Custom Agent Prompts let your organization configure the default prompts that appear inside the GLIDR AI Agent. Instead of every team member starting from a blank box, they open the Agent and see a curated menu of starting points — prompts written by your team for your team's workflows.
The result: clever, consistent, well-formed prompts across the org, without each person having to figure out how to ask the Agent the right question.
When to use custom prompts
Reach for custom prompts when you've found Agent prompts that consistently produce good output and you want the rest of the team to use them. Common examples:
- A standard discovery question to ask about a new Hypothesis
- A market-sizing prompt with your org's preferred framing
- A canvas-review prompt that catches the gaps you care about
- A weekly-update prompt that produces a consistent format
If a teammate keeps re-typing the same prompt, that's a candidate.
How users see custom prompts
When a team member opens the GLIDR AI Agent on any project, your organization's custom prompts appear as suggestions in the prompt area. Selecting one drops the prompt into the Agent so the user can run it as-is or tweak it before sending.
Setting up custom prompts
Custom prompts are configured at the organization level by an admin. Open Settings → Custom Agent Prompts, then add or edit the prompts that should appear by default for everyone in your org.
Each prompt has a short label (what the user sees in the suggestion list) and the actual prompt text the Agent receives.
Tips for writing good prompts
- Be specific about output shape. Tell the Agent how you want the answer structured — a bulleted list, a table, a one-paragraph summary.
- Reference project context. The Agent already knows the project's Dashboard and Canvas, so prompts like "Looking at the current canvas, …" produce more grounded answers than generic prompts.
- Keep labels short. The label is what users scan in the suggestion list, so a 3–5 word imperative ("Critique current canvas", "Suggest next experiment") reads better than a full sentence.
- Iterate based on what your team actually uses. If a prompt isn't being selected, rewrite it or replace it. Custom prompts are cheap to change.