I did not learn prompt engineering from AI.
I learned it from a few places that had nothing to do with AI.
Sentence diagramming in 7th grade. Excel formulas. Data analytics. Ten years of screen sharing with remote teams, trying to explain exactly where to click.
At the time, none of it felt connected. Now it does.
The key is that AI responds better when the words are doing a specific job. Some words make it slow down. Some force structure. Some change the tone. Some keep it grounded in your sources instead of letting it wander.
That is why I think of certain prompt words as behavioral triggers, not just instructions.
Most people are still prompting on hope
They ask AI for something. They get a messy answer. Then they keep rewording until the output feels close enough.
That is not a workflow. That is a slot machine.
I see this becoming a bigger problem for agency teams, because AI is moving into reporting, content, research, client communications, and internal operations. That work is too important to run on hope.
If AI is going to help an agency move faster, the team needs a shared vocabulary for how to steer it. Not fancy prompt tricks. Not giant prompt libraries nobody maintains. Just clear trigger words tied to specific behaviors.
Trigger words tell AI what kind of work to do
The biggest shift for me came when I stopped thinking of prompt words as better wording and started seeing them as behavioral triggers. Certain words make the model do different things.
- "Step-by-step" tells it to slow down and show the path.
- "Deconstruct" tells it to break something apart before answering.
- "JSON" forces the output into a structure you can use programmatically.
- "Table" makes the answer easier to verify.
- "Objective" reduces the agreeable fluff.
- "Citations" pulls the answer back to source material.
- "No preamble" cuts the polite filler.
- "Truth over alignment" gives the model permission to disagree.
That last one matters more than people think. AI is trained to be helpful. Helpful becomes agreeable fast. And agreeable is dangerous when the output is being used to make business decisions.
So prompt engineering is not about magic words. It is about knowing what behavior you are trying to trigger.
Do you need reasoning? Structure? Grounding? A different point of view? A constraint? A format your team can actually use?
The words should match the job.
The lesson came from learning different kinds of language
I learned this from a strange mix: sentence diagramming, Excel formulas, data analytics, and years of teaching remote teams where to click on a screen. Different languages. Same lesson.
Sentence diagramming taught me that word order changes meaning. Excel formulas taught me that format matters. Data analytics taught me that output is only useful if you can validate it. Screen sharing taught me that instructions have to be specific enough for someone else to follow.
AI works the same way. The clearer the instruction, the better the system behaves. For a great deep dive into the stylometric descriptive characteristics AI evaluates please read Christopher Penn's - Almost Timely News: 🗞️ How To Force AI to Write More Like You
Agencies need steering language, not prompt theater
Agency teams do not need 4,000-word prompt templates nobody will maintain. They need a practical way to ask:
- What behavior do we need from AI?
- What format do we need back?
- What source material should it stay grounded in?
- What should it avoid doing?
- Where do we need it to challenge us instead of agreeing?
That is the difference between asking AI to "help" and giving it enough direction to produce something you can actually use.
AI-assisted workflows only work when the human knows how to steer. Human-Led, Data-Informed, AI-Accelerated is not a slogan. It is the operating model. The human sets the direction. The data keeps the work grounded. AI accelerates the path.
Start prompting with intent
So my advice is simple. Stop prompting on hope. Start prompting with intent.
I put the 128 trigger words I actually use into a free tool, organized by the job each one does, with a copy-ready phrase for every one. Find the word that fixes the output you keep fighting, and use it on your next prompt.
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