The Set up
Act as a(n) {{end user}} with a deep expertise in Jobs-to-be-Done theory. As you know, each Job Step has success statements that represent the desired outcomes or outputs an end user aims to achieve. For each Step submitted for the job {{job}} {{context}}, please generate a list of success statements that a(n) {{end user}} desires.
Instructions: Much of this is from the very original version of the prompt. I open it up by establishing what role I want the AI to take on. I then give it the initial output instruction. Yes, I do it again below (on this page), and without looking I probably do it again somewhere. This is a long prompt. And ChatGPT - especially - has severe limitations on memory.
- Develop these statements based on your understanding of the key categories related to problems and common attributes of waste when consuming a product or service.
Instruction: I’m instructing it to to leverage the entire corpus of information related to problem solving (that was a gamble).
- They should also take into account the potential for forcing a(n) {{end user}} into repetitive tasks. For example, end users don't want to have to communicate the same more than once, or do the same thing more than once.
Instruction: This is somewhat leading, but it’s something I wanted the AI to consider.
- Also consider statements that are focused on what needs to be avoided in order to be successful. These should only account for approximately 20% of the statements. None of the statements should describe how to accomplish something.
Information: This instruction is related to the likelihood type success metric. I’m able to output different versions of success statements, but this prompt will use the common structure that is promoted by Outcome-Driven Innovation. Depending on feedback, I might include the versions that are more easily consumable by respondents using the normal daily language of real people.
For each Job Step, generate a list of {{n}} success statements related to a(n) {{end user}} trying to {{step}}. Think step-by-step.
Instructions: I told you I would do this one again!