Complex tasks overwhelm because your brain has to hold too many pieces at once; prompt chaining breaks this by feeding AI output back as input through a sequence of focused steps, each one simpler than the original problem. You move from "write a research paper" to "outline main points, then expand one section, then add citations," each step feeding naturally into the next.
Prompt chaining is a technique where you give AI one task, use its output as input for the next task, and repeat until you've solved a complex problem. Instead of jumping between different tools or conversations, you create a pipeline where each step feeds into the next.
Here's a real example: You need to prepare for a week of meetings. Rather than asking AI to do everything at once (which gets messy), you chain it: First, ask it to summarize your meeting agendas. Second, ask it to extract action items from those summaries. Third, ask it to organize those actions by priority and deadline. Each response becomes the starting point for the next request.
When you ask AI to do multiple things at once, quality drops. The AI tries to juggle everything and often oversimplifies. Chains force focus—each step is clear and the AI can be thorough. It's the difference between asking someone to 'organize my entire life' versus asking them to 'sort these papers by date, then flag urgent items, then create a filing system.' The second approach yields much better results.
Chains also help you catch errors. If step two goes wrong, you can see it immediately and fix the input before moving to step three. With one giant request, mistakes compound invisibly.
Start with your end goal. Work backward to identify the logical steps. For example: if your goal is 'create a prioritized weekly task list from my emails and calendar,' your chain might be: (1) Extract all deadlines from calendar and emails, (2) List all projects mentioned, (3) Identify dependencies between tasks, (4) Group tasks by day, (5) Assign effort levels, (6) Reorder based on priority and energy.
Write each prompt clearly. Include a note that says 'Use this output for the next step' so you remember to paste the response forward. Most people do this in a document or directly in their AI tool, copying and pasting between prompts.
Advanced tools like Zapier with ChatGPT can automate chains, so the output from one request triggers the next automatically. But even manual chaining saves enormous amounts of context-switching.
Try this: Pick one recurring weekly task (like planning your week). Map out 4-5 logical steps to solve it. Write one prompt for each step, execute them in order, and paste each response into the next prompt. Compare the quality to your normal approach—you'll likely see clearer thinking and fewer missed details.
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