The Top 3 Things You Need to Know to Train Your AI (Loan Officer Guide)

For Loan Officers Who Want More Applications, Referrals, and Deals

By Chris Johnstone
www.loaibook.com

How to Set Up ChatGPT, Control Your Outputs, and Position Yourself to Be Recommended by AI

If you are using AI but not getting strong output, the problem is usually not the AI.

The problem is how most people use it.

A lot of loan officers ask AI one simple question, get a weak answer, and assume the tool is limited. In reality, AI becomes powerful when you train it properly, give it the right instructions, and use it consistently inside your business.

This guide walks you through the three biggest things you need to do to get better results from your AI.

Step 1: Personalize Your AI

The first step is to make your AI sound like you.

If your AI does not understand your tone, your audience, your style, and your business, the output will feel generic. That leads to more editing, more frustration, and weaker content.

Think of AI like a new team member. If you hired someone today, you would not expect them to instantly write like you, speak like you, or understand your business without training. AI works the same way.

What Your AI Needs to Know About You

Start by teaching your AI the basics:

Who you are

Explain your role in your business. For example, are you a loan officer, branch manager, team leader, mortgage advisor, or marketing professional in the mortgage space?

Who you serve

Describe your ideal audience. This may include first-time homebuyers, move-up buyers, refinancers, real estate agents, investors, or past clients.

How you communicate

Tell your AI how you like to write and speak. Do you prefer short sentences? A direct tone? A friendly style? Educational content? Strong calls to action?

What matters to your brand

Share your values, brand voice, and any important messaging rules. If you care about being truthful, simple, educational, and action-oriented, say that clearly.

What to Give Your AI

To improve output, feed your AI examples of your real work, such as:

  • emails you have written

  • social media posts

  • text messages

  • scripts

  • newsletters

  • landing page copy

  • blog posts

  • appointment-setting messages

The more quality examples you provide, the more your AI will start to reflect your actual voice.

Add Clear Instructions

You should also give your AI clear rules.

Do:

  • write clearly

  • keep things concise

  • focus on action

  • sound confident and useful

Do not:

  • use fluff

  • sound robotic

  • make things too long

  • use weak calls to action

When you personalize your AI properly, your results improve fast because the output starts closer to what you actually want.

1. Train Your AI

Most people never do this step.
This is why their results are weak.

Do This:

Click your profile (bottom left)

Click Settings

Open ChatGPT Settings

Click “Personalization” and then “Custom Instructions”
This is where you define your business.

Add Your AI Profile

Copy and fill this out:

My name is [NAME] I am a mortgage loan officer that specializes in [Insert loan and client types, first time home buyers, FHA etc.]

• NMLS #: [NMLS#]
• Location: [City, State]
• Company: [Company Name]
• Website: [https://]
• Online 1003 / app link: [https://
]
• Booking link: [https://]
• Google Profile: [https://
]
• Main socials: [Facebook @___ | Instagram @___ | LinkedIn @___]

Tone I prefer: [Warm professional | Direct expert | Conversational advisor | High energy]

Never use hype or fake claims. Always compliant. If needed say:
“All loans subject to approval. Equal Housing Lender.”

When I ask for marketing, reply ready-to-send (SMS first, then email, then social).

Save.

What This Does

Every response is now:

  • Personalized

  • Localized

  • More persuasive

  • More relevant

Step 2: Use a Better Prompt Structure

The second step is to stop giving weak prompts.

Most people type something simple like:

“Write me a Facebook post about mortgage rates.”

That is too vague.

AI performs much better when you give it structured input. The clearer your prompt, the better the output.

The 5-Step Prompt Framework

1. Role

Tell the AI who it is supposed to be.

Example:
Act as an expert mortgage loan officer helping homeowners understand refinance opportunities.

2. Goal

Tell the AI the outcome you want.

Example:
The goal is to generate inbound messages from homeowners who may benefit from refinancing.

3. Task

Tell the AI exactly what to do.

Example:
Write a short Facebook post with a strong opening hook, simple explanation, and a call to action asking people to message me.

4. Info

Give the AI context.

Example:

  • audience is homeowners in my local market

  • tone should be direct and helpful

  • avoid hype

  • keep it simple

  • focus on education and action

5. Tools

Tell the AI what resources, format, or output style to use.

Example:

  • use short paragraphs

  • make it easy to read on mobile

  • include a CTA at the end

  • keep it under 150 words

Why This Works

When you give AI role, goal, task, info, and tools, you remove ambiguity. Instead of guessing, the AI gets a clear assignment.

That usually leads to:

  • better quality

  • less editing

  • stronger marketing

  • more relevant output

  • faster execution

Use the 5-Step Prompt Framework

Most prompts fail because they are vague.

Use this instead:

The Framework

  1. ROLE

  2. OBJECTIVE

  3. CONTEXT

  4. INSTRUCTIONS

  5. TASK

Example

ROLE:
Top 1% loan officer

OBJECTIVE:
Generate conversations that lead to applications

CONTEXT:
I am a loan officer in [CITY] specializing in first-time buyers

INSTRUCTIONS:
Keep it short, natural, and non-salesy

TASK:
Write a text message to re-engage my database


What This Fixes

  • Generic responses

  • Robotic tone

  • Low conversion


What This Creates

  • Real conversations

  • Better engagement

  • More appointments


Step 3: Use Prompt Stacking

Once you get an answer, do not stop there.

This is where most users lose momentum.

They ask for one draft and accept it too early.


Example of Prompt Stacking

First prompt:
Write a Facebook post for homeowners who may want to refinance.

Second prompt:
Make the hook stronger and more curiosity-driven.

Third prompt:
Now make the tone sound more like a trusted local mortgage advisor.

Fourth prompt:
Add a clearer CTA that encourages people to send me a message.

Fifth prompt:
Give me three alternate versions for testing.


What This Improves

Prompt stacking helps you refine:

  • tone

  • clarity

  • structure

  • persuasion

  • length

  • call to action

You do not need perfect results in one shot. You need a good first draft and a system for improving it.


Step 4: Automate Repeatable Tasks

Once your AI is trained and your prompts are stronger, the next step is automation.

This is where AI starts creating real leverage in your business.

Most loan officers use AI once in a while. The real opportunity is to use AI for repeatable tasks that happen every week.


Examples of Tasks You Can Automate

Lead generation research

Have AI look for common questions people are asking online about mortgages, refinancing, or home buying.

Market updates

Use AI to help draft weekly local market summaries for your database and referral partners.

Content creation

Generate blog posts, emails, social posts, video scripts, and newsletter content on a regular schedule.

Follow-up support

Use AI to help write replies to common questions and inbound messages.

Pipeline reviews

Use AI to summarize activity, track opportunities, and identify follow-up gaps.


Why Automation Matters

Automation saves time, but more importantly, it creates consistency.

Consistency is what builds:

  • authority

  • trust

  • visibility

  • conversations

  • pipeline

When AI handles repeatable work, you free yourself up for the tasks that actually require you, like calls, strategy, and closing business.


Step 5: Use the Right AI Tools for the Right Jobs

Not every AI tool is meant for the same task.

To get the best results, it helps to use the right category of tool for the job.


Writing and Strategy Tools

Best for:

  • blog posts

  • emails

  • social captions

  • scripts

  • research

  • brainstorming


Design Tools

Useful for:

  • social graphics

  • lead magnets

  • ads

  • visual brand assets


Video Tools

Helpful for:

  • short-form videos

  • reels

  • talking-head content

  • educational clips


Coding and Technical Tools

Support:

  • websites

  • landing pages

  • automations

  • technical implementation


Step 6: Start Small and Build Momentum

You do not need to automate your whole business today.

Start with one clear improvement.

For example:

  • personalize your AI with your bio and writing examples

  • use the 5-step prompt framework for your next email

  • build one weekly content task

  • refine one social post using prompt stacking

Small wins create momentum.

Once you see better output, you will start finding more places where AI can save time and improve performance.


Step 7: Think Like a Business Owner, Not a Casual User

The biggest mindset shift is this:

Stop using AI like a toy.

Start using it like a team member.

That means:

  • training it

  • guiding it

  • correcting it

  • assigning it tasks

  • improving its output over time

Loan officers who learn to do this will have a major advantage because they will be able to create more content, respond faster, stay in front of their audience, and operate with more consistency than the average person in their market.


Final Thoughts

If you want better results from AI, focus on these three things first:

1. Personalize your AI

Teach it your voice, your tone, your audience, and your standards

2. Use better prompts

Give it structure with role, goal, task, info, and tools

3. Automate repeatable work

Turn AI into a system that helps your business run more consistently


This is how you go from getting random answers to building a real advantage with AI.

The loan officers who learn this now will be in a much stronger position going forward, because AI is not just becoming a helpful tool. It is becoming part of how modern business gets done.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *