Home › Prompt Manager › Prompt Manager for Every AI
Most people don't use one AI. They use ChatGPT for drafting, Claude for editing, Gemini because it's already open in a Google tab, and Perplexity when they need sources. That's normal in 2026 — and it's exactly why a prompt saved in one of them is useless in the other three.
PromptDock is a free ai prompt manager Chrome extension built around one idea: your prompts should belong to you, not to whichever chatbot you happened to write them in. Save a prompt once, and type // in any supported AI chat to insert it — same shortcut, same library, every platform.
Think about where your best prompts actually live right now. Probably scattered across three places: buried in old ChatGPT conversations you can't search, half-remembered in your head, or copy-pasted into a Notes doc you have to tab over to, scroll through, and copy from by hand. None of that travels with you.
Switch from ChatGPT to Claude for a task and you start from zero. Claude's Projects don't sync to Gemini. Gemini's saved info doesn't touch Perplexity. Every AI platform is building its own walled garden of memory and context, and every one of those gardens stops at its own front door. If you use more than one model — and most serious users do, because each one is genuinely better at different things — you're maintaining the same mental list of prompts four or five times over, rewriting the good ones from memory and losing a little precision each time.
A multi-model prompt manager fixes this by moving the library out of any single chatbot and into the browser itself, where it can sit alongside all of them.
PromptDock's prompt library isn't tied to an account or a specific site — it's stored locally in your browser and made available inside every AI chat box PromptDock supports. Save "Turn this into a professional email" once, and it's there whether you're in ChatGPT at 9am, Claude at noon, or Gemini at midnight.
Group prompts by project or purpose — Writing, Code Review, Client Emails — so a growing library stays easy to scan instead of turning into a scroll-forever list.
Turn "Write a LinkedIn post about {{topic}} for {{audience}}" into a reusable template. Fill in the blanks as it inserts instead of hand-editing text every time.
Your whole library is a portable JSON file. Back it up, move it to another machine, or share a prompt pack with a teammate.
Prefer not to type //? Open the same palette with a configurable keyboard shortcut instead.
Select any great prompt or piece of text on any page, right-click, and save it straight into your library — no copy, switch tab, paste.
Pin your daily drivers so they're the first result before you've even finished typing a filter.
The mechanic is deliberately the same no matter which AI you're in:
PromptDock's palette opens right where you're typing — no popup window, no separate tab.
Start typing and the list narrows instantly. Pinned and frequently-used prompts surface first.
The full prompt lands in the input, cursor ready. If it's a template, fill in each {{variable}} as it inserts. Then send as normal.
Under the hood, PromptDock doesn't rely on one fragile trick to work "everywhere." Each supported site has its own chat input — a plain textarea, a contenteditable div, a rich-text box — and PromptDock is built to detect and insert into each one properly, the way a person typing would. That's also why the list of supported platforms is a specific, tested list rather than a vague claim to work on "any AI site."
Every AI has its own quirks, so PromptDock ships dedicated guides for using it well on each one:
See the full case for switching to one library instead of per-tool notes in how to reuse the same prompts across every AI, and if ChatGPT is your main driver, how to save ChatGPT prompts walks through every method, including this one, side by side.
The tradeoff most multi-platform tools make is turning your prompts into their cloud product — sign up, log in, and your library now lives on someone else's server. PromptDock does the opposite:
StorageChrome's local extension storage, on your device. No PromptDock servers store your prompts.AccountNone required, ever. Install and start saving prompts immediately.NetworkThe extension makes no background network requests with your prompt data.ExportYour entire library is one JSON file you control — back it up whenever you like.Pricing is just as simple. The free plan holds 10 prompts across all 10 platforms, forever — no expiry, no nagging. Every install also unlocks a 7-day full-Pro trial automatically: unlimited prompts, {{variables}} templates, and sync, all unlocked from minute one so you can judge the real product instead of a stripped-down demo. After 7 days you land softly on the free plan; nothing you saved is deleted. If you want to keep the unlimited library and templates, Pro is a single $19 one-time payment — not a subscription, not a recurring charge to remember to cancel.
If you're comparing tools in this category more broadly, see how PromptDock stacks up as an AIPRM alternative, or start straight from a working set with 50 free ChatGPT prompts you can import in one click. For the mechanics of the trigger itself, how the // slash-command prompt system works covers the palette in more depth.
One library. Ten AI chats. Type // anywhere. PromptDock saves your prompts locally — no account, nothing uploaded — and inserts them in ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Perplexity, DeepSeek, Grok, Copilot, Mistral, Poe and AI Studio. Free for 10 prompts, plus a 7-day full-Pro trial on install. Add to Chrome — it's free →Yes. PromptDock is a single Chrome extension that adds the same // trigger and prompt palette inside ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Perplexity, DeepSeek, Grok, Microsoft Copilot, Mistral (Le Chat), Poe and Google AI Studio. You save a prompt once and it's available in all ten.
Not with PromptDock. There's no sign-up and no login screen. Your prompt library lives in Chrome's local extension storage on your device. Nothing is uploaded to a server.
PromptDock detects the native chat input on each supported site individually and inserts text the same way a person typing would — so it respects each platform's own editor (plain textarea, contenteditable div, or rich text box) instead of relying on one fragile universal hack.
You drop to the free plan automatically — no card required up front, nothing to cancel. Everything you saved during the trial (folders, tags, templates) stays intact; you just can't save past 10 prompts or use Pro-only features like sync until you upgrade.
Yes, the free plan is free forever for up to 10 saved prompts across all supported platforms. Pro removes the limit and adds templates, folders at scale, and sync, for a single $19 one-time payment — not a subscription.