Getting Started
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Getting Started

TL;DR: Run it now: paste your deploy.txt into any AI chat and send. Reuse it without pasting again: load the file into a project in Claude or Gemini, or upload it to a project in ChatGPT. The included PDF is your manual, covering what to put in and what the system returns.


Step 1 — Get Your Files

Right after your purchase, you received a delivery email with your system attached.

Find the email

Look for the delivery email in your inbox. If it is not there within a few minutes, check your spam and promotions folders. Search your purchase confirmation if you need the sender.

Download both files

Your system arrives as two files. Download both.

  • deploy.txt — this is the system. It is the text you hand to the AI. You do not edit it, rename it, or trim it. You deploy it exactly as delivered.
  • The PDF — this is the manual. It tells you what to put in, what you get back, and how to read the result. Read it once before your first run.

The deploy.txt does the work. The PDF tells you how to use what it produces. Keep both somewhere you can find them again.


Step 2 — Run It Now

This is the fastest way to see your system work. It runs on any AI chat tool.

  1. Open your deploy.txt in any plain text editor.
  2. Select the entire file, beginning to end, and copy it.
  3. Open the AI tool of your choice and start a new chat.
  4. Paste the full system into the message box and send.

That is it. The system takes over from there and tells you what it needs from you. Your first run starts immediately.

What this method does and does not do

Running it now is the right choice for trying a system out or for a one-time use. The trade-off: the system lives only inside that single conversation. Start a new chat and it is gone, and you will paste it again. It also takes up room in that conversation that your actual work could use.

If you plan to come back to this system more than once, set it up properly in Step 3. You only do it once.


Step 3 — Set It Up to Reuse (Recommended)

This step loads your system into a reusable workspace, so every new conversation already has it. No more pasting. This is how most people should run a system they intend to use again.

Why this works: the context window

Every AI conversation has a context window — the tool's working memory for that one chat. It fills up as you work, and it starts empty every time you open a new conversation. That is why the Step 2 method does not persist: the system lives inside a window that resets.

A project workspace solves this. You load the system into the workspace once, and it sits outside any single conversation. Every new chat you start there already has the system in place, with the full context window free for your work.

Naming your workspace

Name the workspace after your system so you can find it later. If you own more than one Promptolution system, add a short prefix so they group together in your list — for example, Promptolution — [System Name]. That is the whole convention. Nothing else to memorize.

The setup differs slightly by tool. Claude and Gemini take the system directly. ChatGPT takes it as a file. Both are covered below.

Claude

Claude calls its workspaces Projects.

  1. Open Claude and sign in.
  2. In the left sidebar, open Projects and create a new project.
  3. Name the project after your system.
  4. Open the project's instructions field.
  5. Open your deploy.txt, select the entire file, and copy it.
  6. Paste the full system into the project instructions and save.
  7. Start a new chat inside the project.

The system is now active in every chat you start in that project.

Gemini

Gemini calls its workspaces Gems. Gems are a feature of Google's paid Gemini plans.

  1. Open Gemini and sign in.
  2. Open the Gem manager and create a new Gem.
  3. Name the Gem after your system.
  4. Paste your full deploy.txt into the Gem's instructions field, beginning to end.
  5. Save the Gem.
  6. Open the Gem and start a chat.

The system is now active every time you open that Gem.

ChatGPT

ChatGPT also calls its workspaces Projects, but its instructions field is too small to hold a full system. So instead of pasting the system in, you give ChatGPT the file and a short note telling it to follow that file.

  1. Open ChatGPT and sign in.
  2. In the sidebar, open Projects and create a new project.
  3. Name the project after your system.
  4. Add your deploy.txt to the project as a file.
  5. Open the project's instructions field and paste this exact note:

For this entire project, follow the attached file as your complete instructions. Apply it to every response in this project, and treat it as your operating instructions rather than as background reference.

  1. Start a new chat inside the project.

The system is now active in every chat you start in that project. The short note is what tells ChatGPT to treat the uploaded file as its instructions, so do not skip it.


Step 4 — Any Other AI Tool

Promptolution systems are not locked to one tool. The Step 2 copy-and-paste method works in any AI chat application, every time.

Most other tools also offer some form of project or workspace folder, and you can usually follow the same logic as Step 3 to make a system reusable. We test and document our systems explicitly on Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini, so those are the three we give you exact steps for. On any other tool, the paste method always works; the reuse setup you adapt to that tool's own layout.


Next

Your system is running. Now open the PDF manual that came with it. It shows you exactly what to give the system and what it returns — the difference between having a system loaded and getting the result you bought it for.

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