Free ChatGPT prompts are everywhere online, prompt lists, cheat sheets, 50-prompt PDFs. Most of them don't work as advertised because they're written for a generic user, not your specific role and context. At aidowith.me, the Practical Prompts route runs 15 steps and takes 75 minutes. You'll write prompts for your actual job tasks, not generic examples, test them on real work, and save the ones that deliver. By step 10, you'll have 8-10 tested prompts that produce consistent, usable output. Two things that change prompt quality immediately: adding your role and audience at the start of every prompt, and specifying the output format (bullet list, paragraph, table) before the task description. The route covers both with exercises. The difference between a prompt you downloaded and one you built for your own job is the same as the difference between someone else's prescription glasses and your own, technically the same tool, but only one works for you. Free to start at so.aidowith.me.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- You've downloaded 3 prompt cheat sheets, tried half the prompts, and deleted the PDF because none of them fit what you do.
- Your ChatGPT outputs are inconsistent, sometimes brilliant, often generic, and you don't know what you're doing differently each time.
- You spend 5-10 minutes rephrasing the same prompt trying to get useful output instead of doing the actual work.
With aidowith.me
- Build prompts around your role and real tasks, not generic templates that were written for no one in particular.
- Use the route's prompt framework (role + context + format + constraints) to get consistent output every time from step 1.
- Save your 8-10 tested prompts in a library so you grab the right one in 30 seconds instead of rebuilding from scratch.
Who Builds This With AI
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
pick up the 4-part prompt structure
You'll rewrite a vague prompt, 'summarize this for me', using role, context, output format, and constraints. You'll run both versions and see the difference in output quality immediately. This is the foundation every other step builds on.
Build prompts for your top 5 work tasks
You'll pick 5 tasks you do most often, emails, reports, meeting prep, content, analysis, and apply the 4-part framework to each. Each prompt gets tested on a real piece of work before it goes into your library.
Save and organize your prompt library
By step 15, your tested prompts are saved in a structured Google Doc with task labels and usage notes. The library is ready to use from tomorrow, and each time you add a better prompt, the old one gets replaced, so the library stays lean.
Build Free ChatGPT Prompts That Work for Your Job
Join the waitlist for early access to the Practical Prompts route, 15 steps, 75 minutes, a tested prompt library ready to use.
Start This Route →What You Walk Away With
pick up the 4-part prompt structure
Build prompts for your top 5 work tasks
Save and organize your prompt library
Save your 8-10 tested prompts in a library so you grab the right one in 30 seconds instead of rebuilding from scratch.
"I'd tried so many prompt lists. This route was the first time I built prompts for my actual job, account management at a tech company. My email response time dropped by 40% the first week."- Account Executive, enterprise SaaS
Questions
The route at aidowith.me doesn't give you a list, it shows you how to build prompts that work for your specific role. A prompt that works for a marketer will fail for a finance analyst. The 15-step route shows the framework so you can write any prompt you need, not just use someone else's.
Specify 4 things every time: your role and the task context, who the output is for, the exact format you want (bullet list, table, paragraph), and any constraints (word count, tone, what to exclude). Missing even one of these four tends to produce inconsistent output. The format rule in particular is the most commonly skipped, and it's often why people get a wall of paragraphs when they wanted a quick bullet list they could paste directly into a slide.
Yes. The Practical Prompts route is built for the free tier, all exercises are designed to work within the standard message limits. The GPT-4o model is available on the free tier with some daily limits, which is more than enough for building and testing a personal prompt library. If you hit the daily limit mid-session, Claude free tier handles the same exercises, the route includes prompt versions that work on both tools so you're never stuck.