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Why Your AI Search Prompt Library Is Letting You Down (And How to Fix It)

| 3 minutes to read

There’s a trap a lot of businesses fall into with AI search measurement, where they pick a handful of broad category prompts, run them through ChatGPT or Perplexity a few times, and take the results as a meaningful read on their AI visibility.

It isn’t.

If your prompt library over-represents generic discovery queries, ignores different product lines, skips local competitors, or only tracks branded searches, your dashboard can look thorough while pointing you in entirely the wrong direction.

A genuinely useful prompt library is a structured sample of the AI-assisted journeys that matter most to your business. Not every possible question. Not a keyword list stretched into sentence form. A representative set of how your customers actually think, compare, and decide, with all the context they bring to it.

What Makes a Prompt Library Representative?

The starting point isn’t writing prompts. It’s defining what the library needs to represent.

That means mapping your business across five dimensions before you write a single prompt:

  • Customer journey stage: Are you measuring discovery, evaluation, comparison, validation, or transaction? Each stage produces different AI outputs and different insights.
  • Product or service line: A multi-product business needs separate prompt groups per offering. The topics, competitors, and decision criteria can be completely different.
  • Audience or persona: A freelancer and an enterprise buyer ask different questions, use different language, and need different proof before they commit.
  • Market and language: Local competitors, local sources, local regulations, and local trust signals can all change what an AI platform surfaces. Translating your UK prompts into French doesn’t make them representative for France.
  • Business priority: Not all of the above carry equal commercial weight right now. The library should reflect where you actually need to improve visibility.

The Bit Most Prompt Libraries Miss: Buyer Constraints

Real AI search prompts aren’t clean and generic. They’re shaped by context. Budget. Team size. Industry. Tools the person already uses. Compliance requirements. Urgency.

“Best project management software” and “best project management software for a 20-person marketing agency that needs client approval workflows and Slack integration” are very different prompts. The second one is far more likely to resemble how your actual buyer phrases their question and it’ll produce much more useful data.

Building constraints into your prompts means you’re measuring AI visibility in the decision contexts that actually matter, not a sanitised version of your market that doesn’t quite exist.

How Many Prompts Do You Actually Need?

Quite a few businesses build prompt libraries that are either far too small to be meaningful or so large they can’t be maintained or acted on. A sensible starting point depends on business complexity:

  • Single product, limited audience: 30-60 prompts
  • Multi-product or strong persona segmentation: 100-250 prompts
  • Enterprise, multi-country, multi-brand: 250+ prompts, organised by market, product line, and journey stage

But size isn’t the point. A smaller, well-structured library beats a large, random one every time. The goal is pattern recognition, not volume.

Where to Get Your Prompts From

Don’t start from your own assumptions about how customers ask questions. Pull from sources that reflect real behaviour:

  • Non-branded search demand data
  • Long-tail queries from Google Search Console that are underperforming on clicks
  • Sales call notes and CRM records
  • Support tickets and live chat logs
  • Reviews and community language (Reddit, industry Slack groups, forums)
  • People Also Ask data

The language your customers use when they’re frustrated, comparing options, or looking for reassurance is far more useful than your internal description of what you do.

Keep Platform Results Separate

One final thing that often gets overlooked: don’t blend results across platforms.

Your brand might be recommended in ChatGPT, absent from Perplexity, and misdescribed in Google’s AI Mode. If you average those into a single “AI visibility score,” you’ve hidden the specific insight that would actually tell you what to fix.

Track each platform separately. Report them separately. The differences are where the useful information lives.

Next up, we’ll look at how to use your prompt library findings to diagnose what’s actually holding your AI visibility back and how to prioritise the fixes that will have the biggest commercial impact.

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Sophie Roberts

Managing Director

As Managing Director at Koozai, Sophie Roberts keeps the agency on course, overseeing a diverse portfolio of clients. With a BA [Hons] in Marketing & PR and with more than 30 years of experience in marketing, Sophie has delivered impactful solutions for household names including Golden Wonder, Airfix & Humbrol, and Victorinox Swiss Army Knives. Since joining Koozai, she has continued this track record of excellence, guiding high-profile clients such as Travelbag, Trevor Sorbie, Red Funnel, and Côte Brasserie through digital strategies that have delivered measurable results. Her leadership style combines empathy and clarity, making even the most complex digital strategies accessible and actionable for clients and colleagues alike. Sophie’s career began in PR, where she quickly stood out by leading memorable, results-driven campaigns, notably the BBC’s “Service!” programme, which won a Catey Award for Best Independent Marketing Campaign and boosted engagement across the front-of-house profession. Her experience extends strongly into the hospitality sector, but she has also delivered innovative digital strategies for clients in construction and beyond. A passionate advocate for work-life balance and positive team culture, Sophie champions an environment where people thrive. A self-confessed foodie and proud geek, she treats every day like a school day, always eager to learn and improve. She has a particular interest in harnessing technology and AI to improve efficiency, effectiveness, and strategic innovation across marketing disciplines. Sophie’s insights and expertise have been featured in publications including The Business Magazine, Portsmouth News, The Daily Echo, Yahoo News, The Caterer, and HVP Magazine.

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