دليلك الشامل إلى Claude | كل ما تحتاج لمعرفته عن كلود (للمبتدئين)
دليلك الشامل إلى Claude | كل ما تحتاج لمعرفته عن كلود (للمبتدئين)
I have spent over 1,000 hours inside Claude. I use it every day to build tools, run my business, and launch companies that make millions. Most people feel productive with AI, but they are barely scratching the surface. You might be using 5% of what the tool can actually do.
This guide shows you how to move from a basic user to someone who builds systems that run without any manual work. You will learn how to stop treating AI like a search engine and start treating it like a team of expert employees.
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Level 1: The Amateur – Basic Interaction
Amateurs treat Claude like a fancy Google search. They ask one question, get one answer, and close the tab. There is no memory and no long-term plan. It is like having a supercomputer but only using it to do basic math.
To move past this, you need to change how you prompt. Stop giving one-way commands and start a dialogue.
Prompting for Context
The biggest mistake beginners make is not giving enough info. Claude can only be as good as the context you provide. Instead of guessing what you want, tell Claude to get the facts first.
Use this prompt: “Before you answer, ask me any questions that you need to perform this task properly.”
This forces the AI to interview you. It finds the gaps in your request and fills them before it starts working. Your first output will be much better.
Improving Quality with Self-Correction
AI makes mistakes. Even the best models can hallucinate or miss a detail. You can fix this by making the AI check its own work.
Just say, “Check your work.” You will see it catch its own errors. It is a simple habit that saves you from publishing mistakes.
Level 2: The Regular – Building a Workspace
The regular user stops starting from scratch every time. They use “Projects” to give Claude a persistent memory. This turns a chat bot into a dedicated workspace for a specific role or client.
Setting Up Projects
Projects let you group your work. You can have one project for marketing, one for sales, and one for product development. This keeps the AI focused on the right goal.
To start, click “Create a new project” and name it after your role. Now, every chat in that project knows the target.
Creating a Master Prompt
A master prompt is a file that tells the AI everything about you. It lists your voice, your team a layout, the tools you use, and your goals. Instead of writing this yourself, let Claude help.
Try this prompt: “Interview me to build a master prompt for my role as a [Your Role].”
Claude will ask you a series of questions. Once you answer, it will give you a master prompt file. Upload this file into your project directory. Now, Claude remembers who you are every time you open the project.
Adding Support Files
Don’t stop at the prompt. Add actual data to your project. Upload your branding guides, past successful emails, or company process docs.
For example, if you make YouTube videos, upload your brand voice doc and old scripts you liked. Claude will use these as templates to write new outlines that actually sound like you.
Level 3: The Integrator – Connecting Tools and Workflows
An integrator stops copying and pasting. They connect Claude to the places where work actually happens. This means linking your email, calendar, and docs directly to the AI.
Connecting External Data
Claude has connectors for Gmail, Google Drive, Slack, and Notion. Once these are linked, you can stop jumping between tabs. You can simply tell Claude to “go get the email” or “search my drive.”
This allows you to run high-level checks on your business. You can ask it to scan Slack for the last week and give you a CEO-level summary of what is happening across the company.
Visuals and Interactive Artifacts
Claude can do more than write text. It can build graphs, bar charts, and mockups. It also creates “artifacts,” which are mini-apps with clickable buttons and sliders. This makes data much easier to understand.
If you have a long document, use “Composer.” It is like having a Google Doc inside the chat. You can edit the text and refine the output until it is perfect.
Browser Integration
Install the Claude Chrome extension. This lets you use the AI on any website. You can ask Claude to write instructions for a task and then execute those instructions directly on the page you are visiting.
Level 4: The Operator – Directing Autonomous Tasks
The operator stops being the doer and becomes the director. This is the “human in the loop” stage. You set up the system, and then you just review and approve the results.
Using System Prompts
System prompts are the real intellectual property of a modern company. They are the recipes for how work gets done. Instead of doing a task, you write a prompt that defines exactly how that task should be handled every single time.
Building Custom Skills
If you do a task more than three times a week, make it a “skill.” You can create a custom command, like /company-status, that triggers a complex workflow.
A company status skill might analyze your metrics, read employee updates, and give you a concise report. You type one command, and the AI does an hour of analysis in seconds.
Automated Scheduling
You can use tools like Co-work to run these tasks in the background. For example, you can schedule Claude to review your calendar and email every night at 8:00 PM. It can send you a message explaining exactly what tomorrow looks like. It is like having a chief of staff who never sleeps.
Level 5: The Builder – Creating Custom AI Tools and Apps
Builders use Claude to write code. They don’t just use the app; they ship software. This puts you in a tiny fraction of the population that creates their own tools.
Claude Code and Software
Claude Code lets you build custom dashboards and internal apps. You don’t need to be a pro programmer because English is the new coding language.
There are three ways to build here:
- Loops: Jobs that run on a server and talk to other APIs.
- Tools: Simple, one-off apps for a specific project.
- Apps: Full production software for long-term use.
Using Plan Mode
To save money and time, always use “Plan Mode.” Type /plan and dump your idea. Claude will ask questions and write a full plan for you to approve before it writes a single line of code. This prevents expensive mistakes and wasted tokens.
If you are away from your desk, use “Claude Code Remote.” You can connect to your terminal via your phone and keep coding while you are on the move.
Level 6: The Agent Orchestrator – Architecting Autonomous Systems
The orchestrator is the final level. Here, you build a machine that runs the machine. You move from being “in the loop” to being “on the loop.”
The Orchestrator Framework
Start with one main agent. This is your CEO or Chief of Staff agent. This agent doesn’t do the grunt work; it directs other agents.
Then, build specialized sub-agents. One might handle real estate deals, while another handles copywriting. The main agent communicates with these sub-agents to get the job done.
Chaining Skills and Quality Control
You can chain these skills together. An “Inbox Agent” might call a “Copywriting Agent,” which then uses a “Brand Voice Skill” to write an email.
To ensure quality, add a “Critique Agent.” The main agent sends the work to the critique agent first. The critique agent finds errors, sends it back for a rewrite, and only then does it reach you for final approval.
Final Thoughts
Moving from an amateur to an orchestrator is about habits. Most people just collect features without ever using them. To actually improve, pick one feature from this list and use it every day for 30 days.
Whether it is setting up your first Project or building a custom skill, the goal is to stop doing the manual work. Use Claude to build the systems that run your life and your business. If you want the full AI Company OS playbook, reach out for the guide to integrate these steps into your own business.



