Instead of manually rereading notes to regain context after a break, instruct a context-aware AI to summarize your own recent progress. This acts as a personalized briefing, dramatically reducing the friction of re-engaging with complex, multi-day projects like coding or writing.
People struggle with AI prompts because the model lacks background on their goals and progress. The solution is 'Context Engineering': creating an environment where the AI continuously accumulates user-specific information, materials, and intent, reducing the need for constant prompt tweaking.
When an AI coding assistant gets off track, Tim McLear asks it to generate a summary prompt for another AI to take over. This "resume work" prompt forces the AI to consolidate the context and goal. This summary often reveals where the AI misunderstood the request, allowing him to correct the course and restart with a cleaner prompt.
A powerful workflow is to explicitly instruct your AI to act as a collaborative thinking partner—asking questions and organizing thoughts—while strictly forbidding it from creating final artifacts. This separates the crucial thinking phase from the generative phase, leading to better outcomes.
To gain a macro perspective, Melanie Perkins does an "AI walk." She goes for a walk and dictates all her thoughts on her phone using a notes app. Later, she uses AI to summarize the brain dump, helping her filter ideas, identify action items, and think more strategically.
When an AI model gives nonsensical responses after a long conversation, its context window is likely full. Instead of trying to correct it, reset the context. For prototypes, fork the design to start a new session. For chats, ask the AI to summarize the conversation, then start a new chat with that summary.
Instead of viewing AI collaboration as a manager delegating tasks, adopt the "surgeon" model. The human expert performs the critical, hands-on work while AI assistants handle prep (briefings, drafts) and auxiliary tasks. This keeps the expert in a state of flow and focused on their unique skills.
Traditionally, engineers need long, uninterrupted blocks to achieve flow state. By managing context and generating code, AI helps engineers get into flow faster. This makes shorter, 45-minute work blocks viable and productive again, restructuring the ideal engineering workday.
Long conversations degrade LLM performance as attention gets clogged with irrelevant details. An expert workflow is to stop, ask the model to summarize the key points of the discussion, and then start a fresh chat with that summary as the initial prompt. This keeps the context clean and the model on track.
Instead of holding context for multiple projects in their heads, PMs create separate, fully-loaded AI agents (in Claude or ChatGPT) for each initiative. These "brains" are fed with all relevant files and instructions, allowing the PM to instantly get up to speed and work more efficiently.
For complex, one-time tasks like a code migration, don't just ask AI to write a script. Instead, have it build a disposable tool—a "jig" or "command center”—that visualizes the process and guides you through each step. This provides more control and understanding than a black-box script.