Foundation Route

Prompt Engineering Tutorial: Write Prompts That Work on Real Tasks

Most tutorials show you prompts for made-up scenarios. This one walks you through 15 real professional tasks where you write the prompt, see the output, and fix what breaks.

15 steps ~1h 15min For all professionals Free

A good prompt engineering tutorial doesn't just explain techniques, it puts you in a situation where you have to use them. The best way to get better at prompting is to write a prompt, see what comes back, identify what's weak, and revise. At aidowith.me, the Practical Prompts route is built around this loop across 15 real work scenarios. You start with a task, write a first-draft prompt, compare it to an improved version, and revise until the output meets a specific quality bar. The tasks cover the most common professional AI use cases: writing briefs, summarizing documents, drafting plans, generating options, and structuring communication. The route takes about 1 hour 15 minutes. No coding required. You finish with a library of tested prompts you can use the same day and a solid sense of why each version works better than the one before it.

Last updated: April 2026

The Problem and the Fix

Without a route

  • Video tutorials show polished outputs. You need to see the broken first draft and see why it failed.
  • Most tutorials use toy scenarios. You need prompts tested on documents and tasks you work with.
  • You watch a tutorial, feel like you got it, then freeze when you open a blank prompt box.

With aidowith.me

  • Write prompts from scratch on real professional tasks. Each step includes a broken version to diagnose.
  • See exactly why each version works or fails, not just the final polished output.
  • Leave with 15 tested prompts in a library organized by task type, ready to use today.

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

1

Write your first structured prompt

Pick a real work task and write a prompt with a role, a task description, and an output format. Compare it to a one-liner.

2

Diagnose and fix weak outputs

Take a prompt that produces a mediocre output and identify the missing ingredient. Revise and note the difference.

3

Build your prompt library

Save each tested prompt with a short note on what makes it work, organized by task category.

Write Real Prompts. Get Real Results.

Follow the 15-step Practical Prompts route and finish with a prompt library you'll use every day.

Start This Route →

What You Walk Away With

Write your first structured prompt

Diagnose and fix weak outputs

Build your prompt library

Leave with 15 tested prompts in a library organized by task type, ready to use today.

"I've done video tutorials before and always felt like I understood it until I tried. This route made me write the prompts. Completely different outcome."
- Product manager, fintech startup

Questions

A useful prompt engineering tutorial has you writing real prompts, not just reading about them. It shows you broken versions so you can diagnose problems. And it covers tasks you face at work. The Practical Prompts route at aidowith.me does all three across 15 steps in about 75 minutes with no video watching required.

The Practical Prompts route is built for professionals who use AI tools in their work and want more consistent results. No prior prompt engineering experience is needed. The 15 steps build progressively from basic structure to multi-constraint prompts. Advanced users find value in the diagnostic steps and the organized prompt library format.

You write the prompts yourself at each step. There's no passive watching. Each step has a task, a starting point, and a quality bar to hit. You leave with tested work samples in a documented library, not notes on a video you'll half-remember by tomorrow. The route takes about 75 minutes and runs at your pace with no queues.