Prompt engineering is a real, paid skill set, but the job title itself is still rare. A 2024 LinkedIn scan found fewer than 3,000 open prompt engineer roles globally, yet over 40,000 job ads mention prompt skills as a requirement inside marketing, ops, product, and data positions. What employers want is someone who can get reliable, repeatable output from AI tools on real work tasks. That is exactly what aidowith.me trains. The Practical Prompts route walks you through 15 structured steps in about 1 hour 15 minutes. You finish with a personal prompt library you can use at work the next day. This is not a passive course. It is a doing route where you build every prompt against a real task from your job, and you walk out with a system you can show in your next performance review or job interview.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- Job boards show only ~3,000 dedicated prompt engineer openings globally, making the title hard to chase.
- 40%+ of AI-adjacent job ads list prompt skills as a requirement but bury them under vague descriptions.
- Most online content on the topic is hype, not a practical path to building those skills on real work tasks.
With aidowith.me
- Get a clear-eyed answer to what prompt engineering means in today's job market.
- Build a repeatable prompt system across 15 guided steps that applies to your current role.
- Walk away with a prompt library, not just theory.
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
Map real-world prompt use cases
Pick 3 tasks from your actual job and define the output you need from an AI tool for each one.
Write and test structured prompts
Apply a 4-part prompt structure across your chosen tasks and compare raw versus structured outputs.
Build your personal prompt library
Save the 5 best-performing prompts in a reusable format you can call on at work tomorrow.
Build Prompt Skills That Show Up in Your Work
Start the Practical Prompts route on aidowith.me. 15 steps, ~1 hour 15 minutes, and you finish with a prompt library for your actual job.
Start This Route →What You Walk Away With
Map real-world prompt use cases
Write and test structured prompts
Build your personal prompt library
Walk away with a prompt library, not just theory.
"I stopped calling myself a prompt engineer and just started showing what I could do. Two months later I got a raise."- Content strategist, media company
Questions
Dedicated prompt engineer salaries range from $70K to $165K in the US, according to 2024 job data. However, fewer than 5% of those openings are standalone roles. The bigger opportunity is adding prompt skills to an existing role, which is where most professionals see salary impact. Building those skills on aidowith.me takes about 75 minutes and produces a reusable prompt library you can reference during your next performance review.
No. The majority of in-demand prompt work happens in marketing, HR, ops, and customer success, not engineering. You do need to be systematic and willing to iterate, but no coding is required. The Practical Prompts route on aidowith.me is built for professionals who work with text, data, and communication daily. You will produce structured, reusable prompts across 15 steps without writing a single line of code.
Getting functional takes about 2-4 hours of focused practice on real tasks. Getting good enough to show in a job interview or performance review takes a week of daily use. The fastest path is structured practice on your own work tasks, not abstract exercises. The Practical Prompts route on aidowith.me covers the core system in 15 steps and 1 hour 15 minutes, then you apply it to your own work.