About

We got tired of bad prompts.

And then we got tired of bad business advice. Promptos sells two things: prompt packs for the work you do every day, and playbooks for the business you want to build. One quality bar across both.

Why Promptos started.

I started Promptos because I was tired of paying for prompt packs that read like Mad Libs and reading “10 ChatGPT prompts to 10x your productivity” listicles that all linked to the same Notion template.

I'd been writing prompts in a private Google Doc for a year. Friends would ask “how did you get Claude to do that?” and I'd paste three lines into a DM. After enough DMs, I sorted my Doc into seven packs by audience, tested every prompt against three models, and rewrote the ones that didn't survive twenty real uses.

The bar is simple: would you actually keep this prompt in your day-to-day toolkit, or would you forget about it by the end of the week?

Why we expanded into guides.

After Promptos launched, the question we kept getting wasn't “is there a prompt for X.” It was “how do I actually start a business that pays me $5k/month so I can use these prompts in real work?”

The honest answer was: a course will sell you a Discord, a YouTube binge will eat your year. So we wrote what we'd have wanted: eight finished playbooks for the businesses operators are actually starting in 2026, AI agencies, agent builders, web design studios, digital products, newsletters, faceless content, SaaS side projects, coaching.

They're not theory. Each playbook is 80–180 pages of frameworks, templates, and scripts, written by operators who actually ran the business. Same quality bar as the packs. Same editorial style. Same lifetime updates.

More on the methodology lives on the method page. If you want the full breakdown of why playbooks beat courses, that's on why Promptos.

Why we added Authority.

After the packs and playbooks launched, the question we kept hearing was somewhere in between: “I've been posting for months and the audience won't grow,” or “I have an audience but no paying product.” That gap doesn't fit a single pack or a single business playbook, it's its own arc. So we shipped Authority: three products that sit between the daily prompts and the long-arc business book, strategy (The Personal Brand Playbook), execution (The Content Engine Pack), and monetization (The High-Ticket Product Finder). Same quality bar. Same editorial voice. Same lifetime updates.

How prompts and playbooks get tested.

Every prompt: twenty real uses across three commercial models. If it fails on any of them, it gets a tuning note or it gets cut.

Every playbook: read by at least two operators currently running that exact business. Templates are the ones we've used in real client work. Numbers are real numbers. Scripts are scripts that have actually been sent.

We also ran a pre-launch program with about 200 buyers across the catalog. Their feedback shaped the final cut, and their reviews are on /reviews, every one of them, including the critical ones.

What we promise.

Thirty-day refund, no exit interview. Lifetime updates on every product you buy. Plain-English license that lets you use prompts and playbook templates in client work. We'd rather refund 10% of buyers than keep a single frustrated one.

What's next.

More playbooks, slowly. A quarterly cadence so existing buyers keep getting value. No SaaS pivot. No tokenized loyalty program. Just more good prompts and finished playbooks, written in the same voice, sold at the same prices.

That's the company. That's the whole pitch.

MC
Nathan
Founder, Promptos · Brooklyn, NY