How To Structure Prompts
Artemis is designed to understand natural language, but providing clear context in your prompt helps ensure accurate and relevant results.
Below are simple guidelines to structure effective prompts.
🎯 Specify the question or answer when needed
When referring to specific survey content, clearly mention:
The question text or reporting alias
The answer label text or reporting alias
Instead of:
“Show results for this.”
Use:
“Show results for Question : Overall Satisfaction.”
“Analyze responses where ‘Very Dissatisfied’ was selected.”
“Create a chart for the ‘Service Quality’ question.”
This allows Artemis to accurately locate and analyze the correct data.
🧠 Use context when an item is already selected
If you have already selected a specific question, theme or report view in the interface, Artemis automatically uses that context.
In this case, there is no need to repeat the question name.
If Question 3 is currently selected, you can simply write:
“Show a bar chart for this question.”
“Summarize these results.”
“Analyze sentiment in these responses.”
Artemis understands the active context and applies the request accordingly.
📊 Be clear about the output you Want
Specify the format when relevant:
“Create a bar chart…”
“Generate an HTML table…”
“Provide an executive summary…”
“Compare results in a structured table…”
Clear output instructions help Artemis deliver results in the most useful format, there are no limits on what you can output.
📅 Add timeframes, segments or filters when relevant
If your analysis depends on a specific period or group, include it in the prompt.
Examples:
“Compare satisfaction between Q1 and Q2.”
“Show results for the Marketing department only.”
“Analyze responses from the last 30 days.”
“Analyze responses where ‘Very Dissatisfied’ was selected filtered by United States of the "Country" question.”
✅ Keep Prompts Clear and Specific
You do not need to use technical syntax. Natural language works best.
Good example:
“Generate a trend chart showing NPS over the past 6 months.”
Avoid vague prompts such as:
“Show data.”
“Analyze this.”
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