Prompt chains break complex tasks into sequential steps that feed into each other, so you describe the workflow once and the AI handles each phase automatically. Instead of asking for research, then analysis, then a summary separately, you write one instruction that tells the AI to do all three in order, using each output as the next input.
Imagine you're making a smoothie. You could wash the blender, get the fruit, measure it, blend it, wash the blender again—stopping to get each thing separately. Or you could get everything first, do all the blending at once, then clean up. That's the difference between constant task-switching and what AI calls "prompt chaining."
Prompt chaining is just asking an AI to do multiple related tasks in sequence without you jumping back and forth. Instead of opening ChatGPT five times for five different requests, you give it one set of instructions that flows from one task to the next. The AI does Task A, uses that output for Task B, and so on.
Here's a real example: You need to write a project proposal. That actually involves multiple steps: brainstorm ideas, outline the proposal, write the first draft, review for clarity, suggest edits. Without chaining, you'd do each step separately, lose focus, maybe get distracted. With chaining, you say: "First, brainstorm three angles for this proposal. Then use those to create an outline. Then write a draft using that outline." The AI does it all in one conversation, building on each output.
Why does this matter? Your brain has a limited ability to switch between tasks. Every time you switch, there's a tiny cost—you lose focus, you have to re-explain context, you might forget where you were. Prompt chaining removes those costs. The AI keeps the context alive automatically.
The misconception: People think they need to chain every possible task into one monster prompt. Actually, good chaining is about grouping only the tasks that build on each other. You don't chain "write a proposal" with "pay my electric bill"—those are totally separate. But "brainstorm → outline → draft" makes perfect sense.
Try this: Next time you need to complete something with multiple steps (writing, planning, organizing), try this in one chat: List all the steps, then say "Do step 1, then step 2 using the output from step 1, etc." Notice how much faster you complete the whole thing compared to doing each part separately.
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