Skip to content
TrainingSites
  • Campus
  • Courses
  • Tutorials
  • Study Halls
Login/Join Account
Shop
TrainingSites

Anthropic/Claude Tools

1
  • How To Prompt A New Skill For Claude

Phase 3: Scale & Automate Your Campus

4
  • YouTube Newsletter Notification App AI Business Uses
  • Rethinking a education business in the ai age.
  • FRAMEWORK: T.A.C. – Teach, Apply, Coach
  • 100 Vibe Coding Ideas For Online Course Creators

Phase 2: Launch Your First Cohort

10
  • VIBE Course Creation Prompt
  • Real Life Situations and Scenarios
  • Perplexity Research Course Finished Response
  • Generic Master Course Prompt
  • DeepResearch Course Finished Report
  • Deep Research Course Task Request
  • Create Authentic Course Content
  • Create A Course With 3 Prompts
  • Course Research and Braining Storming Prompts
  • Convert Transcripts Into Course Content ChatGPT o1

Teaching Online with AI — FAQ

100
  • Will AI lower the price that people are willing to pay for online courses?
  • Will AI eventually replace online educators and course creators?
  • Why would someone join a live community when they can just ask ChatGPT?
  • Why would I use AI for research when I can just Google something?
  • Why use AI for email writing when I already have a template folder?
  • Why does AI sometimes say things that sound real but are completely made up?
  • Why does AI sometimes give confident but completely wrong answers?
  • Why do some AI answers feel so human while others feel obviously robotic?
  • Why do educators need to understand how AI works even if they only use it as a tool?
  • Why do different AI tools give different answers to the same question?
  • Why do AI tools keep improving so quickly compared to other software?
  • When should I use Google instead of asking an AI tool?
  • When is it faster to use a traditional tool versus going to AI?
  • What’s the best time of day or workflow moment to start practicing with AI?
  • What types of online courses are most at risk of being replaced by AI?
  • What skills will still be valuable for educators to have in five years given AI?
  • What should I tell my students when they ask me what AI is?
  • What should I not use AI for when I’m just starting out?
  • What should I actually try doing with AI in my first week to get comfortable?
  • What makes AI more useful than a pre-made template library?
  • What is the simplest task I can use AI for right now without any training?
  • What is the one thing about AI that most non-technical educators fundamentally misunderstand?
  • What is the main workflow difference between using AI and using traditional research tools?
  • What is the main advantage of AI over a YouTube tutorial for learning something new?
  • What is the fastest win I can get from AI in my teaching business this week?
  • What is the difference between the web interface for AI and the mobile app?
  • What is the difference between AI and machine learning and automation?
  • What is the case for investing in a community-based teaching model over solo courses?
  • What is the biggest threat AI poses to the online education industry?
  • What is the biggest mistake beginners make in their first week using AI?
  • What is the best AI tool to start with as a complete beginner?
  • What is one thing AI does that no other tool I currently use can match?
  • What is AI in simple terms for someone who isn’t tech-savvy?
  • What is a realistic expectation for what AI can do for me in my first month?
  • What is a prompt and why does wording it carefully matter?
  • What happens if I ask AI a really dumb question — will it judge me?
  • What evidence is there that human educators are thriving even as AI gets better?
  • What does transformation require that AI cannot provide?
  • What does it mean when people say AI was trained on data?
  • What does it mean when an AI has a knowledge cutoff date?
  • What does it mean that AI is a probabilistic tool rather than a deterministic one?
  • What does AI do better than Grammarly for editing my writing?
  • What does a large language model actually do when I type a question into it?
  • What do my students want from me that AI cannot give them?
  • What do human educators offer that AI genuinely cannot replicate?
  • What can AI do that Word and Google Docs can’t?
  • Should I write my prompts like a search query or like a sentence to a person?
  • Should I stop using Google now that AI tools exist?
  • Should I start with the free version of an AI tool or pay for the premium tier?
  • Should I replace my current tools with AI or add AI on top of them?
  • Should I be taking notes on what works and what doesn’t as I experiment with AI?
  • Should I be adding AI features to my course or avoiding them entirely?
  • Is using AI for lesson planning any better than using a Word document outline?
  • Is there a safe way to test AI on real course content without publishing anything?
  • Is there a risk that AI will start giving me personalized answers based on my history?
  • Is the AI I’m using storing my conversations and learning from them?
  • Is personal coaching still worth paying for when AI can give advice instantly?
  • Is live facilitation more or less valuable now that AI exists?
  • Is it naive to build a teaching business right now when AI is advancing so fast?
  • Is fear of AI replacement something I should discuss openly with my students?
  • Is ChatGPT the same thing as AI, or just one type of AI?
  • Is AI just a smarter version of the spellcheck I already use?
  • Is AI better at summarizing documents than reading them myself?
  • If AI can answer any question instantly, why would anyone pay to learn from me?
  • How will I know when I’ve moved from beginner to actually comfortable with AI?
  • How much does AI actually understand context from earlier in a conversation?
  • How long does it typically take to feel comfortable using AI as an educator?
  • How is talking to AI different from searching a forum for answers?
  • How is ChatGPT different from just doing a Google search?
  • How is AI writing different from just using a content template?
  • How is AI different from a search engine like Google?
  • How does human accountability differ from AI-generated feedback?
  • How does an AI chatbot compare to a knowledge base or FAQ system?
  • How does AI handle tasks like scheduling or organizing compared to tools I already have?
  • How does AI handle real-time information compared to tools I already use?
  • How does AI compare to Canva for creating educational visuals?
  • How do I use AI in my teaching in a way that makes my students value me more, not less?
  • How do I talk to potential students about AI without undermining my own value?
  • How do I stay relevant as an educator when my subject matter keeps changing because of AI?
  • How do I sign up for ChatGPT or Claude without doing something wrong?
  • How do I save or organize the AI responses that are actually useful?
  • How do I reframe my value as a teacher in a world where AI knows everything?
  • How do I practice using AI without it interfering with my actual work?
  • How do I know if I am using AI effectively or just wasting time with it?
  • How do I figure out whether the AI output is good enough to use or needs editing?
  • How do I explain to my students or colleagues that I’m starting to use AI?
  • How do I decide which existing tools to keep and which ones AI can replace?
  • How do I build on what AI gives me instead of just accepting whatever it says?
  • How do I avoid the trap of using AI for everything once I discover how powerful it is?
  • How do companies like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic make money from AI?
  • How confident should I be that an AI answer is accurate before I use it in my teaching?
  • How can I compete with free AI tools that seem to know everything?
  • How are other educators dealing with the anxiety around AI replacing their work?
  • Does AI actually understand what I’m asking, or is it just pattern matching?
  • Can I break something or cause a problem by experimenting with AI?
  • Can AI think for itself, or does it only repeat things it has seen before?
  • Can AI replace the relationship between a mentor and a student?
  • Can AI replace the note-taking apps I already rely on?
  • Can AI make decisions on its own, or does it always need a human prompt?
  • Can AI do things that my existing course platform tools can’t do?

Campus Setup

1
  • How to Set Up Your First Study Hall

OpenAI/ChatGPT Tools

3
  • OpenAI ChatGPT Atlas Browser Hacks For YouTube
  • How Edupreneurs and Small Business Can Compete With Apps In ChatGPT
  • How ChatGPT and Apps In ChatGPT Will Change Learning

AI Automation & Workflows

8
  • FRAMEWORK: (SPARK) Turn Video Courses Into Mini-Apps
  • FRAMEWORK: (SOWHAT) How To Weed Out AI Tools
  • Claude MCP Integration with TrainingSites
  • Claude Connectors – MCP for regular people!
  • ChatGPT Tasks – AI Agents That Create Content From Your YouTube Videos
  • AI Engine ChatBot Prompt
  • AI Agents Task Lists
  • 100 Concrete AI Agent Ideas for Course Creators & Educators

Getting Started

2
  • Dashboard Quickstart
  • CAMPUS TOUR

Phase 1: Build Your Community Library

3
  • TS YouTube Title and Thumbnail Formula
  • TrainingSites Client Questions
  • TrainingSites Brand Details

Case Studies & Examples

7
  • Pickleball APP Onboarding
  • MyPickleball Friends Keywords
  • My Pickleball Friends Basics
  • MPF Topical Authority Map
  • MPF Facebook Intro Snippets
  • Marketing Strategy
  • Marketing Email & Copy

Campus Technical Setup

57
  • Your Campus Communication Dashboard: FluentCRM Overview
  • Understanding Individual Campus Member Profiles
  • Understanding Campus Member Messages in TrainingSites
  • Understanding Activity Feeds: The Heart of Your Study Hall
  • TutorLMS Integration – Connecting Campus Communications with TutorLMS
  • TrainingSites Campus Global Settings Overview
  • Teaching Study Hall Privacy: Public, Private, and Secret Settings
  • Teaching Study Hall Member Management: Roles, Invitations, and Access Control
  • Teaching Members to Join Learning Paths: Participation Management
  • Study Hall Post Sorting Options: Helping Members Find What Matters
  • Study Hall Navigation Links: Organizing Your Campus Experience
  • Study Hall Membership Invitations: Growing Your Community Strategically
  • Study Hall Document Library: Organizing and Sharing Resources
  • Setting Up Your First Campus Communication (Bulk Message Campaign)
  • Providing Downloadable Resources in Lessons: File Management
  • Primary Workflow Triggers for Campus Automation
  • Personalizing Campus Messages with Smart Codes
  • Personalizing Campus Communications with Merge Tags
  • Managing Your Campus Members: The Contacts Dashboard
  • Managing Your Campus Member Database
  • LMS Triggers for Student Journey Workflows
  • LMS Actions for Course Automation
  • LifterLMS Integration – Connecting Campus Communications with LifterLMS
  • Learning Path Privacy Settings: Teaching Members Access Control
  • LearnDash Integration – Connecting Campus Communications with LearnDash
  • Introduction to Student Journey Workflows
  • Introduction to Campus Automation: Teaching That Happens While You Sleep
  • Import Campus Members into Your TrainingSites Campus
  • How to Set Up a Study Hall for Your Campus Members
  • How to Segment Your Campus Members with Lists, Tags, and Dynamic Segments
  • How to Install and Activate FluentCRM for Your Campus
  • How to Add and Manage Campus Members in FluentCRM
  • Handling Comments and Reactions: Building Conversations in Study Halls
  • Guide Your Members: How to Set Up Their First Study Hall
  • Editing and Deleting Study Halls: A Complete Management Guide
  • Creating Student Journey Workflows and Using the Editor
  • Creating Reusable Message Templates for Your Campus
  • Creating Knowledge Assessments: Teaching Members to Build Quizzes
  • Creating Custom Member Data Fields in Your Campus
  • Creating Campus Enrollment Forms with Fluent Forms
  • Creating and Managing Posts: The Foundation of Study Hall Engagement
  • Creating and Managing Polls: Drive Quick Engagement in Study Halls
  • Creating and Managing Learning Paths in Your Campus
  • Composing Campus Member Messages in TrainingSites
  • Campus Member Statuses – Managing Active and Inactive Members
  • Campus Member Segments – General & Dynamic Targeting
  • Campus Communication Templates – Reusable Message Designs
  • Campus Communication Campaigns – Broadcasting to Members
  • Campus Communication Actions in Student Journey Workflows
  • Campus Automation Triggers: When Your Teaching Automations Start
  • Building and Editing Campus Automations
  • Advanced Member Filtering: Finding Exactly the Right Students
  • Advanced Filter – Finding Specific Campus Members
  • Adding Resource Links to Learning Paths: Navigation Enhancement
  • Adding Custom Links to Study Halls: Connect External Resources
  • Activity Feed Views: Teaching Members to Navigate and Engage
  • Abandoned Cart Recovery for Course Sales

Content Creation & Marketing

4
  • YouTube Thumbnail Strategies
  • YouTube Shorts Basics
  • Text For Video Titles and Scripts
  • Default YouTube Settings

Prompt Library & Frameworks

53
  • 🧠 Prompt Like a Boss: Expanded Vocal Prompting Cheat Sheet
  • YouTube Video Template
  • YouTube Transcript Formatter – To Support Video
  • YouTube Transcript Formatter
  • YouTube Title and Thumbnail Special Instructions
  • TEACH Framework: With Examples
  • TEACH Framework: Basics
  • Social Media Creation Prompts
  • Sales Page Prompt Generator for Free Member Offers
  • Sales Copy Prompts
  • Prompts To Create Your Personal Teaching Style and Video Profile
  • Prompts To Create Your Default Context Profile
  • Perfect Course Audience Prompt
  • OpenAI Image Generation Tips
  • My Course Syllabus Prompting System
  • Mini-Course Transcript Converter
  • Master Lesson Text Prompt
  • How To Use A Prompt that Creates The Best Prompt
  • Glasp.co YouTube Summary Prompts
  • Getting Started Intro Lesson Text Prompts
  • Generic YouTube Prompts
  • General Prompts
  • General Blogging Prompts
  • Gemini 2.5 Pro Title & Text Generator – Market Specific
  • GEAR Prompt Template Library
  • GEAR Phrases
  • GEAR Framework with ACR Integration
  • GEAR Framework Checklist
  • GEAR Framework Applications for Side Hustle Tasks
  • From Youtube Videos
  • FRAME: Turn ANY Topic Into A Framework
  • Create A MindMap File Prompt
  • Course Research to MindMap Prompts
  • Converty Competitors Youtube Videos Into MindMaps
  • Convert YouTube to Blog
  • Conversational Clean Up Prompts
  • Conversational AI Use Cases
  • Content or Topic Authority Map
  • Community Building Prompts
  • Client Profile Prompts
  • ChatGPT Prompt Styles: Definitions and Examples
  • AI Prompts For Youtube and Course Videos
  • AI Prompts – Getting Started
  • AI Powered Self Assessments – Gemini
  • AI Powered Self Assessments – Claude
  • AI Powered Self Assessments – ChatGPT
  • 5 Weird Conversational Prompts To Use
  • 5 AI Prompts for Simplifying Course Content
  • 20 Prompts To Create Content For YouTube Videos
  • 20 Online Course Creation Prompts with Simple and Complex Examples
  • 15 Advanced Business Conversations
  • 10 Ways To Use Gemini 2.5 Pro with Multimodal Inputs
  • 10 General Purpose Marketing Task Prompts

S1: Getting Started with AI as an Educator

100
  • Will AI lower the price that people are willing to pay for online courses?
  • Will AI eventually replace online educators and course creators?
  • Why would someone join a live community when they can just ask ChatGPT?
  • Why would I use AI for research when I can just Google something?
  • Why use AI for email writing when I already have a template folder?
  • Why does AI sometimes say things that sound real but are completely made up?
  • Why does AI sometimes give confident but completely wrong answers?
  • Why do some AI answers feel so human while others feel obviously robotic?
  • Why do educators need to understand how AI works even if they only use it as a tool?
  • Why do different AI tools give different answers to the same question?
  • Why do AI tools keep improving so quickly compared to other software?
  • When should I use Google instead of asking an AI tool?
  • When is it faster to use a traditional tool versus going to AI?
  • What’s the best time of day or workflow moment to start practicing with AI?
  • What types of online courses are most at risk of being replaced by AI?
  • What skills will still be valuable for educators to have in five years given AI?
  • What should I tell my students when they ask me what AI is?
  • What should I not use AI for when I’m just starting out?
  • What should I actually try doing with AI in my first week to get comfortable?
  • What makes AI more useful than a pre-made template library?
  • What is the simplest task I can use AI for right now without any training?
  • What is the one thing about AI that most non-technical educators fundamentally misunderstand?
  • What is the main workflow difference between using AI and using traditional research tools?
  • What is the main advantage of AI over a YouTube tutorial for learning something new?
  • What is the fastest win I can get from AI in my teaching business this week?
  • What is the difference between the web interface for AI and the mobile app?
  • What is the difference between AI and machine learning and automation?
  • What is the case for investing in a community-based teaching model over solo courses?
  • What is the biggest threat AI poses to the online education industry?
  • What is the biggest mistake beginners make in their first week using AI?
  • What is the best AI tool to start with as a complete beginner?
  • What is one thing AI does that no other tool I currently use can match?
  • What is AI in simple terms for someone who isn’t tech-savvy?
  • What is a realistic expectation for what AI can do for me in my first month?
  • What is a prompt and why does wording it carefully matter?
  • What happens if I ask AI a really dumb question — will it judge me?
  • What evidence is there that human educators are thriving even as AI gets better?
  • What does transformation require that AI cannot provide?
  • What does it mean when people say AI was trained on data?
  • What does it mean when an AI has a knowledge cutoff date?
  • What does it mean that AI is a probabilistic tool rather than a deterministic one?
  • What does AI do better than Grammarly for editing my writing?
  • What does a large language model actually do when I type a question into it?
  • What do my students want from me that AI cannot give them?
  • What do human educators offer that AI genuinely cannot replicate?
  • What can AI do that Word and Google Docs can’t?
  • Should I write my prompts like a search query or like a sentence to a person?
  • Should I stop using Google now that AI tools exist?
  • Should I start with the free version of an AI tool or pay for the premium tier?
  • Should I replace my current tools with AI or add AI on top of them?
  • Should I be taking notes on what works and what doesn’t as I experiment with AI?
  • Should I be adding AI features to my course or avoiding them entirely?
  • Is using AI for lesson planning any better than using a Word document outline?
  • Is there a safe way to test AI on real course content without publishing anything?
  • Is there a risk that AI will start giving me personalized answers based on my history?
  • Is the AI I’m using storing my conversations and learning from them?
  • Is personal coaching still worth paying for when AI can give advice instantly?
  • Is live facilitation more or less valuable now that AI exists?
  • Is it naive to build a teaching business right now when AI is advancing so fast?
  • Is fear of AI replacement something I should discuss openly with my students?
  • Is ChatGPT the same thing as AI, or just one type of AI?
  • Is AI just a smarter version of the spellcheck I already use?
  • Is AI better at summarizing documents than reading them myself?
  • If AI can answer any question instantly, why would anyone pay to learn from me?
  • How will I know when I’ve moved from beginner to actually comfortable with AI?
  • How much does AI actually understand context from earlier in a conversation?
  • How long does it typically take to feel comfortable using AI as an educator?
  • How is talking to AI different from searching a forum for answers?
  • How is ChatGPT different from just doing a Google search?
  • How is AI writing different from just using a content template?
  • How is AI different from a search engine like Google?
  • How does human accountability differ from AI-generated feedback?
  • How does an AI chatbot compare to a knowledge base or FAQ system?
  • How does AI handle tasks like scheduling or organizing compared to tools I already have?
  • How does AI handle real-time information compared to tools I already use?
  • How does AI compare to Canva for creating educational visuals?
  • How do I use AI in my teaching in a way that makes my students value me more, not less?
  • How do I talk to potential students about AI without undermining my own value?
  • How do I stay relevant as an educator when my subject matter keeps changing because of AI?
  • How do I sign up for ChatGPT or Claude without doing something wrong?
  • How do I save or organize the AI responses that are actually useful?
  • How do I reframe my value as a teacher in a world where AI knows everything?
  • How do I practice using AI without it interfering with my actual work?
  • How do I know if I am using AI effectively or just wasting time with it?
  • How do I figure out whether the AI output is good enough to use or needs editing?
  • How do I explain to my students or colleagues that I’m starting to use AI?
  • How do I decide which existing tools to keep and which ones AI can replace?
  • How do I build on what AI gives me instead of just accepting whatever it says?
  • How do I avoid the trap of using AI for everything once I discover how powerful it is?
  • How do companies like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic make money from AI?
  • How confident should I be that an AI answer is accurate before I use it in my teaching?
  • How can I compete with free AI tools that seem to know everything?
  • How are other educators dealing with the anxiety around AI replacing their work?
  • Does AI actually understand what I’m asking, or is it just pattern matching?
  • Can I break something or cause a problem by experimenting with AI?
  • Can AI think for itself, or does it only repeat things it has seen before?
  • Can AI replace the relationship between a mentor and a student?
  • Can AI replace the note-taking apps I already rely on?
  • Can AI make decisions on its own, or does it always need a human prompt?
  • Can AI do things that my existing course platform tools can’t do?
View Categories
  • Home
  • Document Library
  • Prompt Library & Frameworks
  • 15 Advanced Business Conversations

15 Advanced Business Conversations

James Maduk
Updated on June 19, 2025

Conversation 1: “Help Me Figure This Out”

How You’d Actually Say It:

“Hey, I’m thinking about starting an online course business, but honestly, I’m not sure if it’s a good idea. I know [your topic] really well, but there seem to be a lot of people already teaching this stuff. Can we just talk through whether this makes sense? I don’t want to waste six months building something nobody wants.”

Why This Works:

  • Natural, conversational tone
  • Admits uncertainty (which gets better advice)
  • Asks for help thinking, not doing
  • Shows you value your time

The Kind of Response You’ll Get:

Strategic discussion about market validation, positioning, and realistic assessment of your situation.


Conversation 2: “I’m Stuck on Something”

How You’d Actually Say It:

“I’ve been going back and forth on this and I can’t figure it out. Should I start with a course, or should I do coaching first? I keep reading different advice and I’m getting paralyzed. My situation is [describe your reality]. What would you do if you were me? And can you help me think through the pros and cons?”

Why This Works:

  • Acknowledges you’re overthinking
  • Asks for personalized advice
  • Invites a back-and-forth discussion
  • Shows you want guidance, not just information

Conversation 3: “Challenge My Thinking”

How You’d Actually Say It:

“I’ve been planning this course about [topic] for [audience], and I’m pretty excited about it. But before I dive in, can you poke some holes in this idea? What am I not seeing? What could go wrong? I’d rather you tell me the hard truths now than discover them after I’ve built everything.”

Why This Works:

  • Invites honest feedback
  • Shows you’re open to being wrong
  • Prevents costly mistakes
  • Gets strategic input, not validation

Conversation 4: “Walk Me Through This”

How You’d Actually Say It:

“I want to understand something better. Let’s say I do decide to create this course – what should the student experience actually look like? I mean, from the moment they first hear about me until they’re getting results. Can we map that out together? I want to make sure I’m thinking about this holistically.”

Why This Works:

  • Asks for collaborative thinking
  • Shows big-picture awareness
  • Invites step-by-step discussion
  • Focuses on student success

Conversation 5: “Give Me Your Honest Opinion”

How You’d Actually Say It:

“Okay, I need some straight talk. I’ve been creating content for [time period] and I have [audience size], but I’m not making the money I want. Looking at my situation honestly, what do you think the real problem is? Am I focusing on the wrong things? Be direct with me – what would you change if this was your business?”

Why This Works:

  • Asks for honest assessment
  • Shows willingness to face reality
  • Invites constructive criticism
  • Focuses on solutions

Conversation 6: “Reality Check My Numbers”

“I need someone to sanity-check my business projections. I’m thinking I can get to $10K/month within 6 months by selling a $500 course. Based on typical conversion rates and the fact that I currently have [your audience size] followers with [engagement level], does this seem realistic or am I being overly optimistic? Break down what would actually need to happen for me to hit that number.”

Why This Works:

  • Provides specific metrics for analysis
  • Asks for industry benchmarks, not just opinion
  • Invites reality-based pushback on optimistic projections
  • Forces you to understand the actual math behind your goals

Conversation 7: “Help Me Spot My Blind Spots”

“I’ve been in my industry for [X years] and sometimes I think I know what people need, but maybe I’m too close to it. Can you help me identify assumptions I might be making about my audience that could be wrong? What questions should I be asking my potential customers that I probably haven’t thought of? I want to make sure I’m not building something based on my own biases.”

Why This Works:

  • Acknowledges expertise can create blind spots
  • Asks for uncomfortable truths, not validation
  • Shows self-awareness about potential biases
  • Gets outside perspective on insider assumptions

Conversation 8: “Positioning Dilemma”

“I’m stuck between two different positioning strategies and I can’t decide. Option A is [describe approach] which feels safer but maybe more crowded. Option B is [describe approach] which feels riskier but more unique. Given what you know about market positioning and my situation, how would you think through this decision? What factors should I be weighing most heavily?”

Why This Works:

  • Presents real strategic choices with trade-offs
  • Asks for decision-making framework, not just answers
  • Shows understanding that positioning involves risk assessment
  • Invites systematic thinking about complex choices

Conversation 9: “Scale vs Quality Trade-offs”

“I’m at a crossroads. I can keep doing what I’m doing and maintain high quality but limited reach, or I can systematize and scale but I’m worried about losing the personal touch that makes my students successful. How do other successful education businesses handle this transition? What would you prioritize if you were trying to grow without sacrificing results?”

Why This Works:

  • Addresses real growth dilemma all successful educators face
  • Asks for industry examples and proven approaches
  • Shows you understand that scaling involves sacrifices
  • Seeks strategic prioritization, not just growth tactics

Conversation 10: “Pricing Psychology Discussion”

“I’m struggling with pricing strategy and I think it’s more psychological than logical. I know my course delivers value, but I feel weird charging premium prices. At the same time, I don’t want to undervalue what I offer. Can we talk through the psychology of this? How do I get comfortable with charging what I’m worth while still feeling good about serving my audience?”

Why This Works:

  • Admits psychological barriers, not just logical ones
  • Asks for help with internal conflict, not just external strategy
  • Shows awareness that pricing is emotional, not just mathematical
  • Seeks mindset shifts along with tactical advice

Conversation 11: “Competitive Moves”

“Someone just launched a course that’s very similar to what I was planning. It’s got me second-guessing everything. Should I pivot, double down on what makes me different, or wait to see how their launch goes? How do you think about competitive moves in education businesses? What would be the smartest strategic response here?”

Why This Works:

  • Presents real-time competitive pressure scenario
  • Asks for strategic thinking, not emotional reassurance
  • Shows understanding that competition requires strategic response
  • Seeks principled approach to competitive decisions

Conversation 12: “Customer Success Optimization”

“My course completion rates are around [X%], which I think is typical, but I want to do better. Let’s think strategically about this – what are the real reasons people don’t finish courses, and how could I redesign my approach to address those issues? I’d rather have fewer students who get amazing results than more students who don’t finish.”

Why This Works:

  • Focuses on student outcomes over revenue metrics
  • Asks for root cause analysis, not quick fixes
  • Shows willingness to sacrifice quantity for quality
  • Invites systematic problem-solving approach

Conversation 13: “Business Model Evolution”

“I started with courses, but I’m wondering if I should add coaching, consulting, or maybe even a certification program. How do I think about evolving my business model without getting distracted or overcomplicating things? What would be the most logical next step given my current success and resources?”

Why This Works:

  • Shows growth mindset while acknowledging complexity risks
  • Asks for systematic expansion approach
  • Seeks logic-based decisions, not opportunity-chasing
  • Invites resource-aware strategic planning

Conversation 14: “Authority Building Strategy”

“I want to be known as THE expert in [your niche], not just another course creator. Beyond just creating good content, what would a strategic authority-building plan look like? How do the people who become recognized thought leaders actually make that happen? What would you focus on if establishing authority was the primary goal?”

Why This Works:

  • Sets ambitious but specific positioning goal
  • Asks for systematic approach beyond content creation
  • Seeks understanding of actual thought leadership strategies
  • Invites long-term strategic thinking

Conversation 15: “Exit Strategy Thinking”

“This might sound premature, but I want to build this business in a way that could eventually run without me or be valuable to someone else. How should that thinking influence the decisions I’m making now about systems, branding, and business model? What makes an education business sellable versus just a personal brand job?”

Why This Works:

  • Shows sophisticated business building mindset
  • Asks how future goals should influence current decisions
  • Seeks understanding of business value creation
  • Invites systems thinking over personal brand dependency

What Makes These “Advanced”:

  • Strategic complexity – Multiple variables to consider
  • Business sophistication – Real growth challenges
  • Psychological depth – Internal barriers and mindset issues
  • Long-term thinking – Beyond just immediate tactics
  • Competitive awareness – Market dynamics and positioning
  • Systems thinking – How decisions interconnect
chatgpt, claude-ai, gemini, intermediate, Prompt, prompts
20 Online Course Creation Prompts with Simple and Complex Examples10 Ways To Use Gemini 2.5 Pro with Multimodal Inputs
Table of Contents
  • Conversation 1: "Help Me Figure This Out"
    • How You'd Actually Say It:
    • Why This Works:
    • The Kind of Response You'll Get:
  • Conversation 2: "I'm Stuck on Something"
    • How You'd Actually Say It:
    • Why This Works:
  • Conversation 3: "Challenge My Thinking"
    • How You'd Actually Say It:
    • Why This Works:
  • Conversation 4: "Walk Me Through This"
    • How You'd Actually Say It:
    • Why This Works:
  • Conversation 5: "Give Me Your Honest Opinion"
    • How You'd Actually Say It:
    • Why This Works:
    • Conversation 6: "Reality Check My Numbers"
    • Conversation 7: "Help Me Spot My Blind Spots"
    • Conversation 8: "Positioning Dilemma"
    • Conversation 9: "Scale vs Quality Trade-offs"
    • Conversation 10: "Pricing Psychology Discussion"
    • Conversation 11: "Competitive Moves"
    • Conversation 12: "Customer Success Optimization"
    • Conversation 13: "Business Model Evolution"
    • Conversation 14: "Authority Building Strategy"
    • Conversation 15: "Exit Strategy Thinking"
  • What Makes These "Advanced":

Share This Article :

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest

Was it helpful ?

  • Happy
  • Normal
  • Sad

Done For You Services

  • Training Sites
  • Online Courses
  • Email Marketing
  • Social Media Marketing

Resources

  • Done For You Service
  • Tools To Use
  • Documents/Downloads
  • Affiliates/Partners

Get Help

  • Support
  • Tickets
  • Billing
  • Book A Call
YouTube Linkedin Facebook Group Facebook Instagram X Email

© 2026 TrainingSites

  • Shop
  • Terms
  • Earnings
  • Contact Me
  • FAQ
  • Campus
  • Courses
  • Tutorials
  • Study Halls

WPGrow