Stop clicking 'New Chat' in ChatGPT — staying in the same conversation gets you better answers

ChatGPT Image
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

For the longest time, I had one unbreakable habit whenever I opened ChatGPT. I’d immediately click New Chat regardless of the conversation. It didn't matter if I was writing an email or planning a family vacation, every single conversation started from scratch.

But after using ChatGPT every day for almost three years, I do the exact opposite. Just as you don't need to start a fresh sheet of notebook paper for every journal entry, you can often stay in the same conversation within ChatGPT. One caveat, of course, is if you are switching topics. But other than that, I've noticed the quality of ChatGPT’s responses is noticeably better because I keep the conversation going. Doing so is one of the absolute simplest ways to get more useful, nuanced answers without having to write massive, multi-paragraph prompts.

Here’s why it works so well.

Latest Videos From

ChatGPT thrives on context (and a warm-up)

ChatGPT

(Image credit: ChatGPT / John Brandon)

Think of ChatGPT as a coworker you're asking for help on a project. The first time you talk, you have to explain everything: what you’re working on, the tone you're going for, what you’ve already tried and what you’re ultimately hoping to accomplish. But after you’ve been collaborating for a while, you don’t need to repeat the backstory. You just ask your question.

Large language models like ChatGPT work in a remarkably similar way. As a conversation grows, the AI builds out its "context window," a working memory of everything you’ve already discussed in that specific chat thread. That means you can ask follow-up questions, pivot directions or refine an idea without ever having to re-establish the baseline.

That means, instead of writing a bulky prompt when you want to tweak the plan, you can simply fire off:

"What if it rains on day two?" "Can you make the dinner options cheaper?" "What would you swap out if we only had two days?"

The AI remembers the kids, the seafood and the Boston focus. The interaction becomes much more natural.

My prompts have actually gotten shorter

I save all my chats, which means rather than opening a new chat, I circle back to old chats and continue the conversation. The biggest surprise I've found from this workflow is that when you stay in the same chat, many of your follow-up prompts only need to be a sentence or two because ChatGPT already deeply understands the framework of the project. This means using less tokens and reducing the possibility of hitting usage limits as quickly.

For example, when I’m working on code, I might start by discussing the core concept. Once that's established, I don't need to write a new prompt explaining edits. I just ask it to stress-test my work, suggest tweaks or point out potential areas for improvement that I may have missed. Each response builds on the foundation of the last, rather than starting over from zero.

Shift from 'search engine' to 'collaboration'

A close-up of someone holding their phone with a search bar superimposed above it

(Image credit: Getty Images)

I've mentioned why ChatGPT and Google should not be used the same way. One of the biggest shifts with continuing the conversation is that it takes away the one-time transaction of a Google-style search.

Rather than asking ChatGPT one question, getting one answer and moving on, the AI becomes an ongoing coworker ready to handle the next aspect of the project.

By the end of a back and forth conversation sequence, ChatGPT has a far better, more multidimensional understanding of what I’m trying to accomplish than it ever could have gleaned from one initial prompt. Often, it's the third or fourth response in a chain that yields the gold.

When you actually should start a new chat

Let me be clear about one thing: keeping every conversation in the same chat is a terrible idea. Keeping a seamless workflow doesn’t mean every conversation should become a never-ending megathread. Eventually, the context window gets too crowded, and the AI can lose the plot. A clean slate can be incredibly helpful — I’ve just learned not to use one automatically.

I still start a fresh chat when:

I’m switching to a completely unrelated topic. (Don't mix your weekly meal prep with a coding project).

I want to compare answers. If I need an unbiased take, I don't want earlier context influencing the response.

I’m running head-to-head tests or experimenting with wildly different prompting approaches.

The conversation has become so long that it feels unfocused. (If the AI starts bringing up ideas from 40 prompts ago that are no longer relevant, it's time to hit refresh).

A quick note on 'Memory' vs. Context

ChatGPT memory notification

(Image credit: ChatGPT)

If you’ve enabled ChatGPT’s relatively new "Memory" feature, it might remember certain overarching preferences across all your conversations, such as how you prefer formatting or recurring details about your life.

But that is fundamentally different from the deep context inside an individual chat. Think of Memory as ChatGPT remembering who you are, while an ongoing chat helps it remember what you are working on right now. It's that immediate, project-specific back-and-forth that leads to hyper-relevant answers.

Final thoughts

I encourage you to give this a try for yourself. Open one of your existing ChatGPT conversations right now and ask a follow-up question instead of starting a new chat. Compare the depth of that answer with what you get when you paste the exact same question into a fresh conversation. You might be surprised by how much the extra context changes the game.

You may just discover that before you instinctively click New Chat, pausing and asking yourself: Am I actually starting something totally new — or am I continuing the same thought?

If it’s the latter, staying put might just be the easiest way to instantly upgrade your AI outputs. Let me know your thoughts and share your own workflow in the comments.

Follow Amanda Caswell and stay ahead of the AI curve

Google News

Follow Tom's Guide on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our up-to-date news, analysis, and reviews in your feeds. Subscribe to Tom's Guide on YouTube and follow us on TikTok. Finally, you can visit our dedicated Tom's Guide Savings Squad hub for expert help on getting the best products for less.


More from Tom's Guide

Amanda Caswell
AI Editor

Amanda Caswell is the AI Editor at Tom's Guide and one of today’s leading voices in AI and technology.

A celebrated contributor to various news outlets, her sharp insights and relatable storytelling have earned her a loyal readership. Amanda’s work has been recognized with prestigious honors, including outstanding contribution to media.

Known for her ability to bring clarity to even the most complex topics, Amanda seamlessly blends innovation and creativity, inspiring readers to embrace the power of AI and emerging technologies.

As a certified prompt engineer, she continues to push the boundaries of how humans and AI can work together.

Beyond her journalism career, Amanda is a long-distance runner and mom of three. She lives in New Jersey.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.