The difference between developers who get 10x value from Cursor and those who get 2x value isn't the tool -- it's the workflow. A strong Cursor AI workflow has 3 layers: a.cursorrules file that defines your stack and conventions, a prompt library with 5 to 10 reusable templates for your most common tasks, and a Composer habit for multi-file changes. Developers who build this system report saving more than 3 hours per week compared to using Cursor without any structure in place. The workflow takes about 1 hour to set up the first time and continues paying back that investment on every project after. At aidowith.me, the Reusable Prompt System route covers 10 steps in about 1h 15min and shows you how to build this system -- one that transfers to every project you touch, not just the one you're currently working on.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- Every new project starts from scratch -- you're rewriting the same Cursor prompts you've typed 20 times before.
- Cursor gives different results for the same task because there's no.cursorrules file to keep it consistent.
- You switch between Cursor chat and Composer randomly, wasting time on the wrong tool for each job.
With aidowith.me
- A prompt library with 5 to 10 templates covers 80% of your recurring tasks -- write once, reuse everywhere.
- .cursorrules makes Cursor's output consistent across sessions by defining your stack, naming conventions, and forbidden patterns.
- A clear decision rule for chat vs. Composer cuts wasted prompts by half and gets you to the right output faster.
Who Uses This Tool
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
Audit your 5 most repeated Cursor tasks
List the tasks you prompt Cursor to do every week -- these become the foundation of your prompt library and.cursorrules file.
Write your.cursorrules and prompt templates
Build a.cursorrules file and 5 reusable prompt templates that encode your stack, style, and common patterns.
Set up your Composer workflow
Define when to use Composer vs. chat and create a checklist for multi-file changes so every refactor follows the same process.
Build a Reusable AI Workflow in 1h 15min
10 steps. You finish with a prompt system,.cursorrules file, and Composer workflow that saves time on every project you build.
Start This Route →What You Walk Away With
Audit your 5 most repeated Cursor tasks
Write your.cursorrules and prompt templates
Set up your Composer workflow
A clear decision rule for chat vs. Composer cuts wasted prompts by half and gets you to the right output faster.
"I spent 30 minutes building my.cursorrules file and a prompt library. Three weeks later I've saved at least 6 hours on a single project."- Indie developer, SaaS tools
Questions
Start with your.cursorrules file: write your stack, Python or JavaScript version, libraries, naming conventions, and any patterns to avoid. Then make a list of the 5 prompts you use most often and save them as templates. This foundation takes about 45 minutes to build and pays back that time within the first week of using it.
Cursor reads your actual files, so it has context ChatGPT doesn't have unless you paste everything manually. A Cursor workflow uses.cursorrules to persist that context automatically, and Composer to apply changes across multiple files at once. The result is fewer back-and-forth exchanges and fewer manual edits after the AI responds.
Yes. The Reusable Prompt System route at aidowith.me covers Cursor workflow setup across 10 steps in about 1h 15min. You finish with a .cursorrules file, a prompt library, and a Composer decision framework - a system you can drop into any project immediately. The route is structured so each step builds on the last, and by step 8 you'll have a workflow that transfers across every project you touch.