Skip the Blank Page. Open the Library.
Real prompts for images, blogs, social posts, and newsletters, side-by-side with the work they made. Pick one, hand it to your team, and ship.
You hired the team. You set the voice. Monday morning rolls around, you open the chat, and the cursor blinks. That moment, sitting there with everything ready and nothing to say first, is the moment most creators lose their week.
Even the best team in the world can't help if you don't know what to ask. The blank page doesn't care that you have Maya on marketing or Clara on content. It just blinks, waiting on you. The Resource Library is what blinks back.
The Short Version
The Resource Library is a built-in collection of prompts and playbooks you can copy straight into your team's chat. Real prompts for real outputs: images, blogs, social posts, newsletters, and step-by-step guides. Every prompt is paired with the work it actually made, so you can see where you're headed before you brief.
Why a Library, Not a Tour
Momentum doesn't survive a blank page. Onboarding gives you a great first week. Your team meets you, you meet them, you ship something you're proud of. The second week is harder. You want to try a new image style. You've got a launch on Friday. You haven't sent a newsletter in a month and you're not sure where to start.
That's the moment most creators stall, not because their team isn't ready, but because they haven't seen what's possible. So they retype the same vague brief, get something fine, and close the tab. The Resource Library is the answer to that moment. It's a shelf, not a tour. You walk in, you pick something useful off it, you walk out.
What's on the Shelves
Five categories, each tuned to the kind of work it produces. Every card opens a side panel that shows the prompt template alongside the example output, so you can see the shape of the win before you start.
Stunning images
Maya prompts paired with the actual image they made. Product hero shots, magazine covers, three-word ads, quote cards, OG images, profile banners. Pick the look you want, copy the prompt, swap in your product or topic.
Long-form blogs
Clara prompts laid out like a Medium or Substack post, so you can feel the rhythm and length before you brief. Explainers, customer spotlights, opinionated takes, launch posts. The kind of writing your audience saves.
Social posts
Instagram, LinkedIn, and X mockups that read as the real thing at a glance, plus text-only templates for captions and short-form scripts. Recognise the platform, see the post, then copy the prompt that made it.
Newsletters
Mocked up like an actual email, with a From, To, and Subject line. That’s where most newsletters live or die. Launch announcements, weekly roundups, value-first teaches, and more.
How-to guides
Step-by-step playbooks for the bigger moves. Build your first automation. Get the most out of Maya. Train your team on your voice. These open on dedicated pages so you can read them like docs.
From Library to Chat in Four Moves
The flow is the same every time. Once you've done it twice, it's muscle memory.
Open the Library
Pick a prompt
Make the bracketed bits yours
[YOUR PRODUCT] or [WORD 1]. That's where your voice goes. The rest of the prompt is the structure that makes the output land. Don't fight it.Hand it to the right team member
Getting the Most From the Library
Browse before you brief
You don't always know what you want until you see it. Five minutes scrolling the library beats fifteen minutes describing the wrong thing to your team. The example outputs are there for a reason. Let them set the direction before you write a word.
Make the bracketed bits yours
Every prompt is built around placeholders. Resist the urge to rewrite the whole thing. The bracketed bits are the only part that's supposed to change. The structure around them is what makes a quote card actually read like a quote card and a three-word ad land like a three-word ad.
When the example shows more than the prompt promises
Some example outputs in the library were generated with small tweaks on top of the base prompt. Where that happened, the prompt template notes it. If the result you're looking at has a detail the prompt doesn't describe, that's your invitation to add one of your own.
Save the ones that work
If a prompt produces something you love, hold onto it. Drop your version into a notes doc, pin it in a channel, screenshot the result. The library is the seed. What you generate from it is yours. Repeat what works, ditch what doesn't.
A Library, Not a Launchpad
Most “templates” pages are something you visit on day one and never see again. The Resource Library is built for the opposite. It's meant to be revisited. Week two, when you've shipped your first launch and want to try a new angle. Month three, when you want a new image style for the next campaign. Month six, when a friend asks how you make this look easy.
That's the bet. Every time you come back to the chat and the cursor starts blinking, the answer to “what do I ask my team to do next” is one tab away.