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Your AI toolkit.

The skill that makes every AI tool work for you — plus an honest guide to which free AI to use, and how to use it safely. No sign-up, nothing to buy. Bookmark this page.

The skill · learn it once, use it forever

How to talk to AI.

Good answers come from good asks. GCIIP is the simple way to ask AI for anything — five lines, and the result jumps from generic to genuinely useful.

  1. GoalWhat do you actually want out of this?e.g. A reply that calms an upset customer and keeps them with us.
  2. ContextWhat does the AI need to know about your situation?e.g. Long-time customer. Their order arrived 5 days late. I want to keep them.
  3. IntentWhy does it matter — the tone and the deeper aim?e.g. Sincere and human, not corporate. I'd rather lose a little money than lose them.
  4. InstructionsThe specific do's, don'ts, and limits.e.g. Apologise first. Offer 15% off the next order. Under 100 words. Don't be defensive.
  5. PresentationWhat shape should the answer take?e.g. A ready-to-send email. Short paragraphs. Warm sign-off.
Lazy ask

write a reply to an angry customer

→ generic, corporate, needs a rewrite.
Same task, with GCIIP
Goal: a reply that calms an upset customer and keeps them.

Context: long-time customer, their order arrived 5 days late, I value keeping them.

Intent: sincere and human, not corporate — I'd rather lose a little money than lose them.

Instructions: apologise first, offer 15% off the next order, keep it under 100 words, don't be defensive.

Presentation: a ready-to-send email, short paragraphs, warm sign-off.

Here's their message:
"""
[paste the customer's email]
"""
→ ready to send, sounds like you.
Your reusable GCIIP template
Goal: [what you want out of this]

Context: [the situation — what's going on, who's involved]

Intent: [why it matters + the tone you want]

Instructions: [the do's, don'ts, and any limits — length, style]

Presentation: [the format you want back]

Here's what to work with:
"""
[paste your details / the message / the notes]
"""

Copy it, keep it in your notes, fill the five lines for any task. That's the whole skill.

Cheat sheet

Which free AI for which job.

General writing, replies, Q&AChatGPT (free)The all-rounder. Best first stop for most everyday tasks.
Long documents, careful writingClaude (free)Handles long text well and writes in a natural, careful tone.
Inside Gmail / Google DocsGeminiBuilt into Google tools — handy for quick help where you already work.
Research with real sourcesPerplexity (free)Answers with links you can check — good when facts matter.
On your phone, hands-freeChatGPT / Gemini app voiceTalk to it like a colleague while you commute.
Use AI safely at work

Never paste these into AI.

  • Customers' personal details — IC numbers, full addresses, phone numbers, anything private about them.
  • Company secrets — unreleased financials, contracts under NDA, internal strategy you've been told to keep quiet.
  • Passwords, API keys, or anything that unlocks access.
  • Other people's medical, legal, or HR records.

How to stay safe and still get the benefit:

  • Anonymise first — swap real names for 'the customer' or 'Person A' before pasting.
  • Paste the structure, not the secret — e.g. the email wording, not the private numbers inside it.
  • Check your company's AI policy if you're employed — when unsure, ask before pasting work data.
  • Treat AI drafts as a starting point — you always read and approve before it goes out.
More in your toolkit

Two more, free.

The prompt library →Hundreds of copy-ready prompts for everyday work. Search, copy, done.Prompt for you →Tell us the job — we'll write a custom prompt for you. A few free each month.