Best AI prompts for every use case
This hub is built for teams that need reusable prompt defaults, not one-off clever wording. Browse by job, then connect each prompt to a real workflow.
Updated 2026·Prompt hub reviewed periodically—treat prompts as versioned assets with review.
Prompts that make output more reliable
Use these pages to lock role, context, constraints, and output shape. The goal is not prettier wording — it is less rework and faster reviews.
High-intent prompt playbooks
Fast defaults to standardize role, context, constraints, and output schemas.
Browse by use case
Compact clusters, then a paginated index below.
Category
Writing
Briefs, outlines, drafts, and rewrites
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Outreach
Cold email, DMs, and follow-ups
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Category
SEO
Briefs, on-page copy, refreshes
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Category
Coding
PRs, debugging, refactors
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Category
Study
Learning loops and research
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Category
Marketing
Campaigns and creative variations
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Search all prompt playbooks
Search + pagination keeps the hub crawl-friendly.
Prompts
Best AI prompts for Internal Comms
AI prompts for announcements and internal memos.
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Prompts
Best AI prompts for Landing Pages
AI prompts for hero copy, sections, and CTAs.
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Best AI prompts for Lead Generation
AI prompts for lead magnets, outreach, and sales copy.
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Best AI prompts for Learning
AI prompts for learning, study guides, and skill building.
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Best AI prompts for Lesson Planning
AI prompts for lesson plans and classroom activities.
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Best AI prompts for LinkedIn Posts
AI prompts for LinkedIn posts and carousels.
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Best AI prompts for Logo Ideas
AI prompts for logo concepts and variations.
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Best AI prompts for Market Research
AI prompts for market analysis and competitor research.
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Best AI prompts for marketing
Campaign scaffolding, hooks, and experiment-ready variants.
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Best AI prompts for Meeting Notes
AI prompts for meeting summaries and action items.
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Best AI prompts for Newsletter Ideas
AI prompts for newsletter topics and sections.
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Best AI prompts for OKRs
AI prompts for objectives and key results.
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Best AI prompts for Onboarding
AI prompts for product and client onboarding flows.
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Best AI prompts for Performance Reviews
AI prompts for review summaries and feedback.
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Best AI prompts for Podcast Outlines
AI prompts for podcast planning and show notes.
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Best AI prompts for Policy Writing
AI prompts for policies, terms, and guidelines.
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Best AI prompts for Presentations
AI prompts for decks, slides, and presentation content.
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Best AI prompts for Product Descriptions
AI prompts for ecommerce and SaaS product copy.
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Quick answer
These are structured prompt patterns for operators building reusable prompts by use case: they trade clever phrasing for repeatable sections, constraints, and review-friendly output. This works best when you paste real facts and name the audience—generic placeholders produce generic text.
What most people do wrong is running a one-line ask and expecting publication-ready prose. These templates assume you will do one outline pass, one facts pass, and one human sanity check—especially for anything customer-facing.
How to read this page
What this is actually good for
When to use this page:
- You want structured prompts for operators building reusable prompts by use case that you can copy, constrain, and reuse.
- You accept that quality still depends on your inputs, facts, and review step.
- Pick a playbook, copy structured prompts, then connect them to tools and workflows for reviewable output..
When NOT to use this
- You need certified legal, medical, or financial advice without a qualified professional.
- You expect guaranteed factual accuracy without verifying sources yourself.
- You want fully automated production with zero human judgment or policy checks.
Real use case
Someone covering operators building reusable prompts by use case needs a repeatable prompt skeleton so drafts stay on-brief across sessions—not a one-off clever message.
Step-by-step usage (workflow example)
- Paste the prompt with your real constraints and audience filled in.
- Run once for structure, then iterate only on the weakest section.
- Fact-check claims and add citations where your policy requires them.
- Save the final version as your team default for this task type.
Mistakes to avoid
- Mega-prompts that mix research, drafting, and formatting in one shot—split stages so you can verify claims between them.
- Accepting confident numbers, quotes, or policies you did not supply—treat those as defects, not polish issues.
- Skipping version control: when quality drifts, you need a dated prompt you can diff—not a lost chat thread.
Pro tips
- Add a single line: ‘If unknown, output NEED_INPUT—do not guess.’ It turns silent failures into visible todos.
- Ask for an outline first for anything longer than a page; structure arguments before you wordsmith.
- Keep a swipe file of three on-brand snippets; reference them as style anchors, not copy-paste text.