Asking an AI for "better dialogue" or "a compelling scene" without boundaries produces mediocre, generic results because the system has no actual constraint to optimize against. The more precisely you specify what you want—the emotional register, the structural role, the voice qualities—the more the AI can actually distinguish between good and adequate work.
Think of giving directions. If you say, "Tell me how to get downtown," you'll get a vague answer. If you say, "I'm at Fifth and Main, I have a wheelchair, and I need to get to the library by avoiding hills," you'll get precise directions that actually work. Prompts work the same way.
Vague prompt: "Write a tense scene." Result: Generic tension, surface-level drama. Specific prompt: "Write a scene where my character discovers her best friend has been secretly working with her rival. She has 30 seconds to decide whether to confront her immediately or play along. The setting is a crowded coffee shop, and she needs to hide her reaction." Result: A scene with actual stakes, specific emotional textures, and concrete details.
Specificity has several components. First, context: Who are the characters? What's the situation? What's at stake? Second, constraints: What's the time limit? What can't the character do? What resources do they have? Third, emotional direction: Are you going for shocking, heartbreaking, absurdly funny, or unsettling? Fourth, style preferences: Do you want naturalistic dialogue or more theatrical? Sparse description or rich atmosphere?
Here's what happens with vague prompts: The AI generates something technically competent but generic because it's trying to please everyone and has no information to make specific choices. It defaults to common patterns—a tense scene becomes a confrontation because that's what tense scenes usually are. But your story might need something subtler, or more extreme, or wildly different.
With specific prompts, the AI has guardrails. It knows exactly what box to draw inside of, which makes the output stronger and more usable. You might still need to refine it, but you're refining something directional rather than something generic.
Building a specific prompt takes an extra two minutes. Write down: the character's mindset going into the scene, what they know and don't know, what their goal is, what they're afraid of, what the other character's hidden agenda is, the physical location, any dialogue constraints (formal? casual? poetic?), and the emotional tone you want.
The funny part: Specific prompts actually make it easier for AI to generate good output. It's like the difference between a director saying, "Make it good," versus, "In this shot, the camera stays wide. The actor plays it completely still and controlled. The music is absent. The lighting is clinical." The second direction is so clear the team creates exactly what you need.
Try this: Generate something creative with a one-sentence prompt. Then generate the same thing with a five-sentence prompt that includes character details, stakes, setting, and emotional tone. Compare the outputs. The specific version should be noticeably more tailored to what you actually wanted.
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