Prompts hide everywhere.
Slack threads, Notion pages, sticky notes — the ones that actually work end up scattered across your tools.
Capture the prompts that actually work, share them with your team, and copy them into Claude, ChatGPT, or Cursor in a click — right from your browser. No setup, no digging through a Notion page.
Building with code? See botdocs for developers →
Scroll to see how the prompts hiding in your Slack and Notion become a shared library everyone can use.
Slack threads, Notion pages, sticky notes — the ones that actually work end up scattered across your tools.
A public library of skills built by people doing the same work as you — writing, summarizing, drafting, reviewing.
One click and the skill’s in your library — formatted for the assistant you actually use.
Open Claude, ChatGPT, or Cursor — your saved skills are ready to use, formatted correctly for each one. No copy-paste headaches.
Create a team space, pin the skills everyone should know about. They appear in their library automatically — no email, no Slack thread.
When a teammate adds a new skill or improves an existing one, a quiet badge tells you. No notification spam, no “I missed it in the standup.”
Everyone on your team pulls from the same library — so the prompts that work for one person work for everyone.
Copy any skill into the assistant you use — we format it for each one.
Browse a public library of vetted prompts — for writing, summarizing, reviewing, drafting. One click and you're using it in your assistant. No setup, no formatting headaches.
Save the prompts you love into your library. Tag them, group them, find them again — instead of digging through Slack threads or that one Notion page nobody can remember the name of.
Pin the skills your team should be using. Send one link and everyone has them — in their assistant, ready to run. When you update the skill, their copy updates too.
Open the personalized Library page to see your skills, your team's skills, and what's changed lately. New skills show a New tag. Updated ones show Updated — right where you'd look. Silent when there's nothing to report.
The official skill for turning a project, chat transcript, or folder of notes into a properly-structured BotDoc draft using your LLM.
Bootstraps an AI agent on the BotDocs CLI: ingest existing skills, search and install team libraries, sync, publish, and manage teams from the terminal across Claude, Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, Copilot, Windsurf, Gemini, Antigravity, OpenCode, and ChatGPT.
A personal work activity tracking system with automatic capture, manual annotations, AI summaries, and natural language queries.
A data visualization application specification covering data sources, charts, filtering, real-time updates, and exports.
A comprehensive approach to testing covering unit, integration, and e2e philosophy, what to test, and deployment confidence.
Generate a manual QA checklist for the current branch by pulling the linked Linear ticket's acceptance criteria. Use this skill whenever the user says "QA list", "/qa-list", "give me a QA list", "what should I QA", "what do I need to test", "build me a test plan", or any similar phrasing that asks for a manual testing checklist for the work on the current branch. Also trigger when the user is about to push, PR, or hand off a branch and wants to sanity-check what to verify. Parses the current branch name to find a Linear ticket ID (e.g. `trevor/CHA-123`), queries Linear via MCP, and converts acceptance criteria into a tappable inline markdown checklist. Falls back gracefully when AC is missing or the ticket can't be found — synthesizes a QA list from the description and/or the git diff against the base branch.
Find the skills that already work, save the ones you'll use again, and share them with your team in one click. Right from your browser.