AskIt ✍️ Talking to AI Lesson 5
Lesson 5 of 5 · Final Lesson

Build your
personal
prompt library

⏱ 25 min 📚 Your library 💾 Saved locally

Everything in this track has been building to this moment. You now know how prompts work, how to structure them, how to adapt them by task type, and how to use advanced techniques. The last piece is turning that knowledge into something you'll actually use every single day.

A prompt library is a personal collection of your go-to prompts — refined, named, and ready to copy. The people who get the most out of AI aren't the ones who write a clever prompt once. They're the ones who save the prompts that work and reuse them.

💡 Why a library matters

The first time you write a great prompt it takes 5 minutes. The second time you need it you spend 3 minutes recreating something worse. With a library, every task you've solved once is solved forever. This is how AI users go from "occasionally useful" to "genuinely transformative."


Your assignment:
5 prompts you'll actually use

Below you'll build 5 prompts for your real life. Not generic examples — prompts tailored to what you actually do. Think about the tasks you repeat every week: emails you send regularly, things you need to research, content you create, decisions you think through. Those are the candidates.

Use the inspiration cards below if you're not sure where to start. Click any card to load it into your library, then customise it for your specific situation.

Need inspiration? Click any card to add it to an open slot:

📧 Email
Weekly team update email
Turns bullet points into a clear, professional weekly update for your team or manager
+ Add to library →
🔍 Research
Decision framework
Get a structured pros/cons analysis for any decision you're wrestling with
+ Add to library →
✍️ Writing
LinkedIn post from a story
Turn a thing that happened at work into a compelling LinkedIn post
+ Add to library →
💬 Communication
Difficult conversation script
Plan what to say in a hard conversation — at work or in your personal life
+ Add to library →
🧠 Thinking
Devil's advocate critique
Gets the AI to argue against your idea so you can stress-test it before committing
+ Add to library →
📋 Planning
Project kickoff plan
Give it a goal and deadline, get a realistic step-by-step action plan
+ Add to library →
🎨 Creative
Social media caption batch
Generate a week of social media captions from a brief description of your content
+ Add to library →
💼 Work
Meeting summary & actions
Paste rough meeting notes, get a clean summary with clear action items
+ Add to library →
📚 Your Prompt Library
My Prompts
0 of 5 prompts saved

How to use your
library

Once you've saved your 5 prompts, here's how to put them to work:

📋 Step 1: Copy and customise

Use the Copy button to grab any prompt. The best prompts have placeholder sections you can swap out — things like [your company name] or [the specific task] that you fill in each time. That's the power of a template.

🔄 Step 2: Refine as you go

The first version of a prompt is rarely the best. When you use a prompt and the output isn't quite right, spend 2 minutes improving it and save the better version. Prompts compound — they get more valuable over time.

📤 Step 3: Export and store elsewhere

Use "Export all" to download your library as a text file. Paste it into Notion, Apple Notes, your phone's notes app — anywhere you'll have it when you need it. Don't rely solely on this page.

You've completed the track

You started with vague one-liners. Now you have a framework, techniques, and a personal library. This is what £15 a month looks like when it works.

🎉
Track Complete!

You've finished "Talking to AI" — all 5 lessons. You now know more about prompt writing than 95% of AI users. Go use it.

← Back to track overview
Mark lesson as complete
PreviousAdvanced techniques