Let's get a real nugget to help people scale and grow their business. Kossum, what's your nugget today before we get into today's show with Tom? So this is my favorite prompt of all time. I use it 500 million times a day. I have the propensity for flowery language. Which stems from deep insecurities. think the person who's best at this in the world right now is Alex Formosy. the more simply you can say something, the better you are at communicating period, which means I'm a horrible communicator because I love to dress it up. so I go to chat GPT and my favorite prompt is two words. It's simplify this. And then I enter the sentence or the paragraph or the diatribe that I just wrote when chat GPT pumps back the response, it's a relief. And it's so helpful and I'll do it with everything, even emails and I'm sending to people. I'm just like, simplify this and it's still what I'm saying. It's my sentiment. Generally speaking, it's actually my verbiage, even the tone and personality that I've injected into the piece. we're simpler. And sometimes, and this is where the pro tip, the nugget within the nugget, Ralph, the meta nugget, if you will, nugget squared, shall we keep going? sometimes I'll take chat GPT's output and I'll do it again and I'll say simplify this or I'll ask can you simplify this further, can you make this simpler, and communicating it and do this with ad copy by the way. Try doing it with ad copy because again, you're supposed to communicate to people on a seventh grade level. So I really like the simplify this prompt and I use it for everything. So is it fair to say that this prompt is best for. bombastic, hyper locutory, magnoliquent individuals such as you, redundant careless, grandiloquent. So maybe I should actually do that just based upon vocabulary here, but it works better for those people who want to sound really smart. You have the tendency to self effacingly have said that this is, part of the issue, but it can work not just for that archetype. It can be just for people that just want to simplify their language. Alex Hormozy does exceedingly well on this YouTube channel, especially. even if you take four sentences, say something that can be said in one. GPT will do that. It'll take a whole paragraph and just be like, boom, one line. so simplification isn't just semantic architecture. It's also overarching narrative, the linguistic structure, like in all this shit that I just said could have been simplified further, obviously, clearly. so that's my nugget. So I have a nugget. That is a deeper inception to that is if there are inside a nugget, if there are certain people on your team who like to write very long things in Slack, you take that over chat GPT and say, If you really want to be bold, you can just repost that as a part of the thread saying, here's a simpler version of what I was working in this office yesterday and my 22 year old was sitting over there on Instagram and a certain someone inside tier 11 came up in my feed with a 17 minute video and Alex just so happened to know this individual, I'm not going to name any names. I was like, man, wouldn't it be great. If I could get that down to what he's saying in 17 minutes, like two minutes, three minutes, like the next extension to this is like a video version of it. give me the TLDR of whatever it is that you're saying. I wonder what happens if you put that 17 minute video into Opus Pro, the thing that we use for all of our shorts and Ralph just consumed this content as shorts, cause it ranks it based off the most impactful ones. It's entirely possible. I would have to export it. That would take a whole lot of time, but Tom, you had some observations about this very subject about how to be precise in your communication. it was actually a research study or paper that was dropped by Salesforce maybe a couple of weeks back where they have developed this prompt that really make sure that you have a condensed, readable. summary of the thing that you want, and it asks ChatGPT to cycle through and see to read through the main article multiple times to see if anything is missed in the summary and if there's flowery language to get rid of it.