The Ultimate Prompt Creator Quick Start + In-Depth Guide
Whether you just need a quick way to get started or want a deeper understanding of how the Ultimate Prompt Creator works, this guide covers both.
I genuinely think the Ultimate Prompt Creator will surprise you with what it’s capable of — if you actually use it and test its potential.
If you want the quick route, check out the Quick Start Guide and go use UPC.
If you’re the kind of person who prefers a deep dive first, and doesn’t mind what some would call boring theory, head to the In-Depth Guide for the full explanation.
Want to hear UPC explain in his own words who he helps, how he works, and why he might be useful for you?
If you’d rather stay here, let’s start with the Quick Start Guide — or scroll further for the in-depth version.
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UPC Quick Start Guide
If you want to get started right away, the process is self-explanatory:
Simply describe what you want (in everyday language)
Optionally answer clarifying questions
Copy your ready-to-use expert prompt and paste it into your favorite AI tool
Optionally iterate until you’re 100% satisfied
That’s it.
No AI guru BS. No steep learning curve. Just a faster way to get better AI instructions for work, personal projects, and creative ideas.
The fastest way to understand UPC? Just experiment.
Give it almost no input. Then give it a messy brain dump. Try different use cases. Try different AI tools with the same prompts. Test everything you can think of.
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UPC In-Depth Guide
Starting screen guidance
After you’ve clicked on “Get Started”, you’ll see this welcome message:
Most people have an idea in their head — but when it’s time to explain it to AI, they suddenly have no clue where to start.
That’s exactly what this starting message is for: guidance.
Here’s what you should know upfront:
You can describe everything in plain, everyday language
Some questions might not be relevant for your use case (that’s fine)
You can provide as much or as little info as you want
AI isn’t a mindreader (at least not yet)
UPC converts your messy thoughts into clear, professional, structured prompts.
So don’t overcomplicate it — just drop everything you can think of. And if anything is unclear, it’ll simply ask clarifying questions in the next step.
Even if you only give one sentence, UPC can still craft an impressive prompt — especially if you tell it something like “decide for me” (more on that later).
Just remember: input = output, and you’re part of that equation.
The more context you share, the more accurate and personalized the result becomes.
Think of a new colleague you need to guide: if you don’t explain what they need to do, it’s not fair to expect everything to go smoothly, right?
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1) What do you want to achieve?
What do you want the AI to produce or do?
What does success look like right now — and later?
The clearer you are about the outcome, the easier it is for AI to follow the right instructions to get you there.
Try to be as specific as you can. Think in terms of: what you want to end up with, what “good” looks like, and what you want this to enable in the long term.
A vague input:
“I want a prompt to write an engaging blog post about sustainable living practices.”
A clear input:
Output: A detailed, engaging blog post about sustainable living practices
Outcome (now): Increase awareness and encourage readers to adopt 1–2 eco-friendly habits
Outcome (later): Help shift readers toward more sustainable choices over time
That second version almost always leads to a better result.
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2) Audience & Context
Who is the audience/end user, and where will it be used?
Any relevant context (you, your business, the project)?
Any limitations (platform, budget, policies, legal, etc.)?
When AI understands the bigger picture, it can make better decisions and produce outputs that leave less room for mistakes.
Think of it like writing a job listing for AI, so it understands its role within your business or project and has the context it needs to do it well.
Try to be as specific as possible about who your target audience/end user is
Ask yourself: what relevant info does AI need to know about me, my business, or this project — that it logically can’t know on its own?
Which limitations should AI take into account? Platform guidelines, legal stuff, policies to obey, etc.
It’s often logical thinking — but don’t assume AI automatically integrates these things unless you explicitly guide it.
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3) Output preferences
Tone / style – How it should sound
Length / word count – How long it should be
Format / structure – How it should be organized
Must-include points – What it must cover
Anything to avoid – What’s not allowed
This is where most people stay vague… and then wonder why the output is vague.
Think of it like this: AI already knows you want to build a house, for whom, for what purpose, and which limitations to take into account — now you’re giving it your vision of exactly how it should look and feel (and what it definitely shouldn’t).
This is also the part where you decide how much freedom you want to give AI.
Guide it in detail, and the result will be very close to what you pictured. Give less detail, and you can expect more creativity (and more surprises) from AI’s side.
There’s no right or wrong here — just trade-offs.
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4) Inputs (if you have them)
Paste notes, examples, data, or a “good vs bad” sample
This is the final touch.
If you have examples, you can share them with UPC so it has a better picture of how to translate theory into practice.
Extra notes or data can serve as background info too — the more relevant context, the better the result.
One important thing though: this doesn’t mean every detail you paste needs to end up inside the final prompt UPC creates.
You can also tell UPC to refer to additional documents you’ll upload alongside the prompt — instead of stuffing everything into one massive block of text.
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Clarifying questions
Based on your first input, UPC will ask clarifying questions. Here’s why:
So UPC truly understands what you’re aiming for
So you don’t forget important details AI needs
To personalize the results even further
Because we’re humans — we forget things, skip context, or say something in a way that makes perfect sense in our own head… but not to AI.
UPC helps by thinking for you, making sure it still gets what it needs so the final prompt contains everything required for AI to deliver its best work.
It tries to understand your intent, your situation, and what you’re actually trying to achieve before it locks anything in.
And last but not least: the “decide for me” mode.
This is a little trick to save time while still getting powerful instructions added to your prompt — the kind you probably wouldn’t have come up with yourself.
Just say “decide for me”, and UPC will make smart choices based on your first input.
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Copy-paste the final output into your AI tool
After answering the clarifying questions, UPC will automatically craft an expert prompt for you in seconds, including all the “professional ingredients”.
✓ A clear expert role for the AI
✓ A specific task and outcome
✓ Relevant background and constraints
✓ A defined audience and tone
✓ Guidance on what to avoid
✓ A logical, step-by-step structure
The clear instructions most people skip when they ‘just ask ChatGPT.’
Every prompt component — every instruction — is tailored to your goal.
That’s also the big difference with prompt templates:
No UPC prompt will ever be the same, because the instructions are always personalized to what you are trying to achieve.
The only thing you need to do is copy-paste it into your favorite prompt-based AI tool.
That can be ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot, Perplexity — basically any AI tool that works with prompts (image, video, no-code, games, etc.).
Test the same UPC prompts with different AI tools.
Each model has its own strengths and weaknesses — and to make it more interesting, those constantly change, because AI tools evolve faster than we can keep up with.
It’s up to you to figure out which tool works best for your specific use case — and yes, that can differ per use case as well.
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Iterate until you’re satisfied
One of the things people like most about UPC is that first-time results often land surprisingly close to what you had in mind.
That said, tweaking the prompt is easy.
Just go back into the prompt-creation chat and tell UPC what you didn’t like or what you want to improve — for example:
“This is missing an important constraint: it must comply with [policy/platform/legal limitation].”
“The output misunderstood my goal — here’s what I meant: [clarification]. Fix the prompt accordingly.”
“Please change the output format: give me a checklist + a table instead of paragraphs.”
UPC will rewrite the prompt in seconds, ready to copy-paste again.
You can repeat this as many times as you want — until it’s exactly right.
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Final word
Originally, I developed UPC to create powerful prompts for any use case — fast.
But the real eye-opener came when I saw others use UPC in completely different ways and still get powerful results — whether for work, personal projects, or creative ideas.
That’s when I realized:
AI isn’t the magic.
You are.
AI is just the amplifier.
There’s just one catch:
AI is only as powerful as the person driving it.
The difference between “meh” and “holy sh*t” usually comes down to the same thing: the person driving it — the clarity of what they want, and the quality of the context and instructions they provide.
That’s why UPC exists:
to help you drive better, without needing to become a prompt engineer.
Let UPC be the translator that turns your messy thoughts into clear instructions, so AI can actually amplify what you meant.
Whatever’s in your head, go build, go create, go test the weird ideas.
And if UPC helps you get there — better, faster, or both — I’d genuinely love to hear from you.
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