Instead of telling AI to do something complex in one instruction (and getting muddled results), prompt chaining breaks it into sequential steps—each prompt gets AI's full attention on one piece, hands off to the next—and you save time because you're not explaining context over and over or cleaning up confused hybrid outputs.
Think of prompt chaining like giving someone a recipe where each step automatically triggers the next one. Instead of saying "make the dough," waiting for it, then saying "now roll it out," then waiting again, you just describe the whole flow once and it rolls forward automatically.
Normally, when you ask an AI to do something, you give it one instruction, get one answer, then give it the next instruction separately. Each time, you might have to re-explain what you're working with. This is like context-switching—your brain has to refocus, and you're doing extra work.
Prompt chaining solves this by combining multiple requests into one flow. You tell the AI: "First, extract the main ideas from this article. Then, organize those ideas into categories. Then, write a summary for each category." The AI moves through each step without you having to paste the article three times or re-explain what you're doing.
Here's why this matters for your daily life: you save time, but more importantly, you stay in a single thinking context. You don't task-switch. The AI has all the information from step one available for step two, so the output is usually better and more cohesive. If you had done this manually—extract, pause, organize, pause, summarize—you'd lose the thread.
The practical version: you write one prompt that lists the steps clearly, separated by numbers or bold headers. You give the AI all the input it needs upfront. Then you let it work through the chain. Most modern AI tools can handle 5-10 step chains easily without getting confused.
One thing to watch: very long chains (20+ steps) sometimes lose focus. Stick to 3-7 major steps for best results. And always structure your steps in logical order—you can't summarize before you've read.
Try this: Take an article you've been meaning to process. Write one prompt with three steps: 1) extract key statistics, 2) organize them by category, 3) write a one-paragraph takeaway. Paste the article once, then run the whole chain. Compare how fast this is versus doing each step separately.
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