Lesson 75 of 2244
Building Your Personal Prompt Library at Work
Your best prompts are your personal IP. Here is how to capture, organize, and reuse them — and why your future self will thank you.
Adults & Professionals · AI for Business · ~15 min read
Prompts Are Personal IP
The best prompts aren't public tricks — they're the ones tuned to your voice, your clients, and your judgment. A small library of 20 to 30 such prompts compounds faster than any new AI tool you'll adopt this year.
- Anything you've reused three or more times
- Any prompt that produced a great result you want to reproduce
- The system prompts inside your Claude Projects
- Voice and tone rules that work for your audience
- Meeting prep, email rewrite, and deck outline templates
Compare the options
| Option | Upside | Downside |
|---|---|---|
| Notion or Notes | Searchable, taggable | Requires switching apps |
| A pinned Claude Project | Prompt and example in one place | Siloed to one tool |
| Text snippets (Raycast, Alfred) | One shortcut away, cross-app | No version history |
| A private GitHub repo | Version-controlled, shareable | More overhead |
A prompt card in six sections. Fill every section — the notes are the part that saves you next month.
Template for every prompt you save:
## Name
Short and searchable.
## Use case
One sentence on when to use it.
## Prompt
The actual prompt, ready to paste.
## Placeholders
{{audience}}, {{topic}}, etc.
## Example output
A real, redacted example of a great result.
## Notes
What broke the first 3 times and how you fixed it.- Prompts with client confidential info baked in — use placeholders
- One-off prompts you'll never reuse
- Prompts copied from Twitter that you haven't battle-tested
- Long mega-prompts — break them into composable pieces
Key terms in this lesson
The big idea: your prompt library is a quiet career asset. Start it today with ten prompts, add one a week, and inside a year you'll have a personal operating system competitors can't copy.
End-of-lesson quiz
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