Overview
Purpose & Context
The IT Prompt Library is a standalone performance support tool that gives IT professionals immediate access to 12 ready-to-use, role-specific AI prompt templates, organized by task category and designed to be customized and deployed on any generative AI platform. Rather than teaching prompting concepts from scratch, the library operationalizes those concepts directly into the workflow — reducing friction and accelerating time-to-output for the tasks IT teams perform most often.
The best performance support doesn't just teach a skill; it removes barriers to applying it. Every design decision in this tool was made to minimize the distance between a user's need and a usable result.
Audience Analysis
Who This Is For
The primary audience is IT professionals who use generative AI tools in the workplace but spend time crafting prompts from scratch for routine, recurring tasks — without a consistent framework or shared starting point.
IT professionals regularly use generative AI to handle high-frequency tasks such as drafting maintenance announcements, documenting troubleshooting procedures, escalating vendor issues, and onboarding new employees. While many have a basic understanding of how to use AI tools, they often default to underdeveloped prompts that produce inconsistent or generic results.
Without a role-specific reference point, time is wasted on prompt iteration rather than on productive output. This audience doesn't need more instruction on what AI is or how prompting works — they need a curated, ready-to-use starting point that fits their actual work.
Design Decisions
How It Helps the Audience
Eliminates Prompt-Writing From Scratch
Each template is pre-structured with a defined role, task, context, and output format — so users start from a strong, well-formed prompt rather than a blank cursor. Bracketed fill-in fields make customization fast and intuitive.
Covers the Full Range of IT Task Types
Templates span four categories — Writing & Communication, Documentation, Analysis & Problem Solving, and Training & Onboarding — reflecting the breadth of tasks IT professionals encounter across support, operations, and project work.
Designed for Speed at the Point of Need
Live search and category filtering let users find the right template in seconds. A one-click copy button removes any remaining friction between finding the prompt and using it.
Platform Agnostic and Immediately Deployable
Templates are designed to work with any generative AI platform — ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, Claude, or others — requiring no special configuration, training, or onboarding to use.
Content Structure
Template Categories
The 12 templates are organized into four categories that reflect the actual task landscape of IT professionals. Each category contains three prompts covering the most common recurring scenarios within that domain.
Writing & Communication
3 templatesDocumentation
3 templatesAnalysis & Problem Solving
3 templatesTraining & Onboarding
3 templatesTools used:
Open the IT Prompt Library →Design Rationale
Why a Web Tool, Not a Document
The library was intentionally built as a web-based interactive tool rather than a static document to reflect how IT professionals actually work: quickly, on-screen, and across multiple platforms simultaneously. A PDF or Word document would require a user to open a separate file, scan for the right template, and manually copy text — each step adding friction at exactly the moment when friction has the highest cost.
The interactive format also demonstrates a core principle of AI enablement design: the best performance support doesn't just teach a skill, it removes barriers to applying it. Every design decision — filtered navigation, highlighted fill-in fields, one-click copy — was made to minimize the distance between the user's need and a usable result.
Building it in HTML also made the tool platform-agnostic and instantly shareable — accessible from any browser, on any device, with no installation or login required.
Reflection
What I Learned
The most useful insight from this project was the distinction between teaching a concept and operationalizing it. Earlier work in this portfolio — the "Build an Effective AI Prompt" module — focused on helping learners understand the components of an effective prompt. The IT Prompt Library takes the next step: assuming that understanding, and removing the work of applying it from scratch every time.
That distinction — between instruction and performance support — is one of the more consequential decisions an instructional designer makes. Not every problem requires training. Sometimes the right intervention is a well-designed tool that makes the correct behavior the path of least resistance.