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Use the CREF framework to structure every AI brief with clarity and speed.
The fastest way to improve your AI results is to use a repeatable structure. In this course we will use a simple framework called CREF:
CREF is intentionally lightweight. It is just enough structure to remove ambiguity without turning every prompt into a novel. Once you internalize it, you can build a useful brief in under two minutes.
Context is not a data dump. It is the minimum information the model must know to make good decisions.
Good context includes:
Bad context includes everything you can find. Too much context forces the model to decide which details matter, which often leads to weaker output.
Example (context section):
Notice how each bullet helps the model make a decision. The model does not need your entire roadmap. It needs the minimum viable context to do this task well.
Role is the lens you give the model. It shapes the output style, level of expertise, and tone.
Examples of roles:
Role avoids two common problems. First, it prevents the model from choosing an irrelevant voice. Second, it defines the level of authority the output should have.
If you do not specify a role, the model defaults to a generic, vaguely helpful voice. That might be fine for casual tasks, but it often misses nuance for real work.
Examples are the fastest way to steer tone and structure. They reduce interpretation. Even a small example can anchor the output.
There are two kinds of examples:
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A good example is short, realistic, and aligned with the task. It should not be a full solution, just a clear signal.
Positive example:
"Subject: Get focus without the overhead
Body: Teams lose hours each week to context switching. Focuslane gives team leads a clean daily view of priorities without heavy setup. Start a 7 day trial to see how much simpler your week can be."
Negative example:
"Subject: The BEST productivity app ever!!!" (Too hype, wrong tone)
If you only include one example, make it positive. If the risk of the wrong tone is high, include one negative as a guardrail.
Format is where you define the deliverable. It includes length, structure, and any output requirements.
Common format instructions:
The model does not guess your format. If you do not specify it, you will get whatever the model thinks is reasonable, which often means extra editing.
Here is a full CREF brief for the email example:
Context
Role
Examples
Format
When you compare this to the vague prompt from Lesson 1, the difference is obvious. The model now has clear boundaries. It is less likely to guess and more likely to deliver.
Use this checklist to create a strong brief quickly:
Keep the language simple. The model does not need big words, just clear instructions.
CREF is flexible. Sometimes you can skip a section if it is already implied.
The goal is not to fill out a template. The goal is to remove ambiguity. Use as much structure as you need, no more.
CREF is the backbone of this course. It is the fastest way to turn an idea into a useful brief. In the next lesson, we will focus on the most common mistake in AI briefing: giving commands instead of context.