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The short version

Every useful Mibyan session starts with a goal. You write the request, Mibyan creates an output, and you keep refining it until it is ready to use.
1

Sign in and open the workspace

Open Mibyan and sign in with the available account option. Once you are inside, start from the main composer or an existing conversation.
2

Choose the output you want

Decide whether you need a document, presentation, spreadsheet, HTML page, website, or strategic answer. Naming the format early helps Mibyan pick the right path.
3

Write a complete first request

Include the audience, language, tone, length, market, and required sections. If you are not sure, ask Mibyan to interview you before creating the final output.
4

Review the preview

Look at the result as a draft. Check structure, accuracy, missing sections, tone, formatting, and whether the output matches your goal.
5

Ask for precise edits

Use direct feedback such as “make the executive summary shorter”, “add a risk table”, or “turn this into a 10-slide investor deck”.
6

Export or reuse

When the result is ready, export it or use it as context for the next output in the same conversation.

Strong prompt examples

Investor deck

Create a 12-slide investor pitch deck for an Oman-based parcel delivery app. The audience is seed investors. Include the problem, solution, market, business model, traction assumptions, financial model, go-to-market plan, team slide, and funding ask.

Feasibility study

Write a detailed feasibility study for a specialty coffee shop in Muscat. Include startup costs, monthly operating costs, target customers, competitor analysis, pricing, risks, and a 90-day opening plan.

Landing page

Build a responsive landing page for a legal consulting service. Use a calm professional tone, explain the services clearly, include FAQs, and add a contact section.

KPI spreadsheet

Create a monthly KPI sheet for a B2B sales team with 20 rows. Include target, actual result, achievement percentage, owner, risk level, and executive notes.

What to include in every serious request

  • Outcome: what the final output should be.
  • Audience: who will read or use it.
  • Context: company, market, sector, region, or project background.
  • Format: document, deck, table, page, website, or summary.
  • Length: number of pages, slides, sections, rows, or words.
  • Tone: formal, analytical, persuasive, concise, premium, friendly, or executive.
  • Constraints: budget, deadline, local regulations, brand direction, required sources, or business assumptions.

A weak prompt versus a strong prompt

Write a business plan.

First-run checklist

Before exporting your first result, confirm:
  • The title and sections match your goal.
  • The output uses the right language and tone.
  • The numbers, names, and claims are reasonable.
  • The most important audience question is answered early.
  • The result has a clear next step: send, present, revise, publish, or export.
If the first output is close but not perfect, do not start over. Ask for one focused revision at a time. Iteration is usually faster and produces a stronger final result.