Anthropic's Claude Tag is useful because it gives a name to something every AI user needs to learn: route context first, ask second.
The customer lesson is simple
When people mention a file, tool, teammate, app, or skill, they are not decorating a prompt. They are telling the AI what context should be used and what boundary should be respected.
Commands reduce confusion
Slash commands, @ mentions, skills, MCP servers, connected apps, and file references all exist because general prompts are too vague for real work. Clear routing makes answers more accurate and easier to audit.
Why this belongs in training
Teams should know when to attach a source, when to name a tool, when to call a workflow, and when to ask for human review. That is practical AI literacy.
