AI Field Guide - Workspace path

Build one AI workspace for one job.

After the first useful prompt, the next win is simple: stop starting over. Give AI one repeat job, one rules sheet, one saved checklist, and one proof step before you trust the answer.

Step 1

Random chat is fine once. A workspace is how you reuse it.

A random chat is where most people start. They ask one question, get one answer, close the tab, and forget what worked. That is okay for a test. It is not how you build a habit.

Random chat

One-off questions, missing context, repeated setup, and no saved proof of what actually helped.

AI workspace

One job, saved rules, repeatable steps, and a clear check before anything gets used.

Start with one workspace for one job. Do not build the whole system first.

Step 2

Pick a job that repeats.

The right first workspace is not fancy. It is the task you keep doing again and again. If it repeats, AI can help you make the first draft, checklist, or cleanup faster.

1

Customer replies

Turn messy customer messages into calm first drafts.

2

Weekly notes

Turn scattered notes into tasks, follow-ups, and next steps.

3

Content ideas

Turn one topic into post ideas, talking points, and outlines.

4

Simple research

Collect questions, compare options, and mark what needs checking.

5

Admin cleanup

Turn rough lists into clean checklists a person can follow.

Step 3

Give the bot a rules sheet.

The rules sheet tells AI how to act inside that one job. It is not a magic spell. It is the same thing you would tell a helper before letting them touch customer-facing work.

This chat is for one job: [name the repeat job].

My role:
[who you are]

Audience:
[who the output is for]

Voice:
plain, helpful, direct, and not too salesy

Rules:
- ask one question if important details are missing
- do not invent facts, prices, dates, links, or promises
- keep private details out unless I say they are needed
- mark anything I should verify before using
- give me a short version first unless I ask for more

Good example:
[paste a short example of the kind of output you like]

Bad example:
[paste or describe what you do not want]
Job

One workspace should have one main job so the context stays clean.

Voice

Voice keeps the answer from sounding stiff, fake, or too formal.

Rules

Rules stop the tool from acting like it knows things it does not know.

Examples

Examples teach the style faster than a paragraph of instructions.

Step 4

Turn the rules into a workspace card.

A workspace card is the simple version of an AI system. It tells you what job the workspace does, what goes in, what comes out, and how you check it before using it.

# AI Workspace Card

Workspace name:
[customer reply / weekly notes / content ideas / research cleanup]

One job:
[what this workspace helps with]

Inputs I provide:
[messages, notes, rough draft, question, screenshots described in words]

Output I want:
[email, checklist, table, script, plan, questions]

Rules:
- ask if important details are missing
- keep the answer plain and useful
- do not invent facts, prices, dates, links, or promises
- mark what needs human review

Proof step:
Before I use the answer, list what changed, what was guessed, and what I should verify.
Starter card

Customer reply

Input is the customer message. Output is a calm first draft and one missing-detail question.

Starter card

Weekly notes

Input is messy notes. Output is tasks, follow-ups, owners, and what still needs a decision.

Starter card

Video idea

Input is one rough topic. Output is a hook, three talking points, and a plain-spoken close.

Step 5

Build the workspace like a small workbench.

The workspace is not supposed to feel like a giant software system. It is one clean place for the job, the card, one good example, and the proof log. If those four pieces are present, the next run starts faster.

1

The chat or folder

Name it after the job, not the tool. Example: Video Idea Prep, not ChatGPT stuff.

2

The workspace card

Keep the one job, inputs, output shape, rules, and proof step at the top.

3

One good example

Save one answer that sounded right so the workspace has a target to match.

4

The proof log

Write what changed, what was guessed, and what you checked before using it.

Help me build this AI workspace like a small workbench.

Workspace card:
[paste the card]

Good example I like:
[paste one answer if I have one]

Return:
1. the clean workspace name
2. the exact rules to pin at the top
3. the first prompt I should use inside it
4. the proof log I should keep after each run
5. the one thing I should test on the second run

Keep it beginner-friendly and do not turn this into a giant system.

Step 6

Filled example: Video Idea Prep workspace.

This is the kind of workspace Chance can use for YouTube without sounding fake. The goal is not to let AI make the whole video. The goal is to turn messy research into a clearer hook, talking points, and one thing to explain better.

Workspace name

Video Idea Prep

Use this when a rough idea, transcript note, or saved research file needs to become a plain-spoken video outline.

Inputs

Topic, audience, what Chance already knows, links or notes to verify, and what he wants people to understand.

Output

One hook, three talking points, one simple example, one phrase to avoid, and one proof check.

Voice rules

Plain, direct, curious, no fake guru tone, no made-up numbers, and no pretending to understand a source that was not provided.

# Filled Workspace Card - Video Idea Prep

One job:
Turn messy AI research or YouTube notes into a video outline Chance can actually talk through.

Inputs I bring:
- rough topic
- notes or transcript chunks
- what I think it means
- who I am trying to help
- anything that needs verification

Output I want:
1. simple hook
2. three plain talking points
3. one real-life example or analogy
4. what I should not claim yet
5. one proof check before recording

Rules:
- do not make me sound smarter than the facts support
- do not invent what a video, tool, person, or company said
- explain acronyms in normal language
- keep the words close to how I would say them
- mark what I should verify before I teach it

Proof step:
Tell me what came from my notes, what you inferred, and what I still need to confirm.

Step 7

Run it twice before you call it a real workspace.

A workspace is not proven because it worked once. Run a similar second task through it. If the second run is faster and safer, the workspace is worth keeping. If not, tighten the job.

Run 1

Get the first useful draft.

Use a real task with private details removed. Save the answer only if it actually helps.

Fix

Tighten the rules.

Add the missing voice rule, proof check, example, or do-not-invent line you needed.

Run 2

Try a similar task.

If it saves setup time on the second run, keep the workspace and use it again next week.

Review this workspace after the second run.

Workspace name:
[name]

Run 1 result:
[what worked / what failed]

Run 2 result:
[what worked / what failed]

Tell me:
1. what rule I should add
2. what example I should save
3. what proof check is missing
4. whether this workspace is worth keeping
5. how to make the job smaller if it is still messy

Step 8

Save the steps, not just the prompt.

A saved prompt is good. A saved workflow is better. Write down what you paste, what you ask for, what you check, and what you do with the answer.

Input

What messy material do you give it?

Prompt

What do you ask it to make?

Follow-up

What short fix usually makes it usable?

Check

What facts or promises must you verify?

Workspace checklist:
1. Paste the non-private notes.
2. Ask for the output shape I need.
3. Ask for a shorter or clearer version.
4. Check facts, dates, prices, names, and promises.
5. Save the version that worked.
6. Write down what I changed before using it.

Step 9

Let the helper work inside boundaries.

AI can help more when it has context, but context does not mean dumping everything into the chat. Give enough to do the job and keep anything sensitive out unless you have a real reason.

Safe boundaries

  • Use summaries instead of full private records.
  • Remove customer names when the name does not matter.
  • Keep passwords, payment details, and account access out.
  • Ask for drafts, checklists, and questions first.

Slow down when...

  • The answer will go to a customer.
  • The work involves money, refunds, guarantees, or contracts.
  • The topic is legal, medical, tax, or compliance related.
  • The tool suggests publishing or sending without review.

Step 10

Require proof before trust.

Do not just ask, "Is this good?" Ask the tool to show what it used, what it changed, what it guessed, and what a human should check. That is how beginners stay in control.

Green light

The answer is useful, plain, checked, and still leaves the final call with you.

Red light

The answer invents details, skips verification, or sounds ready to send before you approve it.

Step 11

Run one small rhythm each week.

A workspace becomes valuable when it gets used again. Keep the rhythm simple enough that a beginner can do it without feeling like they joined a complicated software class.

Bring

Bring one real job, not a vague idea.

Build

Use the card and rules sheet to get the draft.

Prove

Ask what changed, what was guessed, and what needs review.

Post

Share the card, result, and one question in the Classroom.

Save

Keep the better version so next week starts faster.

Weekly workspace check-in

Workspace I used:

Real job I brought:

What AI helped with:

What I verified:

What I changed before using it:

One rule/example I saved for next time:

My question for the Classroom:

Plain rule

Keep one job you can check. If the workspace does not save time on the second use, make the job smaller and tighten the rules.

Step 12

Use this as the bridge into the Classroom.

The Field Guide gets the first useful answer. The AI Workspace chapter turns that answer into a repeatable habit. The Classroom is where that habit can get weekly structure once Chance opens the join path.

Join link coming soon. Purchase path is not connected yet.