Start Here: Your AI Puppy Is Not Broken
Most bad AI answers are not a technology problem. They are a direction problem.
If AI has been giving you messy answers, random ideas, or content that sounds nothing like you, that does not automatically mean the tool is bad.
Most of the time, it means your AI puppy was sent out into the yard with no leash, no fence, and no clear command.
That is exactly how a lot of people use ChatGPT at first.
They type one broad sentence, hit enter, and hope the answer somehow lands in the right place.
Then they get frustrated when the result sounds generic, too long, too stiff, or completely off track.
Here is the truth.
AI is powerful, but it still needs direction.
It needs to know what you want. It needs to know who it is for. It needs to know what kind of answer would actually help you.
That is why I teach people to think of ChatGPT like an AI puppy.
A puppy is smart. A puppy can learn fast. A puppy can become incredibly helpful.
But if you do not train it well, it will run in circles, chase the wrong thing, and bring back something you never asked for.
So before you blame the tool, look at the prompt.
Did you tell it the outcome you wanted? Did you tell it the format? Did you tell it the tone? Did you tell it what to avoid? Did you give it enough context to work with?
These small details matter more than most people realize.
This week inside AI Puppy Playbook, I am walking through a simple path for fixing that.
On Sunday, your already scheduled How I video, How I built my calm AI path, becomes the anchor for the week. On Tuesday, I am breaking down the three questions that fix a lot of bad answers before they happen. On Thursday, I am going deeper into how to reset and retrain your AI puppy when it starts repeating weak patterns.
If AI has felt confusing, frustrating, or overhyped, stay with me.
You do not need better buzzwords. You need a better way to guide the tool.
That is where the real results start.
CTA: Watch Sunday’s scheduled How I video, How I built my calm AI path, as the starting point for this week’s conversation.


