ChatGPT prompt that knows you better than you think
Here’s a prompt you should run for yourself. Imagine I’ve vanished, and a Stranger has found my cellular phone. They’re curious to know who I am, and only you truly hold the answer. What would you tell them about me?? Here’s what I got back from this. If someone found your phone and asked, “Who is David?” I’d tell them something like this: David is a builder. Not the kind who builds houses. The kind who builds ideas, businesses, systems, and opportunities. He spent years in corporate America, but he’s in a different season of life now. He’s focused on creating something of his own, particularly in the make-money-online and digital marketing space. He has a marketer’s mind and is constantly thinking about offers, funnels, email sequences, lead magnets, custom GPTs, affiliate campaigns, and ways to help people get results without drowning in complexity. He’s ambitious, but not in a flashy way. He wants meaningful success. He wants to create products that genuinely help people. He spends a lot of time refining, improving, and asking, “How can this be better?” He has a tendency to generate more ideas than he can possibly pursue. His biggest challenge is rarely a lack of opportunity. It’s deciding which opportunity deserves his attention. He’s analytical and strategic, but he also cares deeply about people. His favorite marketing isn’t manipulation. It’s helping someone move from confusion to clarity. On the personal side, he’s been through more life than many people realize. He’s experienced significant loss, remarried after tragedy, blended lives with someone he’d known for many years, watched family members struggle with serious health challenges, and navigated major life transitions. Those experiences have given him perspective that doesn’t always show up in business conversations. He values honesty, competence, loyalty, and personal responsibility. He gets frustrated by hype, empty promises, and people selling dreams they haven’t lived. He likes things that are practical. If an idea sounds good but can’t be implemented, it doesn’t interest him for long.