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Optimizing Tokens for Better Structured LLM Outputs
Watch: Most devs don't understand how LLM tokens work by Matt Pocock Token optimization is a critical factor in enhancing the performance, cost-efficiency, and usability of structured outputs from large language models (LLMs). By strategically reducing token usage, developers and end-users can achieve faster response times, lower costs, and more accurate results. For example, JSON , the default format for structured data, often consumes twice as many tokens as TSV for the same dataset. This inefficiency translates to higher costs -processing the same data in JSON might cost $1 per API call, while TSV could reduce this to $0.50. Additionally, JSON responses can take four times longer to generate than TSV, directly impacting user experience in time-sensitive applications like live chatbots or real-time analytics. The benefits of token optimization extend beyond cost savings. A case study from the Medium article LLM Output Formats illustrates this: when converting EU country data into TSV instead of JSON, the token count dropped significantly, enabling faster parsing and reduced computational strain . This optimization also improves reliability-formats like TSV or CSV avoid the parsing errors common in JSON due to misplaced commas or missing quotes. For deeply nested data, columnar JSON (where keys are listed once) can save tokens while maintaining structure, making it a middle-ground solution for complex datasets. As mentioned in the Token Optimization Techniques section, such format choices are central to minimizing token overhead.