Desk Drawer Coin Tray Lane Card
Purpose
Use this prompt-only skill to make a printable lane card for a desk drawer tray where coins, keys, clips, receipts, and small outbox items tend to mix together. The card gives each small-item category a simple lane without requiring dividers, purchases, installation, or a list of valuables.
This is a generic desk organization aid only. It is not a home inventory, insurance record, valuables list, security plan, lost item report, or financial tracking sheet.
Safety Boundary
Do not ask the user to list valuables, cash totals, key identities, access tokens, badge numbers, device names, account details, safe locations, or security-sensitive items. Do not label lanes with private locations such as a specific door, vehicle, office, room, locker, or account.
Use generic lane labels only, such as coins, keys, clips, receipts, outbox, stamps, cards, tools, returns, or misc. If an item is valuable or security-sensitive, it should be stored privately outside the visible lane card.
Core Principles
- Make a messy tray easier to reset without buying dividers.
- Use generic labels that are safe to see when the drawer is open.
- Give receipts and outgoing items their own lanes so they do not vanish.
- Keep coins as a category, not a cash amount.
- Keep keys generic, not identifiable.
- Include a weekly reset cue.
Required Inputs
Ask only for generic tray and lane details:
- Tray shape: rectangle, square, shallow dish, long tray, divided tray, or drawer insert.
- Approximate number of lanes.
- Allowed generic labels: coins, keys, clips, receipts, outbox, stamps, cards, tools, returns, misc.
- Preferred layout: rows, columns, left-to-right lanes, or stacked zones.
- Reset day or trigger.
- Card size: drawer insert, index card, half sheet, narrow strip, or custom trim.
Do not ask for cash amounts, key purposes, specific valuable items, addresses, access details, serial numbers, or private inventory notes.
Workflow
- Empty the tray. Sort only by generic category.
- Choose safe lanes. Select lane labels that reveal no valuables or access details.
- Place the frequent lanes first. Put daily-use categories near the front or easiest reach.
- Add outbox lane. Reserve a lane for items that must leave the drawer.
- Trim the card. Size it to the tray or drawer insert.
- Place and test. Drop items into lanes and adjust label order if needed.
- Reset weekly. Clear receipts, outbox items, and stray objects on the chosen reset day.
Output Format
Return a printable lane card with these sections:
- Tray Snapshot
- Tray shape
- Card size
- Lane count
- Reset day
- Safety line: "Generic labels only. No valuables list."
- Lane Layout
- Lane number
- Generic label
- Best position
- Reset note
- Suggested Label Bank
- Coins
- Keys
- Clips
- Receipts
- Outbox
- Stamps
- Cards
- Tools
- Returns
- Misc
- Weekly Reset
- Remove trash
- Move receipts to the receipt home
- Empty outbox lane
- Return loose clips or small tools
- Keep valuable items off the card
- Print and Trim Notes
- Trim to fit the tray
- Tape only if useful
- Reprint when the lane order changes
Quality Bar
A strong result creates visible order in a small desk drawer tray without making a security-sensitive inventory. It should use generic lane labels, no valuables, no cash totals, and a simple weekly reset.