AI guide. Growth with your customers - Use AI as a trusted business advisor

Your business can grow with your existing customer base. AI Context Guide is a practical guide for people who already have a product, customers, and use AI for business advices. This guide helps you prepare the key inputs AI actually needs to be useful: your ICP, segments, funnels, metrics, and the real language your customers use. Instead of asking AI vague questions and getting vague advice back, you build clear context file that turns AI into an assistant for offers and growth ideas.

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Hi Product Hunt, I made this because I kept seeing the same pattern: founders and small business owners ask ChatGPT for help with sales, marketing, ICP, or positioning, and get answers that sound smart but are still too generic to use. The issue is usually not the model. It is the missing business context. So I turned that problem into a practical guide. On the business side it helps to define the core inputs AI actually needs to be useful for a business: who your best customers are, which segments matter most, where your funnel is breaking, which metrics you are trying to improve, and how customers describe their problems in their own words. On the AI side it has a pre-defined templates and guides that allows to get real business advices based on the context and real world examples The goal is simple: less vague prompting, less wasted time, and more useful outputs for offers, ad copy, scripts, and growth ideas. This is built for founders, operators, and teams who already have some traction and want AI to help with real business decisions, not just generate generic advice, but real growth ideas. If you try it, I would especially love to know: - which part of the context-building process feels most unclear today - where AI gives you the most generic answers right now - whether a guide like this is enough, or if you would want templates, examples, or a more interactive version Happy to answer questions here.

really like how you framed this around context over prompts, feels like a smart shift from the usual "better prompt hacks" angle. the ICP and customer language piece is genuinely useful.

 Appreciate your feedback. Did you try any similar approaches?