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Digest

Generate a daily or weekly digest of activity across all connected sources. Use when catching up after time away, starting the day and wanting a summary of mentions and action items, or reviewing a week's decisions and document updates grouped by project.

$ npx promptcreek add digest

Auto-detects your installed agents and installs the skill to each one.

What This Skill Does

This skill scans recent activity across connected sources and generates a structured digest highlighting important information. It summarizes updates from chat, email, cloud storage, project trackers, CRM, and knowledge bases. It's designed to help users stay informed and quickly catch up on relevant activity.

When to Use

  • Get a daily summary of activity.
  • Catch up on missed information.
  • Monitor project progress.
  • Track updates across multiple tools.
  • Identify important emails and messages.
  • Stay informed about relevant changes.

Key Features

Parses flags for time window selection.
Connects to chat, email, cloud storage, etc.
Gathers activity from multiple sources.
Summarizes messages, emails, and documents.
Tracks project tasks and CRM updates.
Highlights key information and action items.

Installation

Run in your project directory:
$ npx promptcreek add digest

Auto-detects your installed agents (Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, etc.) and installs the skill to each one.

View Full Skill Content

Digest Command

> If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see CONNECTORS.md.

Scan recent activity across all connected sources and generate a structured digest highlighting what matters.

Instructions

1. Parse Flags

Determine the time window from the user's input:

  • --daily — Last 24 hours (default if no flag specified)
  • --weekly — Last 7 days

The user may also specify a custom range:

  • --since yesterday
  • --since Monday
  • --since 2025-01-20

2. Check Available Sources

Identify which MCP sources are connected (same approach as the search command):

  • ~~chat — channels, DMs, mentions
  • ~~email — inbox, sent, threads
  • ~~cloud storage — recently modified docs shared with user
  • ~~project tracker — tasks assigned, completed, commented on
  • ~~CRM — opportunity updates, account activity
  • ~~knowledge base — recently updated wiki pages

If no sources are connected, guide the user:

To generate a digest, you'll need at least one source connected.

Check your MCP settings to add ~~chat, ~~email, ~~cloud storage, or other tools.

3. Gather Activity from Each Source

~~chat:

  • Search for messages mentioning the user (to:me)
  • Check channels the user is in for recent activity
  • Look for threads the user participated in
  • Identify new messages in key channels

~~email:

  • Search recent inbox messages
  • Identify threads with new replies
  • Flag emails with action items or questions directed at the user

~~cloud storage:

  • Find documents recently modified or shared with the user
  • Note new comments on docs the user owns or collaborates on

~~project tracker:

  • Tasks assigned to the user (new or updated)
  • Tasks completed by others that the user follows
  • Comments on tasks the user is involved with

~~CRM:

  • Opportunity stage changes
  • New activities logged on accounts the user owns
  • Updated contacts or accounts

~~knowledge base:

  • Recently updated documents in relevant collections
  • New documents created in watched areas

4. Identify Key Items

From all gathered activity, extract and categorize:

Action Items:

  • Direct requests made to the user ("Can you...", "Please...", "@user")
  • Tasks assigned or due soon
  • Questions awaiting the user's response
  • Review requests

Decisions:

  • Conclusions reached in threads or emails
  • Approvals or rejections
  • Policy or direction changes

Mentions:

  • Times the user was mentioned or referenced
  • Discussions about the user's projects or areas

Updates:

  • Status changes on projects the user follows
  • Document updates in the user's domain
  • Completed items the user was waiting on

5. Group by Topic

Organize the digest by topic, project, or theme rather than by source. Merge related activity across sources:

## Project Aurora
  • ~~chat: Design review thread concluded — team chose Option B (#design, Tuesday)
  • ~~email: Sarah sent updated spec incorporating feedback (Wednesday)
  • ~~cloud storage: "Aurora API Spec v3" updated by Sarah (Wednesday)
  • ~~project tracker: 3 tasks moved to In Progress, 2 completed

Budget Planning

  • ~~email: Finance team requesting Q2 projections by Friday
  • ~~chat: Todd shared template in #finance (Monday)
  • ~~cloud storage: "Q2 Budget Template" shared with you (Monday)

6. Format the Digest

Structure the output clearly:

# [Daily/Weekly] Digest — [Date or Date Range]

Sources scanned: ~~chat, ~~email, ~~cloud storage, [others]

Action Items (X items)

  • [ ] [Action item 1] — from [person], [source] ([date])
  • [ ] [Action item 2] — from [person], [source] ([date])

Decisions Made

  • [Decision 1] — [context] ([source], [date])
  • [Decision 2] — [context] ([source], [date])

[Topic/Project Group 1]

[Activity summary with source attribution]

[Topic/Project Group 2]

[Activity summary with source attribution]

Mentions

  • [Mention context] — [source] ([date])

Documents Updated

  • [Doc name] — [who modified, what changed] ([date])

7. Handle Unavailable Sources

If any source fails or is unreachable:

Note: Could not reach [source name] for this digest.

The following sources were included: [list of successful sources].

Do not let one failed source prevent the digest from being generated. Produce the best digest possible from available sources.

8. Summary Stats

End with a quick summary:

---

[X] action items · [Y] decisions · [Z] mentions · [W] doc updates

Across [N] sources · Covering [time range]

Notes

  • Default to --daily if no flag is specified
  • Group by topic/project, not by source — users care about what happened, not where it happened
  • Action items should always be listed first — they are the most actionable part of a digest
  • Deduplicate cross-source activity (same decision in ~~chat and email = one entry)
  • For weekly digests, prioritize significance over completeness — highlight what matters, skip noise
  • If the user has a memory system (CLAUDE.md), use it to decode people names and project references
  • Include enough context in each item that the user can decide whether to dig deeper without clicking through
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Supported Agents

Claude CodeCursorCodexGemini CLIAiderWindsurfOpenClaw

Details

License
MIT
Source
admin
Published
3/18/2026

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