Zev Arnovitz shows how to transform finished PRDs into interactive prototypes that look enough like your actual product to effectively communicate with your team. “We’ve talked a lot about using Cursor as a thought partner. Now I want to show how we can go from thinking and creating docs to creating prototypes. It’s easy to translate what we’re thinking to our team,” he explains. Zev’s setup includes his copilot with general editor context, people on the team, competitor research, and initiatives. “We noticed that users were having really a hard time selecting palettes for their site. We gave all kinds of default palettes, but users wanted their own colors, their brand colors. So we decided to create a product that allows them to upload a logo or an image and generate some palettes from that.” After finishing his PRD, he tells Cursor: “Based on this PRD, I want to create a prototype. I want to put it in the demo hub we’ve created together. I want the flow to be where users can open from the side panel of the editor the design panel. They can upload their logo, and then we’ll be able to generate 3 different palettes for them.” He adds photos of both the editor and how palettes are shown within the editor for context. “It’s a bit long, but that’s pretty much it. I added the PRD for context. Now I’m going to let this run.” His demo hub showcases all his prototypes in a clickable format: “It’s a cool way to evangelize this and show this to the team.” The resulting prototype looks similar enough to the Wix editor that users can upload a logo (like Starbucks), generate palettes, select them, and see the content on stage change. “This is way overkill, a lot of stuff that Cursor decided to do. But this is just a one shot prompt. It took me maybe 5 minutes. You could definitely do a few iterations and make it really look like what you want. It really simplifies translating this to the team.” ➡️ After writing your PRD, give it to Cursor with screenshots of your actual product. Ask for an interactive prototype. Five minutes later, you have something clickable to show your team instead of static mockups.