Prompt Manager for AI Workflows
Save reusable prompts, organize them with categories and tags, keep them next to the links that matter, and reuse them in one click.
Build your first prompt library on the free forever plan.
Why prompt management breaks
Most prompts get lost in chat threads, screenshots, note dumps, and random documents. They are hard to search, hard to reuse, and usually disconnected from the links and sources that made them useful.
Why LinksPizza works as a prompt manager
- Save reusable prompts as first-class items.
- Organize prompts with categories and hashtags.
- Filter prompts by item type when a panel gets crowded.
- Copy prompt bodies in one click.
- Keep prompts next to the links, sources, and boards they belong to.
Who it is for
- Marketers building reusable campaign prompts and swipe files.
- Developers storing terminal prompts, code-generation scaffolds, and debugging recipes.
- Researchers keeping source links and extraction prompts side by side.
- Creators managing writing prompts, moodboards, and publishing workflows in one board.
Build a reusable prompt library
A good prompt library is not just a text archive. It is a working system for collecting, organizing, and reusing prompts that still matter. LinksPizza helps you keep prompts visible, searchable, and connected to the rest of your workflow.
How prompt items work
- Choose the dedicated Prompt item type in Quick Add.
- Store a prompt body, prompt tags, panel, and category.
- Filter prompts independently from regular links with the type chips.
- Keep prompts synced with the rest of your board and copy them in one click.
Prompts and links in one place
The best prompts usually come from something you read: research, competitor pages, documentation, examples, or notes. LinksPizza lets you keep prompts and links together so your workflow stays usable instead of fragmented.
Use cases
- Save ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini prompts next to the links that inspired them.
- Keep reusable prompt libraries grouped by panel for campaigns, coding, research, and content.
- Mix prompts and source links in the same board so context is never detached from execution.