ChatGPT 5.2 + Nano Banana, and Why the Small Stuff Wins
Jan 14, 2026This post is about two tools I’m using right now, and the bigger point behind them.
Not “AI is magic”. The opposite.
Used well, it helps you tighten what matters. Used badly, it just gives you faster fluff.
ChatGPT 5.2 + Nano Banana, a fruit bowl made in heaven
If you haven’t tried ChatGPT 5.2 Thinking yet, you’ll notice the difference.
Not because it spits out more words, but because it behaves more like a second brain. It slows down, thinks things through, and gives you something you can actually use.
Now add Nano Banana into the mix and it becomes genuinely useful for content and marketing assets.
- ChatGPT helps you think it through
- Nano Banana gives you the visuals to match, thumbnails, blog headers, simple graphics
- The combo helps you tighten work faster, without guessing
The key is keeping it grounded.
It won’t fix a messy offer, unclear positioning, or a weak value proposition.
What it will do is help you spot gaps faster and make cleaner decisions.
Here’s a prompt you can copy and paste:
“Here’s my landing page (paste URL). Give me the 5 highest-impact edits to improve clarity and conversion. Keep my tone.”
If you’re using ChatGPT, make sure you’re in the Thinking mode and your Personalisation is dialled in. Otherwise you’ll just have another robot blowing sunshine up your butt.
It pays to sweat the small stuff
I’ve recently been described as a paradox.
On one side, I like nothing more than getting my boardies on and cruising waves all day.
On the other side, I’m the guy geeking out on the smallest H tag and the most boring SEO detail on a Kajabi blog.
Here’s why.
Those tiny details are what get you found.
More qualified people finding you means more clients into your system.
More clients into your system means more freedom.
More freedom means more time surfing.
Logical, right?
We’re in a new era of search, and the compounding effect is real.
If your tag ducks aren’t in a row, you will get left behind.
I’m seeing it more and more right now, which is why I’m working with clients to tighten the details so they rise above the noise and get found by the right people.
Start with the basics:
- One H1 per page
- Then H2s
- Then H3s
- Clean structure, clean intent, clean internal links
It’s not sexy, but it works.
A Quick Win
Pick one blog post you’ve already published and do a 20-minute upgrade:
- Tighten the title for search intent
- Apply a consistent tag stack
- Add 3 internal links
- Add 3 FAQs at the bottom
- Add one clear CTA to your offer
If you do this every week, you build a library that keeps working long after you press publish.
And if you’re planning your 2026 priorities right now, I also wrote this: What I’m taking into 2026, and what I’m not.
Prices on your website, yes or no
I’m well and truly both feet in the yes camp.
Here’s why.
This week a prospect booked a discovery call and said, on the pre-call survey, they want to go for my Core product at $5,000, then upgrade to Premium at $10,000+ in phase 2.
I hadn’t even spoken to them yet. They’d gone to my website, seen my offers, and booked the call.
That’s exactly what pricing transparency is meant to do when your positioning is clear.
It filters out tyre kickers.
It attracts decisive buyers who already understand the value range.
If you want pricing on-site without killing conversions:
- Use “from” pricing, Core from $5,000, Premium from $10,000+
- List what’s included in 5 to 7 bullets
- Say who it’s for and who it’s not for
- Offer two CTAs, start now, or book a call if unsure
- Make the upgrade path obvious
Your best clients don’t need convincing. They need clarity.
Final thought
The small stuff is not small when it compounds.
If you want a sharp second set of eyes on your offer, pages, and funnel, book a 1-hour Strategy Call. Same business, just cleaner, clearer and easier to run.