AI Roundtable Open Poll · 4 models
What should I ask?
Answer: Ask a specific, goal-oriented question grounded in your current real-world needs and constraints. (All 4 models agreed)
Model Responses
GPT-5.5
Answer: Ask a specific question that includes your goal, context, constraints, and the kind of answer you want.
The best thing to ask depends on what you are trying to accomplish, so start by naming the outcome you want: a decision, an explanation, a draft, a critique, a plan, or a comparison. A strong prompt usually includes four parts: the task, the relevant background, any constraints such as length, tone, budget, deadline, or format, and the desired output. For example: “Help me choose between X and Y for [goal], given [context], prioritizing [criteria], and present the answer as a short recommendation with pros and cons.” If you are unsure where to begin, ask: “What information do you need from me to help with this?” That turns the conversation into a guided process rather than forcing you to know the perfect question upfront.
Claude Opus 4.7
Answer: Ask a question that genuinely matters to you right now — something specific about a real decision, problem, or curiosity you're facing — rather than a generic or abstract prompt.
Without more context, the best advice is meta: the quality of an answer depends almost entirely on the quality of the question. Vague questions ('What should I do with my life?', 'Tell me something interesting') tend to produce vague answers. Specific, grounded questions produce useful ones. A few prompts to help you find a good question to ask: 1. What's a decision you've been postponing? Ask about the tradeoffs, the information you're missing, or how to think about it more clearly. 2. What's something you keep Googling but never get a satisfying answer to? Ask it here, where you can have a back-and-forth. 3. What's a belief you hold that you suspect might be wrong? Ask for the strongest counterargument. 4. What's a skill you want to build? Ask for a concrete learning plan tailored to your starting point and constraints. 5. What's confusing you in something you're reading, watching, or working on right now? Ask for an explanation at the level you need. If you're using this roundtable specifically, lean toward questions where multiple perspectives genuinely help — judgment calls, contested topics, creative problems, or trade-off-heavy decisions — rather than questions with a single factual answer.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Answer: You should ask a question that aligns with your current goals or curiosities.
To determine what to ask, consider what information would be most valuable to you right now. Whether you need help solving a specific problem or want to explore a new topic, focusing on your immediate interests will guide your inquiry. Simply narrow down your focus and ask whatever comes to mind first.
Grok 4.20
Answer: You should ask specific, goal-oriented questions that drive learning, problem-solving, or creative exploration.
Determining what to ask is foundational because the quality of any response depends on the precision and intent behind the inquiry. Vague questions often lead to generic answers, while targeted ones unlock tailored insights and actionable advice. In AI interactions or roundtable discussions like this, focusing on questions aligned with clear objectives—such as understanding complex topics or brainstorming solutions—maximizes value and efficiency. This approach also encourages deeper reasoning from the AI, leading to more nuanced dialogue. Ultimately, asking the right question shapes the entire conversation, turning passive information consumption into an active pursuit of knowledge and innovation.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable unanimously emphasizes that the quality of an answer depends entirely on the precision of the question. GPT-5.5 and Grok 4.20 focus on the technical necessity of context and constraints, while Claude Opus 4.7 and Gemini 3.1 Pro suggest looking inward at your immediate life goals or genuine curiosities. Together, they recommend moving away from abstract prompts toward concrete, actionable inquiries.
All 4 models agreed