Definition
A system prompt is the fixed, behind-the-scenes instruction set added to every AI chat that sets the AI’s role, tone, and rules before a customer types anything.
At a glance
- The customer never sees it; it is set once and applies silently to every message[1].
- It controls the AI’s persona, tone, detail level, and business rules, like topics to avoid[2].
- It differs from the user prompt, the question a customer types, which changes each time[3].
- Editing it is fast and cheap, no model retraining required[4].
Why it matters
The same AI can sound like a stiff lawyer or a friendly shop assistant depending entirely on its system prompt. It is your lever to keep the AI on-brand: greeting customers in your voice, sticking to your products, and politely declining off-topic or risky questions.
System prompt vs. customer question
The system prompt is standing instructions you write (“You are Acme Bakery’s support agent; be warm; never mention competitors”). The user prompt is whatever the customer asks (“Got gluten-free cake?”). The AI reads your instructions first, then answers within those guardrails[5].
Bottom line
A system prompt is the quiet rulebook that makes a generic AI sound like your business, with no code required.
References
- See the hidden rules behind AI. The Washington Post www.washingtonpost.com
- System Prompts vs User Prompts Design Patterns for LLM Apps. Tetrate tetrate.io
- The Difference Between System Messages and User Messages in Prompt Engineering. PromptHub www.prompthub.us
- Using the Messages API. Anthropic docs.anthropic.com
- Text generation guide. OpenAI developers.openai.com
Comments
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