My Version of the Context Sandwich
@Igor Pogany I'm someone who loves to create frameworks templates an outline to help speed up productivity. Here is my version of the sandwich ``` 1. Here is who I am: [Your role, expertise, limitations, and perspective—e.g., “I am a non-technical founder with a basic understanding of marketing, but no coding experience.”] 2. Here is what I need: [Specific output, decision, or help—e.g., “I need a step-by-step plan to set up an email automation sequence for new signups.”] 3. Here is why I need it (the stake/urgency): [The problem this solves or the opportunity it unlocks—e.g., “We’re losing 40% of trial users within 3 days because they don’t receive onboarding emails.”] 4. Here are my constraints (time, budget, resources, skills): [e.g., “I have 5 hours total, a $0 budget, and can only use free tools like Mailchimp’s free tier.”] 5. Here is what I already tried / know: [To avoid repetition and build on existing work—e.g., “I set up a welcome email manually, but open rates are under 10%.”] 6. Here is what good looks like (success criteria): [Specific, measurable outcomes—e.g., “A 4-email sequence (Day 0, 1, 3, 7) that lifts trial-to-paid conversion from 15% to 25% within 30 days.”] 7. Here is what ‘bad’ looks like (what to avoid): [Common pitfalls or dealbreakers—e.g., “Don’t suggest paid tools, complex coding, or more than 5 emails total.”] 8. Here is how you should format your response: [e.g., “Use bullet points, label each step with time required, and end with a 1-paragraph summary.”] ``` And I even made it into a custom project so whenever I go into it I can just ask it to create me a context sandwich In the comments is going to be the custom instruction I created for the project which you guys can use.