What I appreciated: it's not "manifesting your future business." It's operator content. the welcome sequence is the kind of thing you can implement Tuesday. Read it in one weekend, started implementing Monday. As a substack writer, the sponsor pitch deck alone justified the buy.
Prompts & playbooks that work.
Two product lines, one quality bar. Prompt packs for the work you do every day , playbooks for the business you want to build. Battle-tested, written for specific jobs, designed for operators.
Works with
For the work you do every day.
Seven packs, 430 prompts. Sharper briefs, faster copy, better email, cleaner code review, without writing prompts from scratch.
- Faster outputs across Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini.
- Built for specific jobs, not generic "be more productive."
- Pay once. Edit. Fork. Ship.
For the business you want to build.
Eight playbooks, 1080+ pages. Real positioning, real templates, real numbers. Written by operators who actually ran the business.
- One finished plan, not eighty videos.
- Templates: cold emails, contracts, decks, scripts, calculators.
- 90-day roadmap. Day 1 to first client.
Do yourself one favor.
Read “Why Us” before you buy anything else on this page. It's the most important page on this site, and it'll save you thousands of dollars and probably a year of your life.
Most people land here, browse the products, and buy whichever pack sounds coolest. That works. But you'll get way more value if you spend two minutes understanding why Promptos exists in the first place.
The “Why Us” page is an honest comparison of the three real paths to starting a business: expensive courses and mentorships, free-but-time-consuming DIY learning, and the structured playbook approach Promptos is built around.
If after reading it you decide Promptos isn't for you, that's a win. You saved yourself money. If you decide it IS for you, you'll know exactly which product to buy and why.
Three tiers. One progression.
The catalog isn't a pile of products, it's a stack. Pick the tier that matches where you are now; upgrade when the work changes.
Daily execution.
Prompt packs for the work you ship every day, briefs, copy, email, code review, planning.
- The Marketer's Pack
- The AI Power User Pack
- 5 more
Audience & authority.
Strategy, daily content, and a high-ticket product methodology. Three tools that turn expertise into revenue.
- The Personal Brand Playbook
- The Content Engine Pack
- The High-Ticket Product Finder
Build a business.
Eight playbooks for the businesses operators are actually starting, agencies, SaaS, coaching, productized solo.
- The AI Automation Agency Playbook
- The Digital Products Playbook
- 6 more
Each tier compounds the previous. Most operators land on two; the heaviest users pair packs + Authority + one playbook.
Built for the work you actually do.
Battle-tested in real work.
Every prompt was used in actual campaigns, client projects, and money-on-the-line situations before it made the cut.
Built for specific jobs.
Not vague “help me write a blog post.” Each prompt solves one exact problem with the structure to back it up.
Works with every major AI.
Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Grok, these prompts don't depend on model tricks. They're built around better thinking.
Three steps. Then you're shipping.
Pick a pack
Browse seven packs built for specific professions, or grab the bundle in one move.
Download instantly
Get the .docx file in your inbox seconds after checkout. No accounts, no DRM.
Paste and profit
Copy prompts straight into Claude, ChatGPT, or Gemini. Customize as needed.
Built for the work you actually do.
Pick the pack that matches your job. Or take all seven in the Packs Bundle.
One finished plan. Per business.
Eight playbooks for the businesses operators are actually building this year.
Three ways to start a real business.
Only one of them doesn't waste your money or your year.
The course / mentorship
Pay $2,000–$10,000+
- Months of video lessons you'll never finish
- Constant upsells to the "next level mastermind"
- Generic advice that doesn't fit your situation
- Coaches who've never run the business themselves
- You finish 4 modules, then quit
Do it yourself
Free, but expensive
- Stitching together 100 YouTube videos
- Reading Reddit threads with conflicting advice
- Guessing at pricing, scope, contracts
- 8 months in, still no clients
- Burnout, then back to your day job
Promptos Playbooks
Pay $97–$497, once
- Complete step-by-step playbook for ONE business
- Real scripts, real templates, real numbers
- Pair with prompt packs for daily execution
- 90-day roadmap from day 1 to first client
- Lifetime access. No upsells. Ever.
Four scopes. One stack.
Buy a single product if you're certain. Buy a bundle when you want the toolkit, the audience system, or the playbook on the same desktop. Save up to $914.
535 prompts · 1220+ pages · lifetime updates on every product.
Pre-launch operators got Promptos free in exchange for honest feedback. 1,407 reviews. The critical ones are still up.
1,000+ buyers said it worked.
From our pre-launch group. Honest feedback in exchange for products.
The "pro tip" field at the end of each prompt is the unsung hero. the Voice Lock's pro tip alone changed how I follow up on the outputs. the Cut List is doesn't oversell, just delivers. Right away I thought "this is fine." The fifth time I realized it had quietly become the prompt I open by default.
I've bought four prompt packs this year. This is the only one I didn't delete after a month. the Weekly Review prompt is the standout.
As a independent consultant + creator, I'd been stuck on positioning for half a year. chapter 4 on running the interview with AI unstuck me in an evening. the validation prompts alone saved me three months of trial and error. The kind of detail you only get from someone who actually ran the playbook.
Not theory. The chapters read like an operator handing you their actual notes. chapter 2 on positioning in particular has the kind of detail you can't fake. the bio template set is genuinely the cleanest treatment of the topic I've seen. Worth more than the price.
Read it in one weekend, started implementing Monday. As a career coach, the two-axis positioning grid alone justified the buy. the bio template set is genuinely the cleanest treatment of the topic I've seen. Worth more than the price.
Read it in one weekend, started implementing Monday. As a solo channel runner, the niche scoring sheet alone justified the buy.
The 90-day roadmap is the part that doesn't show up in the marketing but is the most useful thing in the playbook. Combined with the topic-picker exercise, it's basically a quarter's worth of planning done for you. Better than three courses I've bought combined. the topic-picker exercise is the one I keep going back to.
chapter 10 on retainers hit harder than I expected. The frameworks are real, the templates are the ones you'd actually want to swipe. What I appreciated: it's not "manifesting your future business." It's operator content. the retainer contract is the kind of thing you can implement Tuesday. chapter 3 on pricing is worth the price by itself. Walked into a discovery call the next week and closed.
Bought this on a Tuesday, used the Inbox Cut on Wednesday, had a real result by Friday. As a director of program management, that's the bar. The "pro tip" field at the end of each prompt is the unsung hero. the Inbox Cut's pro tip alone changed how I follow up on the outputs. the 5-Minute Prep is the kind of prompt I'd have written in three years if I'd thought hard enough. It's there in fifteen seconds instead.
the Beat Sheet Builder is more useful than it lets on. First session in I thought "this is fine." The fifth time I realized it had quietly become the prompt I open by default.
I've bought four prompt packs this year. This is the only one I didn't delete after a month. the Beat Sheet Builder is the standout. The structure of every prompt is the same: use case, body, customize, example, pro tip. That consistency makes the pack usable on the actual job. the Beat Sheet Builder is the one I keep going back to.
the Productivity Pack alone is worth more than the bundle price. Going to be using both for the foreseeable future. the Solopreneur Pack is the right call. The bundle math is silly. You can't buy them all separately and not feel like you should have just done this.
Bought the strategy + execution combo after picking up two of the packs separately. Should have just done this from the start.
the Quote-Tweet Reply is better than I expected. First session in I thought "this is fine." The fifth time I realized it had quietly become the prompt I open by default.
the Launch Story is quietly impressive. On my first attempt I thought "this is fine." The fifth time I realized it had quietly become the prompt I open by default.
the two-axis positioning grid is genuinely the cleanest treatment of the topic I've seen. Worth more than the price. The 90-day roadmap is the part that doesn't show up in the marketing but is the most useful thing in the playbook. Combined with the launch templates, it's basically a quarter's worth of planning done for you. chapter 2 on positioning alone saved me three months of trial and error. The kind of detail you only get from someone who actually ran the playbook.
As a executive coach, I'd been stuck on positioning for half a year. the discovery call script unstuck me in an evening. Read it in one weekend, started implementing Monday. As a leadership coach, chapter 9 on group programs alone justified the buy.
The 90-day roadmap is the part that doesn't show up in the marketing but is the most useful thing in the playbook. Combined with the proposal template, it's basically a quarter's worth of planning done for you.
the AI voice presets alone saved me three months of trial and error. The kind of detail you only get from someone who actually ran the playbook. the title formula library is worth the price by itself. Walked into a discovery call the next week and closed.
the launch week sequence is worth the price by itself. Walked into a discovery call the next week and closed. the 5-post social playbook is genuinely the cleanest treatment of the topic I've seen. Worth more than the price. Better than three courses I've bought combined. chapter 6 on the launch week is the one I keep going back to.
chapter 4 on the eval-first workflow hit harder than I expected. The frameworks are real, the templates are the ones you'd actually want to swipe.
Not theory. The chapters read like an operator handing you their actual notes. the pilot SOW in particular has the kind of detail you can't fake.
Not theory. The chapters read like an operator handing you their actual notes. the pilot SOW in particular has the kind of detail you can't fake. the discovery script is worth the price by itself. Walked into a discovery call the next week and closed.
What I appreciated: it's not "manifesting your future business." It's operator content. the welcome sequence is the kind of thing you can implement Tuesday. Read it in one weekend, started implementing Monday. As a substack writer, the sponsor pitch deck alone justified the buy.
The "pro tip" field at the end of each prompt is the unsung hero. the Voice Lock's pro tip alone changed how I follow up on the outputs. the Cut List is doesn't oversell, just delivers. Right away I thought "this is fine." The fifth time I realized it had quietly become the prompt I open by default.
I've bought four prompt packs this year. This is the only one I didn't delete after a month. the Weekly Review prompt is the standout.
As a independent consultant + creator, I'd been stuck on positioning for half a year. chapter 4 on running the interview with AI unstuck me in an evening. the validation prompts alone saved me three months of trial and error. The kind of detail you only get from someone who actually ran the playbook.
Not theory. The chapters read like an operator handing you their actual notes. chapter 2 on positioning in particular has the kind of detail you can't fake. the bio template set is genuinely the cleanest treatment of the topic I've seen. Worth more than the price.
Read it in one weekend, started implementing Monday. As a career coach, the two-axis positioning grid alone justified the buy. the bio template set is genuinely the cleanest treatment of the topic I've seen. Worth more than the price.
Read it in one weekend, started implementing Monday. As a solo channel runner, the niche scoring sheet alone justified the buy.
The 90-day roadmap is the part that doesn't show up in the marketing but is the most useful thing in the playbook. Combined with the topic-picker exercise, it's basically a quarter's worth of planning done for you. Better than three courses I've bought combined. the topic-picker exercise is the one I keep going back to.
chapter 10 on retainers hit harder than I expected. The frameworks are real, the templates are the ones you'd actually want to swipe. What I appreciated: it's not "manifesting your future business." It's operator content. the retainer contract is the kind of thing you can implement Tuesday. chapter 3 on pricing is worth the price by itself. Walked into a discovery call the next week and closed.
Bought this on a Tuesday, used the Inbox Cut on Wednesday, had a real result by Friday. As a director of program management, that's the bar. The "pro tip" field at the end of each prompt is the unsung hero. the Inbox Cut's pro tip alone changed how I follow up on the outputs. the 5-Minute Prep is the kind of prompt I'd have written in three years if I'd thought hard enough. It's there in fifteen seconds instead.
the Beat Sheet Builder is more useful than it lets on. First session in I thought "this is fine." The fifth time I realized it had quietly become the prompt I open by default.
I've bought four prompt packs this year. This is the only one I didn't delete after a month. the Beat Sheet Builder is the standout. The structure of every prompt is the same: use case, body, customize, example, pro tip. That consistency makes the pack usable on the actual job. the Beat Sheet Builder is the one I keep going back to.
the Productivity Pack alone is worth more than the bundle price. Going to be using both for the foreseeable future. the Solopreneur Pack is the right call. The bundle math is silly. You can't buy them all separately and not feel like you should have just done this.
Bought the strategy + execution combo after picking up two of the packs separately. Should have just done this from the start.
the Quote-Tweet Reply is better than I expected. First session in I thought "this is fine." The fifth time I realized it had quietly become the prompt I open by default.
the Launch Story is quietly impressive. On my first attempt I thought "this is fine." The fifth time I realized it had quietly become the prompt I open by default.
the two-axis positioning grid is genuinely the cleanest treatment of the topic I've seen. Worth more than the price. The 90-day roadmap is the part that doesn't show up in the marketing but is the most useful thing in the playbook. Combined with the launch templates, it's basically a quarter's worth of planning done for you. chapter 2 on positioning alone saved me three months of trial and error. The kind of detail you only get from someone who actually ran the playbook.
As a executive coach, I'd been stuck on positioning for half a year. the discovery call script unstuck me in an evening. Read it in one weekend, started implementing Monday. As a leadership coach, chapter 9 on group programs alone justified the buy.
The 90-day roadmap is the part that doesn't show up in the marketing but is the most useful thing in the playbook. Combined with the proposal template, it's basically a quarter's worth of planning done for you.
the AI voice presets alone saved me three months of trial and error. The kind of detail you only get from someone who actually ran the playbook. the title formula library is worth the price by itself. Walked into a discovery call the next week and closed.
the launch week sequence is worth the price by itself. Walked into a discovery call the next week and closed. the 5-post social playbook is genuinely the cleanest treatment of the topic I've seen. Worth more than the price. Better than three courses I've bought combined. chapter 6 on the launch week is the one I keep going back to.
chapter 4 on the eval-first workflow hit harder than I expected. The frameworks are real, the templates are the ones you'd actually want to swipe.
Not theory. The chapters read like an operator handing you their actual notes. the pilot SOW in particular has the kind of detail you can't fake.
Not theory. The chapters read like an operator handing you their actual notes. the pilot SOW in particular has the kind of detail you can't fake. the discovery script is worth the price by itself. Walked into a discovery call the next week and closed.
Made for people who do the work.
You run paid, lifecycle, or brand at a startup or growth-stage company. You ship weekly and have a soft spot for prompts that actually convert.
You wear seven hats and the seventh is "person who writes the investor update at 11pm." Promptos cuts that hour to twelve minutes.
You use AI as a second pair of eyes, not as autocomplete. You want prompts that bring back the trade-offs, not just the code.
You ship a newsletter, a channel, and three other things on the side. The repurposing pack alone gives you back a Saturday.
One quality bar. Two product lines.
The full manifesto lives on /method. The short version is below.
Twenty real uses across three models.
If a prompt doesn't survive on Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini, it gets a tuning note, or it gets cut. No "100 ChatGPT prompts" lists.
Written by operators. Read by two more.
Every playbook is written by someone who ran the business, then reviewed by two operators currently running it. We rewrite until both sign off.
Templates that work Tuesday.
Editable .docx and PDF. Real scripts, real numbers, real contracts. No fill-in-the-blank Mad Libs. The version on your machine differs from someone else's by week two.
I built the first version of these packs for myself, then six friends, then their teams. Then I stopped giving them away.
The honest version: I'd been writing prompts in a Google Doc for a year. Every time a friend asked "how do you get Claude to do X?", I'd copy three lines into a DM. After enough DMs, I realized I had a product.
So I sorted them into packs. I tested every prompt across Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini, twenty times each, and threw out anything that didn’t survive. Then I wrote new ones for the gaps. Then I wrote playbooks for the questions buyers kept asking after the prompts. The result is what’s on this site.
It's not magic. It's just better than what you'd write at 11pm on a Tuesday.
Questions, answered.
What's actually in a pack?
An editable .docx and a polished PDF. Each pack has 55–75 prompts organized into six working sections. Every prompt has a title, a use case, a copy-pasteable body with bracketed variables, an example output, and a one-line pro tip.
Which AI models do these work with?
Every major LLM. The prompts are built around structure and clear instruction, not model-specific tricks. They work with Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Grok, Perplexity, and whatever ships next. We don't pin to specific version numbers because the landscape moves every month, and the prompts are written to outlast any one of them. If a model can read a prompt with bullet points and follow a brief, it can run these.
Can I use these for client work?
Yes. Promptos is licensed for personal and client work. You can adapt prompts, ship them inside your own templates, and keep using them after a job ends. You just can't resell the pack itself or republish the file.
What format are the packs?
Editable .docx + a polished PDF mirror. Select packs (Productivity, AI Power User) also include a Notion template version.
Do I get updates?
Every pack gets new prompts added quarterly. You'll get every future version of the packs you bought, free, for as long as Promptos exists. We publish a changelog at /updates.
What's your refund policy?
If a pack isn't useful in your first 30 days, write us one sentence and we'll refund you. No screenshots, no exit interview. We'd rather lose a sale than keep a frustrated customer.
Why are these better than free prompts (or expensive courses)?
Free prompts give you about 20% of the job. The other 80% is craft. Knowing when to add a constraint, when to ask for variants, when to red-team the output. Promptos packages that craft into prompts that come with examples, pro tips, and bracketed variables you fill in. The other end of the market is courses and mentorships at $2,000 to $10,000+ that overpromise, underdeliver, and upsell you to the next tier forever. Promptos sits between them: structured, foolproof frameworks at a fraction of the cost, with no upsells and no fluff. Pay once. Ship faster.
Who are you?
Nathan, the founder. Was a marketing lead at a B2B SaaS, then a freelancer, then a maker of Promptos. The packs started as my private Google Doc; they're better now because they had to be.