- AI Spotlight
- Posts
- 👨⚕️ Doctor or Prompt Engineer?
👨⚕️ Doctor or Prompt Engineer?
ALSO: Tricks Inside for Killer Images?

Welcome, AI Explorers

🧠 TLDR
A doctor using ChatGPT mid-consultation without consent? That’s just the start.
This week’s issue breaks down that viral medical moment, plus:
📦 A step-by-step system to sell AI prompt packs—no budget or tech skills needed
🖼️ The golden rules of writing image prompts that actually work (with do’s & don’ts)
⚡ OpenAI hits a $300B valuation, and ChatGPT breaks the internet with Studio Ghibli fan art & many more
It’s a full-stack AI update—from controversy to cash.
Read time: 4 minutes
Important: To ensure you get my newsletter, please add [email protected] to your contact list.
On My Radar
FUTURE IN AI
Doctor Using ChatGPT During Appointment Raises Eyebrows
A woman in Perth said she was shocked when her doctor copied her personal medical information into ChatGPT during a consultation. The AI was used to help interpret her blood test results, but the patient saw it as unprofessional and said she won’t go back to that clinic. This small incident has led to a bigger debate on how far AI should go inside the exam room.
Snapshot:
The doctor copied and pasted the patient’s blood results, symptoms, and age into ChatGPT during the visit.
The patient was visibly uncomfortable and later spoke publicly, calling it a "total breach of trust."
The case has sparked public concern over how AI is being used without consent in private health settings.
What is the underlying point?
We trust doctors with our most personal details—our health, our bodies, our lives. When that trust is mixed with AI tools we don’t fully understand, it shifts the power dynamic. It's not just about using new technology; it's about how that use can quietly make patients feel watched, not heard. If AI becomes a silent partner in the room, we need to ask: who’s really listening to us—our doctor, or a chatbot?
POLL: Do you think it's okay for doctors to use ChatGPT during your medical consultation?Participate and click on the option below. Results in next issue |
From our partner
📰 Still using boring newsletters? Morning Brew brings you daily business and tech insights with a twist—sharp takes, bold headlines, and zero fluff. Over 4 million people read it before their first coffee.
If you're someone who loves this AI newsletter, you’ll probably enjoy Morning Brew’s razor-sharp briefings that keep your edge sharp at work (and give you something clever to say in meetings).
Check out Morning Brew here
The gold standard of business news
Morning Brew is transforming the way working professionals consume business news.
They skip the jargon and lengthy stories, and instead serve up the news impacting your life and career with a hint of wit and humor. This way, you’ll actually enjoy reading the news—and the information sticks.
Best part? Morning Brew’s newsletter is completely free. Sign up in just 10 seconds and if you realize that you prefer long, dense, and boring business news—you can always go back to it.
Make Money using AI
Strategy Deep Dive: Make Money Selling AI-Generated Prompt Packs on Teachable & Prompt Marketplaces
In this guide, I’ll walk you through a repeatable playbook to generate income by compiling and selling AI-generated prompts. This method requires no upfront investment, no prior tech skills, and leverages tools like ChatGPT, Leonardo.ai, Teachable, and PromptBase. Ideal for beginners looking to create digital products once and sell infinitely. Follow these steps to replicate the system.

1. Set Up a Google Doc to Compile Prompts
Create a Google Doc: Go to Google Docs, log in, and create a new document.
Name it something relevant, like “100+ Stunning AI Prompts for Leonardo with Resell Rights.”
Use a bold, large title at the top. Add placeholder sections for image examples.
2. Collect High-Performing Prompts from Leonardo.ai
Create an account on Leonardo.ai (free to start).
Browse the public gallery of user-created images.
For each image:
Copy the prompt used to generate it.
Download the image as a visual reference.
Paste the prompt and image into your Google Doc.
Repeat this until you have at least 100 unique prompts.
3. Create Your Digital Product
Download the Google Doc as a PDF (File > Download > PDF Document).
Now you have a sellable digital product: a bundle of AI image prompts with visual samples.
4. Sell on Teachable as a Digital Download
Go to Teachable and create a free account.
Navigate to “Digital Downloads” > Click “Create”.
Upload your PDF prompt pack.
Set a price (start with $9.99 to $29.99, depending on how niche or valuable the prompts are).
Add a cover image (use Canva to design a digital product mockup).
5. Optional: Generate Unique Prompts with Claude or ChatGPT
To offer original value, use ChatGPT or Claude to generate custom prompts:
Example prompt:
“Generate 10 ultra-detailed prompts for Leonardo.ai to create surreal, cinematic landscapes.”
Test the prompts in Leonardo.ai to confirm output quality.
Add them to your PDF for bonus value.
6. List on Prompt Marketplaces (PromptBase, Promptrr)
Create accounts on PromptBase and Promptrr.
Upload your prompt pack as a listing:
Add an engaging title like:
“100 Leonardo Prompts for Fantasy Concept Art – With Resell Rights”Include 3–4 preview images and a short product description.
7. Design a Professional Cover Using Canva
Visit Canva and select an eBook or digital product cover template.
Customize with your title and AI-generated image samples.
Download as PNG and upload it to Teachable and the marketplaces.
8. Promote on Pinterest, Instagram & Etsy
Use Canva to create Pinterest pins or Instagram carousels that show example prompts and results.
Drive traffic to your Teachable or PromptBase link.
Optionally, list the prompt pack on Etsy (as a digital file) to reach a wider audience.
9. Bonus: Build a Paid Subscription on Skool
Go to Skool.com and create a community group around AI art.
Offer monthly prompt packs as part of a $9–$19/month subscription.
Promote this to your followers or through your Teachable/Pinterest pages.
10. Expand: Add New Packs for Different Tools
Once your Leonardo pack is live, create others:
MidJourney prompts for futuristic cityscapes
ChatGPT prompts for business use cases
Canva templates or AI avatar styling prompts
Sell individually or as a bundle.
Tools You’ll Need:
Leonardo.ai – Image prompt generation
Google Docs – To compile and format the product
Canva – Cover design and visuals
Teachable – Product listing and delivery
PromptBase/Promptrr – Prompt marketplaces for extra income
Pinterest/Instagram – Organic traffic for promotion
Summary:
By packaging AI-generated prompts with visual examples and selling them on digital marketplaces and your own store, you can build a low-maintenance income stream. The beauty is in the one-time creation and infinite resale potential.
AI Canvas
✨ Prompt Mastery: The Ultimate Do’s and Don’ts for AI Image Generation
Creating stunning visuals with AI isn't magic—it's all about the prompt. Think of prompts as the paintbrush for your AI canvas. The better your prompt, the more control you have over the art.
Let’s break down the essential rules of prompt writing into simple, actionable tips 👇
✅ DOs: What Makes a Prompt Great
1. Be Descriptive and Clear
🟢 Use vivid, specific language.
Instead of: "a nice forest"
Try: "a dense pine forest at dawn, mist rising between the trees, golden light breaking through branches"
Why it works: The AI understands what, where, and how it should look.
2. Use This Prompt Framework
📌 Think of this formula:
Subject + Scene/Setting + Style + Lighting/Details + Modifiers
Example:
“A futuristic train gliding through a neon-lit cityscape at night, vaporwave aesthetic, dramatic lighting, wide-angle view”
3. Add Visual Elements and Composition
Include camera techniques, artistic mediums, or viewpoints.
🔹 “Overhead view”, “shot with 50mm lens”, “digital painting”, “charcoal sketch”, “depth of field”
These anchor your prompt visually, helping the AI replicate specific aesthetics.
4. Set the Mood or Emotion
🧠 Add words that signal a feeling or atmosphere:
“mysterious”, “serene”, “chaotic”, “romantic”, “haunting”
5. Use Style Descriptions
🎨 Style tags elevate your visuals.
Examples:
“Baroque architecture”, “vaporwave palette”, “cyberpunk street scene”, “minimalist zen painting”
The more precise the aesthetic, the better the results.
6. Control the Layout with Aspect Ratios
✂️ Use aspect ratios like:
1:1 – Square (portraits, icons)
16:9 – Wide (landscapes, cinematic)
9:16 – Vertical (mobile formats)
7. Leverage Light and Time
🕰️ Light changes everything.
Use phrases like:
“golden hour lighting”, “moonlit night”, “harsh noon light”, “soft candle glow”
8. Use Numbers Instead of General Plurals
🔢 Say “three wolves” or “a pair of shoes” instead of “wolves” or “shoes” to remove ambiguity.
9. Include Negative Prompts
🚫 Want to exclude something? Just say it.
Example: “a peaceful meadow, no people, no buildings, no text”
10. Iterate Intelligently
Use re-roll features or regenerate with slight changes.
Tweak style, lighting, or subject until you get the desired output.
❌ DON’Ts: Common Mistakes That Confuse AI
1. Don’t Be Vague
❌ “a cool photo”
✅ “a hyper-realistic photo of a biker riding through foggy mountains, muted color palette, overcast sky”
Ambiguity = unpredictability. Be crystal clear.
2. Don’t Stuff Keywords
🔴 Too many adjectives can clutter meaning.
Use only the most important descriptors that serve your concept.
3. Don’t Use Filler or Politeness
❌ “Can you please draw a picture of…”
✅ “A majestic dragon perched atop a rocky cliff, roaring into a stormy sky”
AI doesn’t need manners. Be direct.
4. Don’t Forget Format Control
Missing ratios = generic shape. Use aspect ratios for:
Posters
Reels/Shorts
Wallpapers
Thumbnails
5. Don’t Rely on Subjective Words
❌ “a beautiful house”
✅ “a Victorian-style mansion with ornate iron balconies and stained glass windows”
Use visual cues, not opinions.
6. Don’t Expect Realism Without Specifying It
Use cues like:
“photorealistic”, “4K render”, “high-resolution”, “textured skin details”, “shot on DSLR”
7. Don’t Use Conflicting Styles
⚠️ “Pencil sketch + digital oil painting + neon + watercolor”
Pick 1–2 consistent styles to avoid confusion.
8. Don’t Overdo Chaos Unless You Want Randomness
Chaos introduces wild variation. Use low values (e.g., --c 10) for clean results, higher ones (e.g., --c 80) for exploratory or abstract concepts.
🔁 Keep a few go-to versions handy, and just swap the bold parts.
/imagine A [character or object] in a [environment], with [lighting], [style], --ar [aspect ratio]
Want it as a one pager guide? Download here
Quick Bytes
Anthropic and Databricks have signed a $100 million deal to integrate Claude AI models into enterprise data tools, aiming to help companies build smarter, more reliable AI agents. The move reflects growing pressure on AI startups to turn hype into revenue as they challenge Big Tech’s dominance.
OpenAI has raised $40 billion in a funding round led by SoftBank, pushing its valuation to $300 billion and making it one of the world’s most valuable private companies. The funding will support OpenAI’s AGI research, infrastructure expansion, and the “Stargate” supercomputing project with Oracle and SoftBank.
AI startup Staircase Studios is reshaping Hollywood by producing low-budget, AI-assisted films that still rely heavily on human creativity, blending technology with traditional filmmaking. Its debut project, “The Woman with Red Hair,” uses computer-generated visuals but employs writers, actors, and directors, aiming to speed up production without replacing talent.
A viral “Ghibli-style” image generation tool helped push ChatGPT’s weekly active users past 150 million for the first time, causing temporary outages and delays due to server strain. Despite user excitement, the trend has reignited copyright concerns as Studio Ghibli’s distinct style is mimicked by AI-generated content.
Until next time
When doctors copy-paste your diagnosis into a chatbot, and AI becomes your side hustle partner, it’s clear—we’re no longer watching the AI shift happen. We’re living in it. Let me know by replying to this email
Until next time, stay curious and keep exploring!
Last issue’s poll: What do you think about GPT-4o image generator ?
🟢 AI will replace many visual jobs like stock photography and basic design.- 100% |
🔵 There will still be demand for real photographers and designers—just in different ways.- 0% |
You're receiving this email because you subscribed to AI Spotlight or are part of a group interested in AI. If you'd prefer not to receive these updates, you can unsubscribe at any time.
How was today's newsletter |
Reply