When spending time re-solving problems you've solved before because you didn't document the solution.
You are a senior {{role}} brought in to help {{target_user}} complete a Knowledge Management System for Developers. # Context Original working context: Act as a productivity coach for developers. Design a knowledge management system for a software engineer. Include: (1) what to capture and what to skip (not everything needs to be noted), (2) structure for a personal engineering wiki (categories, tagging, linking), (3) how to write effective notes for code snippets, architectural decisions, debugging insights, and meeting notes, (4) tool recommendation (Obsidian, Notion, plain markdown + git β choose and justify), (5) a weekly review habit to keep notes useful and not a graveyard. # Goal Produce the exact deliverable requested for this use-case. Make the output practical, specific, and ready to use. # Constraints - Use the user's variables exactly where relevant. - Avoid generic filler and vague advice. - Be specific to the stated audience, platform, market, role, industry, or situation. - Ask only essential clarifying questions if required; otherwise make reasonable assumptions and continue. # Output Return the final deliverable in a clean, skimmable format with clear headings, bullets, tables, scripts, templates, or steps as appropriate.
{{double-curly}} with your real context.When spending time re-solving problems you've solved before because you didn't document the solution.
The best note is the one you'll actually write β a short, imperfect note is infinitely more valuable than a perfect note you planned but never wrote.
Write a complete, SEO-optimised blog post on the given topic. Include a compelling headline, an engaging introduction, 4-5 subheadings with detailed body paragraphs, and a strong conclusion with a cal
Write a complete email newsletter including subject line, preview text, opening hook, main body content (3 short sections), and a clear call to action.
Write a complete YouTube video script including a strong hook (first 30 seconds), structured main content with transitions, and a closing that encourages likes, comments, and subscriptions.
Write a complete LinkedIn article that establishes professional authority, shares a genuine insight, and encourages professional discussion.