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Introduction to BetterPrompt
BetterPrompt is a marketplace for reusable AI prompts. It's built for people who want high‑quality results from AI models without spending hours experimenting, and for authors who want to share their prompt engineering while fully retaining ownership over their prompts by keeping the logic private.
This guide gives new users a clear overview of what BetterPrompt is, what you can do with it, and how the core pieces fit together.
What BetterPrompt Does
BetterPrompt focuses on reusable, structured prompts instead of one‑off chat messages:
- Browse prompts: Discover prompts built for specific use‑cases (content, code, images, productivity, etc.).
- Run prompts safely: Use other people's prompts without ever seeing or leaking their private instructions.
- Customize with inputs: Change placeholders (like
{{ topic }}or{{ customer_name }}) to fit your exact scenario. - Earn as an author: Publish your own prompts and earn when others run them.
Under the hood, BetterPrompt connects to AI providers (such as OpenAI, Grok, Gemini, and others) and handles the request/response flow for you.
Who BetterPrompt Is For
BetterPrompt works well for:
- Creators & knowledge workers who want to run consistent, high‑quality AI workflows.
- Teams and orgs who need standard, vetted prompts that everyone can reuse.
- Prompt engineers and tinkerers who want to package their best ideas as products.
You don't need to be technical to use BetterPrompt. If you can fill in a form and click "Run", you can get value from the marketplace.
Key Concepts
As you explore BetterPrompt, you'll see these concepts referenced often:
- Prompt: A reusable template with structured inputs and hidden logic.
- Inputs / placeholders: Fill‑in‑the‑blank fields that control what the prompt does for a given run.
- Run: A single execution of a prompt with specific input values.
- Author: A user who creates and publishes prompts to the marketplace.
- Visibility & access controls: Settings that determine who can run or see your prompts.
As you get familiar with these concepts, the rest of the product will feel familiar.
What You Can Do Next
After this overview, you'll likely want to:
- Learn how prompt sharing and private logic works so you can trust the system.
- Follow a quickstart guide to run your first prompt end‑to‑end.
- Explore how to create and publish your own prompts.
Use this article as a starting point, then jump into the more focused guides listed in the Getting Started section.