In all the boardroom chats I’ve had about AI, one thing always comes up: “How can we make AI more accurate when dealing with clients?” As a Salesforce Practice leader and in-charge of strategic innovation, I’ve noticed that even the most advanced models can falter without proper direction. When it comes to Salesforce Agentforce (Salesforce’s AI-driven agent platform), the key to accuracy isn’t about using larger models or having more data. It’s about having better prompts.
Just a few months back, our teams started experimenting with generative AI to make customer service run more smoothly. We were excited about the possibilities, but we also saw some potential downsides, like responses that felt canned, inaccurate information, or a tone that just didn’t fit. This is when it hit us that crafting prompts for AI isn’t just a minor technical adjustment; it’s a strategic skill grounded in some unexpected science and a century’s worth of research on how humans and machines interact.
The story actually begins in 1966, with MIT’s Joseph Weizenbaum unleashing ELIZA, a pioneering chatbot. ELIZA employed basic pattern-matching techniques to pose as a psychotherapist, tricking users into believing they were chatting with a real person, despite lacking any genuine grasp of language. Weizenbaum was taken aback by how readily folks attributed human qualities to his creation. ELIZA imparted a vital lesson: the commands we feed machines dictate their behavior entirely.
Let’s jump to the present day and our sophisticated large language models. These models can whip up essays, troubleshoot code, and even write emails, but they need our direction to do so. Cognitive psychologist George A. Miller famously demonstrated that humans can juggle roughly seven bits of information in their working memory at any given time, give or take two. This underscores the fact that attention and clarity are precious commodities in any exchange. This principle also holds true when we’re designing prompts: bombarding the AI with unclear, complicated instructions overwhelms its capacity for logical thought.
So, we figured out some cool ways to make Agentforce smarter, and you can use these tricks too.





