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How to Publish an AI Prompt on RoutineHub

RoutineHub Blog July 1, 2026
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RoutineHub now allows creators to publish more than Apple Shortcuts. With support for AI Prompts, creators can share reusable slash commands designed to work with tools like Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot, DeepSeek, Grok, and other AI models.

An AI Prompt on RoutineHub works as a reusable command that helps users perform a specific task quickly and consistently. Instead of writing the same instructions again and again, users can download or copy a prompt and use it as part of their AI workflow.

This guide explains how to publish an AI Prompt on RoutineHub step by step.

What Is an AI Prompt on RoutineHub?

An AI Prompt is a reusable instruction that can be invoked as a slash command, such as:

/ooda
/listing-writer
/support-summary

The prompt contains the instructions that the AI model should follow when the command is used. For example, a prompt can help users summarize support tickets, write product descriptions, analyze feedback, create content outlines, or generate structured reports.

AI Prompts are useful because they make repeated tasks faster, more consistent, and easier to share with other users.

What You Need Before Publishing

Before creating your prompt listing, prepare the following:

  • A clear prompt name
  • A short slash command
  • The full prompt body
  • A brief one-line summary
  • A description explaining what the prompt does
  • The AI tools or models it works with
  • A category
  • Optional source URL, license, and attribution

It is also a good idea to test your prompt before publishing it. Run it in the AI tool it was designed for and make sure the output is clear, useful, and consistent.

Step 1: Create a New AI Prompt

Go to RoutineHub and choose the option to publish a new AI Prompt.

You will see a form where you can add the basic information for your prompt, including the name, command, permalink, compatible AI tools, brief summary, description, categories, and other listing details.

Step 2: Add a Clear Prompt Name

Choose a name that explains what the prompt does.

A good name should be simple, specific, and easy to understand.

Examples:

RoutineHub Listing Writer
Support Ticket Summary
SEO Blog Outline Generator
Reddit Outreach Helper
Shortcut Description Writer

Avoid names that are too generic, unclear, or difficult to remember.

Step 3: Create the Slash Command

The command is how users will invoke the prompt. It should be lowercase, short, and hyphenated when needed.

For example:

/listing-writer
/support-summary
/blog-outline
/reddit-outreach

In the command field, you usually only need to enter the command text without the slash, such as:

listing-writer

RoutineHub will display it as:

/listing-writer

Keep the command simple so users can remember and reuse it easily.

Step 4: Set the Permalink

The permalink is the URL for your prompt listing.

If RoutineHub offers an auto-generated permalink, you can leave this field blank and let it generate from the command.

For example, if your command is:

listing-writer

The permalink can be generated automatically based on that command.

Step 5: Choose Which AI Tools It Works With

Select the AI tools or models that your prompt supports.

For example:

  • Claude
  • ChatGPT
  • Gemini
  • Copilot
  • DeepSeek
  • Grok

Choose the tools where you have tested the prompt or where you are confident it will work correctly.

If the prompt is written specifically for Claude Code or another specific AI tool, make that clear in the listing description.

Step 6: Add a Brief Summary

The brief should be a short, SEO-friendly one-line summary of what your prompt does.

Example:

Create polished RoutineHub descriptions for shortcuts, prompts, skills, and plugins.

Other examples:

Summarize customer support tickets into clear action items.



Generate SEO-friendly blog outlines from a topic or keyword.

The brief should help users understand the value of the prompt quickly.

Step 7: Select the Prompt Kind

Choose the kind that best describes the prompt.

For example, if the prompt helps complete a repeatable task, you can select:

Workflow

Use the category or kind that best matches the purpose of your prompt, such as productivity, writing, engineering, support, research, or personal use.

Step 8: Write the Prompt Description

The description explains what the AI Prompt does and why users should use it.

A strong description should include:

  • What the prompt is for
  • What problem it solves
  • How users can use it
  • Which AI tools it supports
  • Example use cases
  • Any limitations or notes

Example description:

RoutineHub Listing Writer is an AI prompt designed to help creators write clear, structured, and engaging descriptions for their RoutineHub listings.

It can be used for Apple Shortcuts, AI Prompts, AI Skills, and AI Plugins. The prompt turns rough creator notes into a polished description with a short introduction, key features, target users, usage notes, and a simple call to action.

## Use Cases

- Write descriptions for new RoutineHub listings
- Improve unclear or incomplete listing text
- Create SEO-friendly summaries
- Standardize formatting across multiple listings
- Help creators explain their work more clearly

## Works Best For

Creators who want to publish better listings without spending too much time writing from scratch.

Keep the description helpful and honest. Avoid exaggerating what the prompt can do.

Step 9: Add the Prompt Body

The body is the actual prompt that users will download or run when they use the command.

This is the most important part of the listing.

Example prompt body:

You are a writing assistant for RoutineHub creators.

Create a clear, useful, and engaging RoutineHub listing description for an Apple Shortcut, AI Prompt, AI Skill, or AI Plugin.

Use the creator’s details and turn them into a polished description that users can quickly understand.

Write in clean Markdown using this structure:

## Short Introduction
Explain what the item does in 1–2 short paragraphs.

## What It Does
Describe the main purpose in simple words.

## Key Features
List the most important features as bullets.

## Who It Is For
Explain who would benefit from using it.

## How To Use It
Give simple usage instructions if enough information is provided.

## Call To Action
End with a short, natural sentence encouraging users to try it.

Style rules:
- Keep the tone friendly, clear, and professional.
- Use simple language.
- Make it SEO-friendly without keyword stuffing.
- Do not exaggerate or overpromise.
- Do not invent features that were not provided.
- If details are missing, write only based on the available information.

Creator details:
[Paste the shortcut, prompt, skill, or plugin details here]

Make sure the body is complete, clear, and ready to use.

Step 10: Add a Version

When publishing the prompt body, add a version number.

For the first release, you can use:

1.0.0

Version numbers help users understand when a prompt has been updated.

Step 11: Add an Argument Hint

The argument hint tells users what kind of input they should provide when running the prompt.

Examples:

[item details]



[customer message]



[topic or keyword]



[issue-url] or [topic]

For a listing writer prompt, a good argument hint would be:

[item details]

This tells users to paste the details of the item they want the AI to describe.

Step 12: Add Version Changes

In the changes field, briefly explain what is included in this version.

For the first version, you can write:

Initial version of the AI Prompt.

Or more specifically:

Initial version of the RoutineHub Listing Writer prompt.

For future updates, mention what changed, such as improved instructions, better formatting, new examples, or support for more AI tools.

Step 13: Choose Categories

Select categories that match the prompt’s purpose.

For example, a writing prompt for RoutineHub listings could use:

Productivity
Engineering

A support prompt might use:

Productivity
Business

A personal planning prompt might use:

Personal
Productivity

Choose only the categories that are truly relevant.

Step 14: Add Source URL, License, and Attribution

If your prompt is available in a public source, such as GitHub, GitHub Gist, Notion, or a documentation page, you can add the URL in the Source URL field.

For license, you can use:

MIT

Or:

Free to use with attribution

For attribution, add the creator name, for example:

Created by Victor Sanchez

These fields help users understand how they can use, modify, or credit your prompt.

Step 15: Review and Publish

Before publishing, review every field carefully.

Check that:

  • The name is clear
  • The slash command is short and lowercase
  • The prompt body is complete
  • The brief explains the value in one line
  • The description is helpful
  • The correct AI tools are selected
  • The category is accurate
  • The license and attribution are correct

Once everything looks good, publish the AI Prompt.

Tips for Publishing a Better AI Prompt

A good AI Prompt should be easy to understand, easy to use, and useful for a repeatable task.

Before publishing, ask yourself:

  • Does the command name clearly explain the prompt?
  • Is the prompt body complete?
  • Can users understand when to use it?
  • Does it produce consistent results?
  • Is the description honest and specific?
  • Did I avoid including private information or API keys?

The best prompts solve a clear problem and save users time.

Final Thoughts

Publishing an AI Prompt on RoutineHub is a simple way to share useful AI workflows with the community. Whether your prompt helps with writing, coding, research, support, automation, or productivity, RoutineHub gives creators a place to make their work discoverable and reusable.

With a clear name, strong description, complete prompt body, and accurate model compatibility, your AI Prompt can help other users work faster and get more consistent results from their favorite AI tools.

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