List of ChatGPT frameworks
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With the emergence of chatbots and AI language models, writing and creating high-quality content in different styles has become easier than ever. But to create the high quality content, quality input must be the first step you take.
This article provides “Act as” styles to enhance your ChatGPT prompts and create informative, unique, and engaging results out of your prompts.
Concept | Description |
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Ambiguity Effect | Provide clear, transparent information about your product or service. |
Baader–Meinhof Effect | Repeat unique features and benefits of your product or service. |
Backfire Effect | Avoid confrontational language and present your argument in a way that resonates with your audience’s beliefs. |
Barnum Effect | Use specific and targeted language that speaks directly to your customer’s needs and desires. |
Ben Franklin Effect | Ask your audience for a small favor before presenting your offer. |
Boomerang Effect | Present both sides of an argument and provide evidence to support your position. |
But Your Are Free Effect | Emphasize the customer’s freedom to choose the way they experience the product. |
Cheerleader Effect | Show images of happy, satisfied customers using or benefiting from your product or service. |
Cognitive Fluency Effect | Use simple and familiar language to improve engagement and comprehension. |
Contrast Effect | Use comparative language that highlights the unique features and benefits of your product or service. |
Coolidge Effect | Highlight the novelty of your product and how it’s a fresh and exciting option. |
Dunning–Kruger Effect | Remain humble and seek feedback from others to ensure message clarity and effectiveness. |
False-Uniqueness Effect | Use testimonials that emphasize the uniqueness of your product. |
Focusing Effect | Highlight the most important benefit or feature of your product. |
Framing Effect | Use positive framing (emphasizing the benefits) rather than negative framing (emphasizing the risks). |
Generation Effect | Use interactive elements on your website that allow potential customers to generate personalized recommendations. |
Golem Effect | Avoid negative stereotypes or limiting language in your marketing. |
Halo Effect | Use positive language and imagery throughout your marketing materials. |
Hedonic Treadmill | Use language that highlights how your product can offer long-term, sustained happiness. |
Hostile Media Effect | Use language that appeals to your target audience’s pre-existing beliefs and values. |
Hot-Cold Empathy Gap | Use language that appeals to both the rational and emotional sides of your audience. |
Illusory Truth Effect | Repeating a benefit or feature can increase the reader’s belief that it is true. |
Imposter Syndrome | Use language that reassures your audience and shows your product can help them overcome imposter syndrome. |
Kuleshov Effect | Show a product in a favorable light by juxtaposing it with other desirable objects. |
Lake Wobegon Effect | Position your product as a top performer and let the customer feel they are getting the best. |
Mandela Effect | Use nostalgia and tap into shared memories to create a strong emotional connection with your audience. |
Novelty Effect | Introduce new features or product updates in your marketing campaigns to grab the attention of your audience. |
Open Loop Effect | Use cliffhangers in copywriting to keep the reader engaged and curious. |
Overjustification Effect | The phenomenon where receiving external rewards for an activity that was previously intrinsically rewarding can decrease our motivation to continue the activity. |
Peak-End Rule | Emphasize the peak and end experiences that potential customers can expect from your product |
Picture Superiority Effect | This effect refers to the phenomenon where people tend to remember pictures more easily and accurately than words or text. |
Pratfall Effect | The pratfall effect describes how making a small mistake or showing a minor flaw can actually increase one’s likability and attractiveness to others. |
Primacy Effect | Describes the tendency for people to remember information that is presented first better than information that is presented later. |
Pseudocertainty Effect | Refers to the tendency for people to rely on their own subjective judgments and beliefs, even in the face of contrary evidence. |
Purkinje Effect | Where the color sensitivity of the human eye shifts toward the blue end of the spectrum in low-light conditions. |
Pygmalion Effect | The phenomenon where people’s expectations of another person’s performance can influence that person’s actual performance. |
Rashomon Effect | The phenomenon where multiple people have different interpretations of the same event or experience. |
Recency Effect | The tendency for people to remember information at the end of a list better than information presented in the middle of a list. |
Rhyme-As-Reason Effect | The tendency for people to believe that a statement is true or has more credibility if it rhymes. |
Ringelmann Effect | The phenomenon where people become less productive when working in a group compared to working alone. |
Self-Fulfilling Prophecy | The process by which one’s beliefs or expectations about a situation or person influence their behavior in a way that ultimately confirms those beliefs or expectations. |
Self-Reference Effect | The tendency for people to remember information better when it relates to themselves or their personal experiences. |
Simon Effect | The phenomenon where the reaction time of a person is influenced by the location of a stimulus, with faster reaction times when the stimulus and response are on the same side. |
Sleeper Effect | The phenomenon where a message from a low-credibility source becomes more persuasive over time, as the source is forgotten but the message remains. |
Social Facilitation | The phenomenon where the presence of others can enhance performance on simple or well-practiced tasks but can impair performance on complex or new tasks. |
Spacing Effect | The phenomenon that learning is greater when studying is spread out over time, rather than studying the same amount of time in a single session. |
Stroop Effect | The delay in reaction time when a person is asked to name the color of a printed word when the word itself is the name of a different color. |
Subadditivity Effect | The tendency to judge the probability of a combination of events as lower than the probability of the individual events. |
Telescoping Effect | The tendency to remember past events as more recent than they actually were. |
Testing Effect | The phenomenon where memory is enhanced by actively recalling information instead of passively reviewing it. |
Von Restorff Effect | The tendency to better remember an item that is distinct from the other items in a list. |
Zeigarnik Effect | The tendency to better remember incomplete tasks or activities than completed ones. |