Why use prompts
Good ideas are specific, relevant, and explain how something works. Prompts act like buttons you press to produce reasons, mechanisms, and examples on demand.
6 universal idea engines
- PESTLE lens
- Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Legal, Environmental
Use to widen angles: Which two lenses best explain this topic
- Who What How Result
- Who is affected
- What changes
- How does it work
- Result or trade off
Great for topic sentences.
- Cause–Effect–Fix
- Root cause → effect on group → fix with mechanism
Perfect for Problem–Solution.
- Stakeholder swap
- Government, Business, School, Family, Individual
Ask: What can each do in one actionable step
- Scale switch
- Home → Neighborhood → City → Nation
Move one level up or down to find examples.
- Time path
- Past → Now → Next
Show change and predict a logical next step.
Prompt cards by question type
Opinion
- Benefit prompt: Who gains and how
- Cost prompt: Who loses and why
- Evidence prompt: What real rule, policy, or study supports this
Frame: I agree because [mechanism 1] improves [outcome], and [mechanism 2] reduces [risk].
Discussion
- Fair case for View A: strongest reason and example
- Fair case for View B: strongest reason and example
- Tie breaker: which solves more problems with fewer costs
Frame: On balance, B is stronger since it achieves [result] with lower [cost].
Problem–Solution
- Root cause: price, access, incentives, information
- Levers: price signals, defaults, nudges, rules, tech
- Feasibility: cost, scale, time, public support
Frame: Do X by Y so that Z happens.
Advantage–Disadvantage
- Advantage test: scalable, inclusive, durable
- Disadvantage test: cost, equity, risk
- Verdict: which side is heavier and why
Frame: Gains outweigh losses because [A] helps [group] by [how], while [B] is limited by [constraint].
GT letters
- Purpose prompt: request, complaint, apology, thanks
- Action prompt: what you want by when
- Tone prompt: formal, semi, informal wording switch
30 second topic map
Write 3 spokes from the topic: cause, impact, response. Under each, add one bullet for a group you choose. Pick the two strongest to build your body paragraphs.
Example run: remote work
- PESTLE picks: Economic and Social
- Cause–Effect–Fix
- Cause: commute time
- Effect: lost focus hours
- Fix: core hours plus meeting free blocks
Topic sentence: Core hours raise output by aligning meetings and freeing long focus blocks.
Example run: plastic waste
- Stakeholders: City, Retailers, Households
- Actions: city adds pay by weight bins; retailers shift to deposit bottles; homes set two bin default
Mechanism: deposits move money upfront so returns become routine.
Quick example bank prompts
- Education: curriculum update, teacher training, device access
- Health: prevention vs treatment, pricing, nudges
- Transport: frequency, pricing, last mile links
- Environment: standards, incentives, monitoring tech
Add one local example for each.
Evidence prompts that sound real
- A city trial
- A school pilot
- A company policy change
- A survey of 500 users
Use one precise detail, not a long story.
Avoid idea traps
- Vague nouns: things, a lot → replace with precise terms.
- List without mechanism → add by or through clause.
- Off topic examples → test: does it prove the topic sentence
Micro templates to turn ideas into lines
- Mechanism: X improves Y by reducing or adding Z.
- Trade off: While X helps Y, it creates cost C for group G.
- Feasible fix: Policy P works because it changes price or time or information.
- Verdict: Overall, [side] is stronger since its benefits are larger and more durable.
10 minute routine
- 1 min: label the question type and underline task words.
- 2 min: pick two engines (for example PESTLE and Stakeholder).
- 3 min: generate three bullets with mechanisms.
- 3 min: write thesis and two topic sentences using the bullets.
- 1 min: choose one compact evidence line for each body.
Checklist before writing
- Two clear reasons or one cause plus one solution
- Each reason has a mechanism with by or through
- One specific example ready
- Stance or verdict stated in one line
- No vague words left
Mini practice set
Prompt: Some cities plan to ban private cars from centers.
- Engines: Stakeholder, Trade off
- Body 1 idea: Buses every 5 minutes cut wait time and shift commuters.
- Body 2 idea: Access permits for disabled drivers protect equity.
Prompt: Free university education
- Engines: PESTLE, Time path
- Body 1 idea: Expands skilled workers over a decade.
- Body 2 idea: Tax caps and service bonds manage cost now.
Build your personal prompt deck
- 12 cards: PESTLE, Who What How Result, Cause–Effect–Fix, Stakeholder swap, Scale switch, Time path, plus six domain cards you meet often.
- Add one local example to each card.
- Review before practice; use two cards per essay.
Final advice
Press two prompt buttons, extract mechanisms, and convert them to thesis and topic sentences. With a tiny deck and a short routine, you will never run out of relevant ideas under time pressure.