Honestly? If you're just using ChatGPT for emails… probably not.
But if you're like me - sometimes getting brilliant results, sometimes getting absolute rubbish - and you don't really know why, that's a different problem.
Here's what I've learned:
→ Most people don't have a prompting problem. They have a framework problem.
They're "vibe prompting" - typing stuff in, hoping for the best, and trying again when it doesn't work.
I was doing the same thing. So I went through the top AI courses on Coursera and tested them properly.
In my latest video, I break down 4 courses and tell you exactly who each one is for - and who should skip it entirely.
Watch it here → https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPYXg5B2TVI
If you just want my quick take?
👉 Vanderbilt's Prompt Engineering course is the one most of you should do. 600,000+ people have taken it, 4.8 stars, and it'll take you from inconsistent results to getting the right answer first time. You could finish it in a weekend.
The best part - with Coursera Plus you get access to all four courses I cover under one subscription.
And right now it's 40% off for us: https://imp.i384100.net/c/5978785/3781546/14726
That means you can flick through the beginner stuff, dive deep into prompt engineering, and even hit the automation or technical courses - all included.
Luke

