23 Best Practices for Using Claude · Nathaniel Solace
Tutorial · Best Practices

23 Best
Practices
for Claude.

The patterns, habits, and mental models that separate casual users from people who build real infrastructure with AI.

Nathaniel Solace · ThoughtLeaderAI
The Problem

Most people use Claude
like a smarter Google.

They ask it a question. It gives an answer. They close the tab. This is like buying a sports car and only using it to idle in the driveway.

How most people use Claude
One-off questions
"Write me an email" (no context)
Starts from zero every session
Generic output that needs full rewrites
Closes after 10 minutes
What best practices unlock
Full projects built in a single session
Output that sounds exactly like you
Every session starts informed
Systems that run while you sleep
Infrastructure, not a shortcut
Part 1

How You Think
About Claude

Before you type a single prompt, the way you frame what Claude is determines everything that follows.

Practice 01
Treat Claude as infrastructure, not a tool.
Most people use Claude like a search engine or a faster Google Docs. The people who get real leverage use it as operating infrastructure — something the whole business runs on, not something you open when you need a quick answer.

The difference: when you open a session, you’re not starting from zero. You’re activating a system.
The Shift
Stop asking "what can I get Claude to do for me today?" and start asking "what system am I building that Claude powers?"
Practice 02
Separate what only you can do from what Claude can do.
You provide the creative spark, the strategic direction, and the final say on taste. Claude handles execution in between. This prevents two failure modes: under-delegating (doing work Claude could handle) and over-delegating (letting Claude make decisions only you should make).
You Own
Novel creative direction
Brand instinct and taste
Relationships and trust
Strategic pivots
Final approval on externals
Claude Handles
Building the system around your direction
Executing to your standards
Drafting communications for approval
Maintaining state and continuity
Running internals autonomously
Practice 03
Think in pipelines, not tasks.
When something comes up, your instinct shouldn’t be "complete the task." It should be: "Is this repeating? Is it automatable? Does it need a template? Does it belong in a system?"

Most people never ask question one. Make it your first question every time.
The Rule
If you do something twice, build the template. If you do it three times, build the system.
Part 2

How You Build
Context

Your context isn’t what you type into a chat. It’s a maintained system of files that Claude reads every time it activates.

Practices 04 – 06

The Context Trifecta

04
Engineer context as a product.
Maintain reference documents that carry context for you. Every session starts informed — not blank.
05
Build living documents.
Documents that accumulate intelligence. When Claude gets something wrong, document the correction. When a pattern emerges, codify it.
06
Use project codes as routing language.
One consistent ID system eliminates routing overhead everywhere it’s applied. Files, tasks, messages — all self-identifying.
The Pattern
The time you spend writing a reference document gets paid back in every session that doesn’t require re-orientation.
Part 3

How You Design
Skills

Skills are reusable instruction sets that tell Claude how to handle specific types of work. The depth of your skills directly determines the quality of your output.

Practices 07 – 09

Skills That Actually Work

07
Define a gold standard for what a skill should be.
Philosophy intro. First-run onboarding. Memory integration. Step-by-step workflow. Platform specs. Delivery format. Cross-skill handoffs. Rules with reasoning. Edge cases. A thin skill produces thin results.
08
Write skill descriptions as trigger systems, not summaries.
Include: a one-line philosophy, an exhaustive trigger phrase list, and an override instruction. Zero ambiguity. The skill fires when it should, every time.
09
Build skills with cross-skill integration in mind.
Skills hand off to each other. The output of one becomes the input of the next. Design skills as pipeline stages, not standalone tools.
Part 4

How You Design
Systems

Architecture decisions that make everything downstream work better. Or worse.

Practice 10
Three-layer architecture: Capture → Execute → Approve.
Each layer does exactly one thing and nothing else. Clear separation prevents every component from trying to do everything.
📱
Capture
Mobile interface. Voice notes, messages, tasks. It captures — nothing else.
📊
Command Center
Single source of truth. All projects, tasks, state. It stores — nothing else.
Execution Agent
Handles internals autonomously. Drafts externals for approval. It executes — nothing else.
Practices 11 – 13

Design Principles

11
Separate personal instance from product source from sandbox.
If you build something you use AND sell, separate the instances from the start. Personal data never touches product source. It’s impossible to unseparate them later.
12
Use HTML + JavaScript as a portable database.
No server, no database, no backend — but also no sync dependencies, no subscriptions, no downtime. Choose the simplest architecture that supports your actual use case.
13
Design approval loops into external actions.
Automation drafts. You approve. Nothing touches another person without your sign-off. Design the approval gate into the system from the beginning — not as an afterthought.
Part 5

How You Prompt

The best prompts aren’t prompts at all. They’re maintained reference documents that encode every standard and preference.

14
Write reference documents, not prompts.
Your most effective "prompts" aren’t single messages. They’re maintained documents: character bibles, operating guides, project rules, context files. You don’t re-explain. You reference.
15
Specify what to do AND what to never do.
Positive constraints are necessary. Negative constraints are what prevent Claude from drifting toward generic output. "Hard No’s" matter more than you think.
16
Use extreme specificity for visual and brand work.
Vague prompts produce vague outputs that require correction. Front-load the specificity. Hex codes, checklists, negative constraints, structured descriptions.
17
Build incrementally. Confirm structure before filling content.
Skeleton first. Confirm it’s right. Then fill it in. Most AI mistakes happen at the "I’ll just do it all at once" stage. Structure first is faster than rebuild later.
Part 6

How You Create
Continuity

Sessions end. Context disappears. Unless you build the bridges that carry intelligence from one session to the next.

18
End-of-day debriefs as institutional memory.
The last 10 minutes of a session spent on a debrief saves the first 30 minutes of the next one. Log every deliverable, every decision, every blocker. Written collaboratively with Claude.
19
Use a versioned file system.
Every evolving asset gets versioned. Old versions go to an archive — never deleted. Combined with a canonical source-of-truth folder, you get an immune system against file duplication.
20
Sync context files across interfaces.
If you use Claude in multiple places — chat, API, CLI, agents — design a shared context layer that all of them read from. Otherwise you have multiple AIs with diverging views of your system.
Part 7

The Strategic
Layer

Leverage doesn’t mean doing things faster. It means one unit of your effort produces many units of output.

21
Treat Claude as a leverage point, not a speed multiplier.
Skills run without explanation every time. Agents process tasks while you sleep. One piece of content becomes a full distribution suite. The command center gives system-wide visibility in one click. This is qualitatively different from "Claude writes my emails faster."
22
Audit and systematize your own processes.
Define the gold standard. Measure everything against it. Fix the gaps. Periodic audits beat perpetual drift. Apply systems thinking to the system itself.
23
Document your own operating protocol.
If your AI operating knowledge only lives in your head, it doesn’t scale. Document it. Maintain it. Version it. Make it a living product, not a one-time setup task.
The Through-Line

Build systems
that run without you.

Then step in only where you’re irreplaceable. The infrastructure captures, routes, executes, and reports. You provide direction, taste, and final approval. The AI gets smarter with every session.

The Formula
Infrastructure captures. Automation executes. You approve.
Nathaniel Solace · ThoughtLeaderAI
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