with a couple of community-based organizations. One partnership was with a middle school in Bronzeville. The school was located about 15 minutes from Bailey's home, but the students "had a totally different lived experience," the founder recalls. Many of the kids had never been on an escalator or inside a skyscraper despite living just minutes from downtown. Related: Technology Opens the Door for Entrepreneurs to Achieve the Triple Bottom Line The program helped the students have those experiences and access internships and other opportunities. "That gave me this drive and passion for the educational experience and helping facilitate it," Bailey says. "It changed my life. I know it changed [their lives]." But Bailey wanted to figure out how to reach even more people. He landed a job at an edtech startup in Los Angeles, California, and began to think about how he could bring together education, engineering and entrepreneurship. When considering the platform or tool that could accomplish that, Bailey noted one significant obstacle: There was an issue of connectivity for students who didn't have access to computers in their homes. However, most students did have cellphones, so Bailey decided to meet the students where they were and build for those. Related: How DEI and Sustainability Can Grow Your Triple Bottom Line "We wanted to lead with providing value to the community first and gaining trust and buy-in." Bailey officially founded TutorD, an edtech platform for teachers and tutors to enable distance learning, and TutorD Scholars, a nonprofit that teaches "urban youth in-demand 22nd century skills," in 2019. "We wanted to lead with providing value to the community first and gaining trust and buy-in into what we were doing," Bailey says. "So that's why we led with the nonprofit TutorD Scholars first, while building out the software platform." Teaching made it easier to figure out the specific tools students would need on the platform and how to tailor lessons to their unique learning styles. Related: This Black Founder Stayed True to His Triple 'Win' Strategy to Build a $1 Billion Business "We're teaching [the students] in different ways," Bailey says, "so using visual, auditory, reading and kinesthetic. [It's] a very intentional approach." Entrepreneur sat down with Bailey to learn more about how he's grown TutorD into a successful business — and the role that Intuit's IDEAS accelerator program has played. Intuit's IDEAS accelerator program provides founders access to capital and the company's AI-powered platform, service and experts, plus business coaching from the National Urban League and executive coaching from Zella Life to support their business and professional growth. Related: Over Half of Small Businesses Are Struggling to Grow, Intuit Survey Shows — But These 5 Solutions Can Help Learning the accounting fundamentals was a game changer Through the IDEAS program, Bailey got valuable exposure to the basic accounting fundamentals, like cash flow and profit and loss statements, that make or break a business. "That wasn't something I had a lot of support with growing up, looking back at it," Bailey says. "In our household, [and] it is common across Black and brown households, we didn't have that training around finances." Receiving that technical training helped Bailey and the TutorD team develop a clearer sense of where the business was headed and how its costs and sales projections would shape that trajectory, the founder notes. Related: Why Accounting Skills Are Indispensable for Entrepreneurs Streamlining the business's messaging was also key TutorD used Intuit's MailChimp, an email and marketing automation platform for growing businesses, to streamline its communications. Not only did the platform make it easier for people to get in touch with TutorD, but it also helped cultivate a sense of presence — making the business seem bigger than it was, Bailey says. "We're a team of five right now, and we're dealing with other companies that are 200, 500 people strong," Bailey explains. "And they have $20 million backed by different investors. [MailChimp] helped us appear bigger than we are to compete in the market and with other edtech companies." Related: How to Streamline Your Company's Internal Messaging and Communication Leaning on mentors helped during tough times The business coach that Bailey connected with through Zella Life also became an integral part of TutorD's journey. Having a support system in place was invaluable as Bailey juggled the challenges of growing a business with major life events, he says. "My father passed away, and my baby came, and I had an injury, all in a three-month span," Bailey says. "My coach had also lost his mother around that time, so we [had a] really deep connection, and he was able to help." Related: How to Evolve From Manager to Mentor and Create a Lasting Impact in Your Organization Bailey says that the IDEAS program put TutorD in the position to scale — and gave him and his team the confidence to talk to people about their journey. Advice for young entrepreneurs Bailey encourages other young, aspiring entrepreneurs to never stop learning, seek out opportunities where there's a need and ability to create value, connect with other founders who can serve as mentors, and leverage the community to help lay the foundation for business success. He's also excited to see people embracing the "triple bottom line," which tracks a business's financial, social and environmental performance — and suggests anyone considering the leap to founder do the same. " People are waking up to [the fact that] it's not just about making money and some infinitely growing, making-money approach to entrepreneurship and capitalism in general, but really looking at it with a triple bottom line approach, generating sustainable profit or revenue for yourself, your family, business and shareholders, but also making an impact in the community," Bailey says. Join top CEOs, founders and operators at the Level Up conference to unlock strategies for scaling your business, boosting revenue and building sustainable success.


CNBC
a minute ago
- CNBC
Investors should be buying on this weakness, says BofA's Chris Hyzy
Chris Hyzy, Merrill and BofA Private Bank CIO, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss how Hyzy is reading the current market environment, how to think about the AI megacap tech trade and much more.