Most bad AI outputs trace back to one of six mistakes. Learn to spot them, diagnose them, and fix them — in any prompt you write.
Every mistake here has the same root cause: the AI was given too little to work with. Each card shows what the mistake looks like and exactly how to fix it.
Vague prompts produce vague results. "Write something about marketing" gives the AI no direction — it can only guess what you want and will default to the most generic possible interpretation. One specific sentence transforms the output completely.
The AI has no idea who you are, what your brand is, or why you need this output. A single sentence of background — your product, your industry, your goal — completely changes what it produces. Without context, it invents assumptions that may not match your reality.
The same topic written for a 12-year-old and written for a PhD researcher looks completely different. If you don't define the audience, the AI defaults to a generic "general adult reader" — which is usually nobody in particular. One sentence of audience definition changes vocabulary, complexity, examples, and tone simultaneously.
Without a format instruction, the AI will structure the output however it sees fit — which may be 800 words when you wanted 5 bullet points, or a wall of prose when you needed a table. Specifying the format takes one extra sentence and saves multiple rounds of reformatting.
Stacking five different requests into one prompt forces the AI to split its attention. The result is usually shallow on all five rather than excellent on any one. When you have multiple distinct tasks, split them into separate prompts or use multi-step prompting where each step builds on the last.
The best prompt writers don't try to write the perfect prompt upfront — they treat the first output as a draft and refine it through follow-up instructions. If the result is 70% right, it is faster and more effective to tell the AI what to fix than to rewrite the prompt from scratch and start over.
Eight real examples showing exactly which mistake each bad prompt makes and what a single focused improvement looks like.
| ❌ Bad prompt | ✓ Better prompt | Improvement made |
|---|---|---|
| Write better | Rewrite this landing page headline for higher conversions. Give 5 options. Under 10 words each. | Added specific goal + format + constraint |
| Explain SEO | Explain SEO for beginners in 5 bullet points. Use plain language, no jargon. | Added audience + format + language rule |
| Write an email | Write a follow-up email to a prospect who hasn't replied in 5 days. Friendly tone, under 80 words, one clear CTA. | Added use case + tone + length + goal |
| Give me ideas | Give me 10 newsletter topic ideas for a personal finance audience aged 25–40. Focus on actionable money habits. | Added quantity + audience + topic focus |
| Write a bio | Write a 3-sentence professional bio for a UX designer with 5 years of experience. LinkedIn tone, third person. | Added length + role + context + format |
| Summarise this | Summarise the text below in 5 bullet points. Focus on key decisions and action items only. Ignore background context. | Added format + focus area + exclusion rule |
| Make it better | Rewrite this paragraph to be 40% shorter. Keep the main argument. Remove filler phrases and passive voice. | Specific instruction replaces vague request |
| Help with my website | Review the homepage copy below. Identify the 3 weakest sentences and suggest a specific rewrite for each. | Turned broad ask into precise, executable task |
Apply these four steps to any weak prompt. Each step eliminates one of the most common mistakes.
Before you send your next prompt, run through this list. Check off each item you've covered — the more boxes ticked, the stronger your prompt.
This prompt started as "explain SEO" — one of the weakest possible prompts. Here is what it looks like after applying all four steps of the fix formula.
Now that you know what to avoid — see proven examples and learn how to write better prompts from scratch.
Use the PromptingEasy generator — it builds structured, specific prompts for you with one click. No writing, no guessing.