A prompt template library for your team is a set of fill-in-the-blank prompt templates, organized by role and task, that anyone can use without prompt-writing skill. On aidowith.me, the Practical Prompts route helps you build one in 15 steps over about 75 minutes. Unlike raw prompts, templates have clear placeholders ([your role], [task description], [desired format]) and built-in instructions, so the output quality doesn't depend on who's using them. You'll start by converting your team's 5 best-performing prompts into templates, adding context fields and output specs. Then you create 5 to 10 new templates for uncovered tasks. Each template gets tested by someone other than the creator to confirm it works without extra explanation. Teams report a 65% reduction in prompt-related questions once they switch from shared prompts to shared templates. The final library lives in one location with role tags and a difficulty rating.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- Shared prompts fail when a different person uses them because context is missing
- Team members ask the prompt creator for help every time, turning one person into a bottleneck
- No standard format means prompts range from one-liners to full-page instructions with no consistency
With aidowith.me
- Fill-in-the-blank templates that work for anyone, no prompt expertise needed
- Each template tested by a non-creator to verify it works without hand-holding
- Role tags and difficulty ratings so team members find what they need in seconds
Who Needs These Prompts
Marketers
Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.
Sales & BizDev
Prep calls, draft outreach, research prospects in minutes.
Managers & Leads
Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.
How It Works
Convert top prompts to templates
Take your team's 5 best prompts and add placeholders, context fields, and output format instructions to make them self-service.
Fill gaps with new templates
Identify 5 to 10 uncovered tasks and build templates from scratch. Follow the same placeholder and format standards.
Cross-test and publish
Have someone who didn't build the template try it. Fix any confusion points, add role tags, and publish in one shared location.
Build Your Prompt Template Library
Follow the route and give your team fill-in-the-blank templates that work for everyone.
Start This Route →What You Walk Away With
Convert top prompts to templates
Fill gaps with new templates
Cross-test and publish
Role tags and difficulty ratings so team members find what they need in seconds
"The difference between a prompt and a template is huge. Our templates work for interns and VPs the same way. No Slack messages asking 'how do I use this?'"- Operations Manager, media company
Questions
A regular prompt library stores finished prompts. A template library stores prompts with clear placeholders and instructions so anyone can fill in the blanks and get results. Templates remove the guesswork. The route shows you how to convert existing prompts into templates and test them for usability. The route provides clear guidance at every step so you can move from setup to results without guesswork.
Start with 10 to 15 templates covering tasks your team does weekly. That's enough to show value without overwhelming people. The route helps you prioritize by mapping task frequency. You can always add more templates later as needs come up. The route provides clear guidance at every step so you can move from setup to results without guesswork.
Each template needs a name, description, placeholder list, the prompt text with [brackets] for fill-in fields, and one example of a completed run. The route provides a standard format you can paste into Notion, Google Docs, or any wiki. Consistency in format is what makes the library usable. The route provides clear guidance at every step so you can move from setup to results without guesswork.