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