I use these 5 clever Claude prompts every day — they make me feel like a genius
The right question can unlock Claude’s most impressive responses
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Claude has always occupied a slightly unusual place in the crowded world of AI chatbots. Anthropic’s offering has cultivated a reputation for thoughtful explanations and reliability, even with the end of its safety pledge, aided in part by its “constitutional AI” approach, which trains the system to critique and refine its own responses according to guiding principles.
Claude tends to reward prompts that include a specific perspective. The trick is learning how to ask for the kind of response you want. As the examples below show, the right prompt can provide smarter answers from Claude than you might have imagined.
1. The pizza and pirates method
Claude thrives when prompts include playful constraints, which force it to invent creative metaphors. For instance, the internet is full of painfully dry explanations of blockchain technology. Most start with cryptographic hashes and distributed ledgers and promptly lose half their audience.
Article continues belowAs an alternative, I asked it to:
“Explain how blockchain works using only metaphors involving pizza delivery and pirates."
Claude responded with a ridiculous but informative scenario of a fleet of pizza couriers delivering orders across town.“Picture ten pizza couriers riding around town. Every time someone orders a pizza, all ten couriers write the order in their notebooks at the same time. If one courier tries to cheat and change an order later, the other nine immediately notice because their notebooks do not match.”
The pirates entered the story when Claude described how blocks connect to each other. Each notebook page contained a secret code linked to the page before it. Claude compared this to a pirate captain stamping every page of a treasure logbook with a special seal that depended on the previous entry.
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It was a clear enough explanation that a friend who has no knowledge, or interest, in blockchain could follow along and even explain a distributed ledger by the end.
2. The retired professor method
One of Claude’s strengths is its ability to unpack complex topics using layered explanations and analogies. Economics, which can quickly turn into a fog of jargon and statistics, is an ideal test case.
So I asked it to:
“Explain how inflation works as if you’re a retired economics professor secretly explaining it to a curious teenager who learns best from analogies.
Claude delivered a kitchen-table lecture, starting with a story about a neighborhood bakery that slowly raises the price of its bread as more people line up outside each morning, rather than definitions of monetary policy.
“Imagine your favorite bakery used to sell a loaf of bread for two dollars, but more people keep showing up every day with money in their pockets. The baker eventually realizes the bread is selling out too quickly, so the price quietly becomes two dollars and fifty cents. Nothing magical happened to the bread itself. What changed was how many people were trying to buy it at the same time.”
Claude compared inflation to a slow reshuffling of value linked to bread and other shops in the area. A grocery store shelf became a way to explain purchasing power. A teenager’s weekly allowance illustrated why fixed incomes can quietly lose value during inflationary periods. The answer felt less like reading an economic report and more like listening to a seasoned teacher.
3. Future historian
Role prompting is one of the easiest ways to unlock Claude’s storytelling abilities. Giving the model a perspective helps shape the tone and logic of the response, turning an explanation into something closer to speculative nonfiction.
As an example, I told Claude to:
“Pretend you are a brilliant historian from the year 2100 visiting the present day. Explain the rise of social media as if it’s an ancient civilization that future students study in textbooks.”
Claude delivered what read like a lecture from a futuristic anthropology course. The historian began by describing social media platforms as sprawling digital city-states.
“To students of the twenty-second century, the social media networks of the early 2000s appear less like websites and more like rival kingdoms competing for attention. Each one built walls, customs, and rituals designed to keep citizens returning every day.”
Claude described algorithms as the unseen bureaucrats of these digital societies and influencers as a merchant class that traded attention instead of goods. It even managed a slightly poignant reflection on the social paradox of the era.
“The citizens of this digital civilization were connected to millions of people at once,” Claude wrote, “yet many historical accounts describe a surprising feeling of loneliness among them.”
4. Debate with Einstein
Claude is great at exploring multiple viewpoints. Combined with role prompting, you can set up an otherwise impossible debate between long-past or even fictional personalities.
So, I asked Claude to:
“Write a conversation between Albert Einstein and Isaac Asimov sitting at a bar discussing artificial intelligence."
Claude basically wrote a short play between a thoughtful and slightly skeptical Einstein and a more enthusiastic Asimov. The digital Einstein stated:
“A machine may calculate faster than any human mind, but calculation alone is not wisdom. Intelligence also requires imagination and the strange leaps of insight that cannot be reduced to formulas.”
Asimov responded with, Perhaps. But machines might become partners in discovery. Imagine an intelligence that helps us test thousands of scientific ideas before breakfast.”
The exchange unfolded like a friendly intellectual duel. The two even agreed that technology itself was rarely the true danger.
“Then perhaps our real challenge is not building intelligent machines, but ensuring that human judgment grows wiser alongside them," AI Einstein said.
5. Blockbuster analysis
Structured reasoning and analytics are core strengths to Claude and provide some of its best and most organized responses.
So, I asked it to:
“Explain why Netflix succeeded while Blockbuster failed. Break it down into a list of strategic mistakes with explanations.”
Claude responded like a consultant preparing a briefing for nervous executives, writing:
“Netflix treated technology as the heart of its business. Blockbuster treated technology as a side project attached to a chain of retail stores.”
Claude discussed problems with timing, business models, company culture, and the inertia of thousands of physical stores, making it difficult for Blockbuster to pivot toward streaming without undermining its existing business.
None of the prompts I've used are particularly complicated when broken down. But they all give Claude a clear role, a creative frame, and a specific goal. That combination taps directly into the model’s strengths.
The difference between a generic question and a carefully designed prompt can be dramatic. Ask Claude a vague question and you’ll often get a safe, predictable answer. Give it a clear role, a creative frame, and a specific goal, and the response can suddenly feel thoughtful, surprising, and genuinely insightful.
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Eric Hal Schwartz is a freelance writer for TechRadar with more than 15 years of experience covering the intersection of the world and technology. For the last five years, he served as head writer for Voicebot.ai and was on the leading edge of reporting on generative AI and large language models. He's since become an expert on the products of generative AI models, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, Google Gemini, and every other synthetic media tool. His experience runs the gamut of media, including print, digital, broadcast, and live events. Now, he's continuing to tell the stories people want and need to hear about the rapidly evolving AI space and its impact on their lives. Eric is based in New York City.
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