Ai Skill Team
All Tutorials
Beginner · 5 min

How to Use This Library

Five steps to go from finding a prompt to getting a great AI output.

1

Browse by Platform or Search

Start from the homepage and select your AI platform (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, etc.), or use the search bar to find prompts by keyword. Each platform section is further organized by app — for example, ChatGPT is split into GPT-4o, DALL-E 3, Canvas, and more.

Search: "email subject line"
→ Returns prompts across all platforms tagged with email writing

Browse: Homepage → ChatGPT → GPT-4o
→ Shows all GPT-4o prompts, filterable by category
2

Find Prompts for Your Specific Tool or App

Once you've selected a platform, use the category filter to narrow results. Categories like Writing, Coding, Research, and Design let you skip directly to what's relevant. Prompts are tagged with the specific app they work best in, so a DALL-E 3 prompt won't waste your time in GPT-4o.

Platform: Gemini
App: NotebookLM
Category: Research

→ Prompts optimized specifically for
   NotebookLM's source-interrogation workflow
3

Copy and Customize the Prompt

Click the Copy button on any prompt card to copy it to your clipboard. Free prompts are always available. Subscriber prompts show a preview — subscribe to unlock all 1.5M+ prompts. After copying, paste the prompt into your AI platform and customize the parts in [brackets] to match your specific use case.

Original prompt:
"Write a [formal/casual] email to [recipient]
declining [offer/invitation] while keeping the
relationship positive. My reason: [your reason]."

Customized:
"Write a formal email to our investor declining
their board seat offer while keeping the
relationship positive. My reason: conflict of
interest with another portfolio company."
4

Understanding the Quality Score

Each prompt displays a quality score from 1-10. Scores are based on community upvotes, copy rate (how often people actually use it), and a rubric evaluating specificity, clarity, and completeness. A score of 8+ means the prompt has been validated by thousands of users. Scores below 6 are shown grayed out — they may still be useful but are less reliable.

Score 9-10: Highly validated, specific, complete
           Works as-is for most users

Score 7-8:  Good foundation, may need minor tweaks
           Check tags to confirm it fits your use case

Score 5-6:  Starting point only
           Expect to customize significantly

Score <5:   Experimental or community-submitted
           Use at your own discretion
5

Saving Favorites

Subscribers can heart any prompt to save it to their favorites list. Favorites persist across devices and sessions. You can also organize favorites by creating collections — useful if you're building a prompt library for a specific workflow (e.g., 'My Marketing Prompts' or 'Code Review Prompts'). Access your favorites from the profile menu.

To save a prompt:
1. Subscribe at /subscribe ($3/mo)
2. Click the heart icon on any prompt card
3. Access favorites: Profile → My Favorites

Organize into collections:
Favorites → New Collection → "Content Writing"
→ Drag prompts into your collection
Next: Prompt Engineering Basics