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Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Amanda Caswell

I use the 'Golden Bracketing' prompt to turn big tasks into simple checklists — here’s how it works

Smartphone displaying ChatGPT logo held in front of white OpenAI logo on green background.

I am a list maker. Not just a grocery list or a to-do list maker, but a walks-around-with-a-sticky-note kind of list maker. It's a little obsessive, but it keeps me organized. Well, that is, until I lose the sticky note or my kids randomly unplug Alexa+.

Maybe you're like me and have opened a chatbot with good intentions of being productive only to think, "I still don't know where to start." If so, there's a solid reason behind for the disconnect.

Amanda's AI Lab
(Image credit: Future)

Amanda’s AI Lab is my new Tom’s Guide column where I test the newest AI tools, features and trends to see what’s actually worth your time.

AI is great at explaining things. It’s also great at brainstorming. But where it becomes genuinely useful is when you force it to get specific — and turn your vague goal into a checklist you can actually follow.

I’ve been using one simple prompt to generate instant, step-by-step checklists for everything from packing for a trip to prepping for a meeting. It takes seconds, it works in ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude and basically any assistant, and it removes the biggest productivity killer: figuring out where to start.

Here’s how to boost productivity with a better checklist

(Image credit: Future/Amanda Caswell)

This is the prompt I use to build a better checklist in seconds.

Prompt: "Create a checklist for: [your task]. Make it step-by-step, in the correct order, with checkboxes. Include time estimates per step, a “don’t forget” section and common mistakes to avoid. If anything is unclear, ask me 3 questions first."

That’s it. As you can see, the magic isn’t asking for a checklist — it’s asking for the extras that make it actually usable: timing, common mistakes and the “don’t forget” stuff you always remember too late.

Why this works so well

(Image credit: Fopo)

Most people prompt like this: “Give me tips for getting ready for a job interview.”

Sure, that gets you advice, but to be truly helpful, you need something that is far more actionable. That's why my prompt makes all the difference. It forces the chatbot to act like a project manager instead of a motivational speaker. It has to:

  • Break the task into logical steps
  • Put them in the right order
  • Estimate effort
  • Warn you about the usual traps
  • Identify missing info before it wastes your time

To use this prompt most effectively, let’s say you’re trying to do something simple but easy to mess up, like cleaning out your phone storage.

You’d type: Create a checklist for: clearing storage on my iPhone. Make it step-by-step, in the correct order, with checkboxes. Include time estimates per step, a “don’t forget” section, and common mistakes to avoid. If anything is unclear, ask me 3 questions first.

From there, you'll get all the details such as what's taking up space, reviewing large attachments and cache, each with a time allotment.

You might also see it offer more suggestions about what not to forget (screenshots folder, downloads folder, duplicate photos) and mistakes to avoid like deleting photos before confirming backup, clearing data you still need.

And while this example is fairly basic, you probably get the idea that the chatbot will offer exactly what you need for a checklist that organizes tasks.

How to get a checklist that matches your life

(Image credit: Getty Images / dikushin)

If you're using this prompt and feel as though the results are too broad, add one line. I use constraints like: [budget / time / skill level / tools / who it’s for]

Examples include:

  • “I only have 20 minutes.”
  • “I’m doing this with three kids around.”
  • "Make it beginner-friendly.”
  • “I want the cheapest option.”
  • “Assume I have an iPhone and a Windows laptop.”

The 'pro' version: ask for a checklist plus a timeline

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

If you want something even more useful, upgrade the prompt.

Prompt: Create a checklist for: [task]. Then turn it into a 30-minute plan and a 2-hour plan. Add a “minimum viable version” if I’m overwhelmed.

This is my favorite way to get unstuck fast, because it gives you options based on your energy level.

If your checklist still feels wrong, don't sweat it. Sometimes a chatbot will skip steps or give you an order that doesn’t make sense. Fix it with one follow-up:

Prompt: Re-check the order. What steps are missing? What would a beginner forget?

Or if you want it brutally simple simply add: "Cut this down to the shortest possible checklist that still works."

That one is shockingly effective.

The takeaway

The fastest way to make any chatbot more useful isn’t always just asking it for more ideas, especially because a checklist needs structure.

Once you start using this prompt, you’ll stop getting vague “helpful” answers and start getting a plan you can actually follow. I suggest copying it and saving it to your notes app or in ChatGPT Projects so the next time you feel overwhelmed you can let AI do what it’s best at, which is breaking up the mess into usable steps.


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