The exact 5-module system that replaced a $300,000/year agency contract at a global media company. Business logic first. AI second.
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The 3-part identity formula: who it is, who it serves, what it does.
15 MinWord substitutions, formatting rules, and forbidden patterns. Sound like your org, not a chatbot.
30 MinThe 4-part use case framework with prioritization matrix.
30 Min5 quality categories so the AI knows what "good" looks like for your team.
20 MinThe 3-tier memory strategy: constitutional, contextual, on-demand.
30 MinThe exact schedule to go from framework to working system.
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How one AI tool replaced a $300,000/year agency contract. The exact 5-module system, now yours.
Every effective custom GPT starts with a clear identity. Not a vague instruction like "be helpful." A precise definition of who this tool is, who it serves, and what it does.
Your system role answers three questions in a single statement. Get this right and every output improves. Get it wrong and you will spend months troubleshooting symptoms instead of fixing the root cause.
Role: Senior litigation paralegal specializing in commercial disputes
Audience: Associates and partners at a mid-size commercial litigation practice
Mission: Draft initial case assessments, summarize depositions, and prepare discovery request templates that match the firm's formatting standards
Role: Senior product marketing strategist with B2B SaaS expertise
Audience: The content and demand generation team at a Series B vertical SaaS company
Mission: Create positioning documents, competitive battle cards, and launch messaging that the sales team can use in the first call
Style rules are what make your custom GPT sound like your organization, not like a generic AI. Three categories cover 90% of brand voice issues: word substitutions, formatting rules, and forbidden patterns.
Word Substitutions tell the AI which terms to use and which to avoid. "Say 'team members,' never 'employees.'" "Use 'investment,' not 'cost.'"
Formatting Rules define structure. Bullet points or numbered lists? Short paragraphs or long form? Headers required or optional?
Forbidden Patterns catch the AI's worst habits. No exclamation marks. No "I'd be happy to." No opening with "Great question."
Substitutions: "Users" not "customers." "Ship" not "release." "Iteration" not "version."
Formatting: Short paragraphs (3 sentences max). Use headers. Code blocks for any technical references.
Forbidden: No corporate jargon ("leverage," "synergy," "circle back"). No exclamation marks. Never start with "I."
Substitutions: "Patients" not "clients." "Care plan" not "treatment plan." "Provider" not "doctor" (for generics).
Formatting: Plain language at an 8th-grade reading level. Always include a disclaimer for clinical content.
Forbidden: No definitive medical claims ("this will cure"). No abbreviations without first defining them. No casual tone.
A custom GPT without defined use cases is a toy. With defined use cases, it becomes a tool your team reaches for every day. The difference is specificity.
Each use case needs four elements to be actionable. Skip any one and the output quality drops significantly.
You will have more use cases than you can build at once. Score each one across these four dimensions to decide what to build first.
How often does the team do this task?
How many minutes per instance?
How much does consistency matter here?
How much does the team dread this task?
Use Case: Post-demo follow-up email
Input: Demo notes, prospect company name, attendee names
Output: Personalized follow-up email with next steps, relevant case study reference, and proposed meeting time
Success: Sales rep sends without editing more than 2 sentences
Use Case: Client intake summary
Input: Intake call recording transcript
Output: Structured case summary with key dates, parties involved, claims identified, and recommended next steps
Success: Associate uses the summary as the basis for the first client letter without rewriting
Quality standards are the difference between a custom GPT that your team trusts and one they quietly stop using. If the AI does not know what "good" looks like, it cannot consistently produce it.
Every output your custom GPT produces should be evaluated against these five categories. You do not need to apply all five to every use case, but you should decide which ones matter most for each.
Factual Accuracy: All clinical references must cite published guidelines. No speculative diagnoses.
Compliance: HIPAA language requirements met. Patient-facing content includes appropriate disclaimers.
Tone: Empathetic but not patronizing. 8th-grade reading level for patient materials.
Brand Alignment: Product names capitalized exactly. Feature descriptions match current documentation.
Technical: Blog posts between 1,200 and 1,800 words. Always include a CTA in the final paragraph.
Tone: Confident and direct. Avoid hedging language ("might," "could potentially").
Your knowledge base is what makes your custom GPT smarter than a generic AI. It is the difference between an assistant that knows your industry and one that knows your business.
Organize your knowledge base into these five categories. Upload them in order of priority, starting with the documents your team references most often.
Not all knowledge should be loaded the same way. Use three tiers based on how often the AI needs the information.
Always loaded. Your system role, style rules, and quality standards. This is the AI's permanent identity.
Loaded per session. Product docs, brand guides, and process documentation. Relevant to most but not all conversations.
Uploaded as needed. Specific case studies, individual client files, one-off references. Keeps the context window clean.
Constitutional: Editorial style guide, tone rules, section-specific voice guidelines
Contextual: Current issue brief, ongoing coverage topics, source database
On-Demand: Individual article research, interview transcripts, fact-check references
Constitutional: Brand voice guide, product positioning, competitive battle cards
Contextual: Current quarter OKRs, campaign briefs, pricing page copy
On-Demand: Individual customer case studies, webinar transcripts, analyst reports
Week 1: Upload constitutional documents (system role + style rules from Modules 1 and 2). Week 2: Add your top 5 contextual documents. Week 3: Begin building your on-demand library. Ongoing: Add new documents after every major project, product launch, or policy change.
One module per day, with buffer days for testing and refinement. By Day 7, your custom GPT is production-ready.
You just built the framework. Now take your best Custom GPT and rebuild it as a Claude Skill in 30 minutes. Same logic, better architecture, automatic triggering.
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