The complete system for using AI prompts to cut your workload, make better decisions, and ship faster — without hiring anyone.
Everything you need to use AI prompts like a professional — for your business, your clients, your decisions.
The most common complaint about AI-generated writing isn't that it's wrong. It's that it sounds like every other AI-generated piece of writing — smooth, hollow, and completely indistinguishable from the ten other emails your recipient opened this morning.
The fix isn't to write around AI. It's to teach it how you actually write.
Most people skip this step because they assume it requires complicated setup. It doesn't. Here's the core approach: give the model four or five pieces of writing you've already done — emails, proposals, posts, whatever you have — and ask it to characterize your style before producing anything new. The model will surface patterns you didn't know existed in your own writing. Then it applies them.
Before any writing task, open with a style brief. Three to five sentences that tell the model exactly how you communicate. Include: sentence length tendency, formality level, how you handle transitions, and any recurring structural choices (do you open with the point, or build to it?).
Example: "I write in short declarative sentences. I don't use hedging language — if something's uncertain I'll say so once and move on. I tend to open with the conclusion and follow with reasoning. I don't use business jargon. My tone is direct but not cold."
That's 50 words. It changes the output completely.
If you have an existing piece of writing you're happy with, use it as a reference sample. Paste it in, ask the model to match the style and structure, then give it the new task. This is faster than a style brief and often produces better results — because you're showing rather than describing.
The imitation pass works best when the reference piece and the new task are structurally similar. Matching a client proposal to a previous proposal works well. Matching a cold email to a long-form article doesn't.
Don't rewrite it. Edit it. Three targeted interventions that fix 80% of "sounds AI" problems:
First, delete the opening sentence. AI output almost always starts with throat-clearing — a setup sentence that doesn't add information. Your actual message starts in the second sentence. Cut the first one.
Second, break any sentence longer than 25 words into two. Long compound sentences are a tell. You don't write them in email. Neither should your AI output.
Third, remove the summary. AI loves to end by restating what it just said. Your reader doesn't need that. End on the last real point.
These three edits take two minutes and produce something that reads like you wrote it.
The rest of this lesson — including the full prompt templates and the style-brief worksheet — is in the full course.
This full curriculum — 8 modules, 42 lessons, learning objectives, pricing, and sample lesson — was generated by Curio in under 5 minutes from a single topic prompt. No templates. No manual outlining. Just a subject and a button.
Try it yourself →"I was spending 3–4 hours a week rewriting AI output that didn't sound like me. After module four I cut that to 20 minutes. The style brief approach alone paid for itself in the first week."
"I'd used ChatGPT for months and kept getting generic answers. Turns out I was just prompting wrong. Module one fixed that. Everything after that was just applying it to more problems."
"The operations module alone saved me about 6 hours a week. Meeting prep, follow-ups, process docs — I have templates for all of it now. I'm embarrassed by how long I did this manually."
Eight modules. A system that compounds. One purchase. If you're using AI for work and still getting mediocre results, this is the fix.
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