Skip to content

The Verification Checklist

One-liner: Build a personal AI verification system — a checklist you’ll actually use — and stress-test it against real AI outputs to find its limits.


You’re going to build a verification checklist, then immediately try to break it.

Step 1 — Generate something to verify. Ask AI to produce a piece of content you might actually use in your work:

Write a [deliverable type — e.g., client email, project proposal, market analysis, technical recommendation] about [topic relevant to your work]. Make it detailed and specific. Include data points, recommendations, and reasoning.

Step 2 — Build your checklist. Before reading the output carefully, write your own verification checklist. Start with these categories and add your own:

CheckQuestionPass/Fail
Factual claimsAre specific numbers, dates, or statistics verifiable?
SourcesCould I find the original source for any cited information?
ReasoningDoes the logic hold? Are there hidden assumptions?
CompletenessWhat important perspective or consideration is missing?
Tone/audienceIs the tone appropriate? Would the intended audience trust this?
ActionabilityAre the recommendations specific enough to actually follow?
Your domain check[Add a check specific to your field]
Your domain check[Add another check specific to your field]

Step 3 — Apply the checklist. Go through the AI output line by line using your checklist. Mark each check as pass or fail. For every fail, note what the issue is.

Step 4 — Stress-test the checklist. Now deliberately ask AI to produce something harder to verify:

Write the same type of [deliverable] but on a topic I’m less familiar with: [topic outside your expertise]. Make it equally detailed and authoritative.

Apply your checklist again. Where does it fail to catch problems? What check do you need to add?

Step 5 — Finalize. Update your checklist based on what you learned. Save it where you’ll actually use it — bookmark it, pin it, print it, whatever works.


Here’s what you’re about to do:

  1. Generate test content — Ask AI to produce a work-relevant deliverable. This gives you realistic material to verify.
  2. Draft your checklist — Build a structured verification list covering factual accuracy, reasoning quality, completeness, tone, and domain-specific concerns.
  3. Apply to familiar territory — Use the checklist on AI output about a topic you know. This lets you calibrate how well the checklist catches real errors.
  4. Apply to unfamiliar territory — Use the checklist on AI output about a topic you don’t know well. This exposes gaps in your process — the errors you can only catch with domain knowledge.
  5. Iterate and save — Update the checklist based on what it missed. Save it in a format you’ll actually reach for.

“Done” looks like: A tested, refined verification checklist (8-12 items) saved in a usable format, with evidence of at least one error it caught and one gap you identified and fixed.


🧭 Why this matters (Strategists start here)

Section titled “🧭 Why this matters (Strategists start here)”

In EP-Basic-01, you built a simple 3-question verification prompt. Here, you’re building a systematic process — a checklist that works regardless of topic, catches both factual and reasoning errors, and is tuned to your specific work context. The community’s 75% Ethical Prompting score means most people intend to verify AI output but lack a consistent method. A checklist turns good intentions into reliable behavior. At the advanced level, you’ll scale this into a governance framework for a team; this exercise builds the individual practice first.


  • Which check caught the most problems? Which was least useful?
  • How did your verification experience change between the familiar topic and the unfamiliar one?
  • What surprised you about the output?
  • What did you have to fix or override?
  • How would you explain what you just did to a colleague?
  • 💬 Discuss: Try explaining your result to someone who hasn’t used AI for this task. What questions do they ask? (Social Learners)

Ready for more? Try EP-Advanced-01 — where you’ll design an AI governance framework for a team or project.

Back to Ethical Prompting & Judgment | 🟡 Intermediate Level