In Module 3 you built your personal context document. You told the tool who you are, who your clients are, how you write, what you typically need, and what to avoid. And from the moment you loaded it into your platform, every session you open begins with all of that already in place.
That is genuinely powerful. But I want to be precise about what it is doing, because understanding its limits is what makes this module make sense.
Your context document handles everything that is true about you all the time. Your positioning. Your client profile. Your voice. Your standing preferences. It is the permanent foundation.
What it does not handle is the specific task in front of you today. The particular client you are writing for right now. The exact piece of work you need from this session. The precise constraints of this output.
Think of it this way. Your context document is the briefing a new team member reads before their first day: everything they need to know about how you work, who your clients are, and what good looks like in your practice. But that briefing does not tell them what to do on Tuesday afternoon. For that, you give them a task. A specific instruction about a specific piece of work.
That is what a well-constructed prompt does. It takes the permanent foundation your context document has already laid and tells the tool exactly what you need from it right now. The two work together. And once you understand that relationship, the quality of your output improves significantly.