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How Feeds Work in Muno Brief

Learn how feeds separate newsletter streams by topic, schedule, persona, and forwarding address.

How Feeds Work in Muno Brief

Feeds are one of Muno Brief’s core product concepts.

A feed is a user-owned stream of trusted sources with its own forwarding address, source emails, brief generation scope, delivery settings, persona, and steering prompt.

Why Feeds Matter

Most users do not have one information need.

They might track AI tools, crypto markets, product strategy, engineering practices, and competitors. Mixing all of that into one brief can make the output less useful.

Feeds keep those streams separate.

Each feed can answer a different recurring question.

What Each Feed Controls

Each feed can have its own:

  • name
  • forwarding email
  • source emails
  • generated briefs
  • delivery day and time
  • timezone
  • delivery enabled or disabled
  • persona
  • steering prompt

This means a feed is not just a folder. It is a configurable intelligence stream.

Example: Crypto Feed

A crypto feed might receive market newsletters, protocol updates, exchange commentary, regulatory notes, and analyst roundups.

Its steering prompt could ask Muno Brief to focus on market structure, liquidity, risk, regulatory changes, and emerging narratives.

The output should help the reader see what changed in the market without reading every issue.

Example: Market Intelligence Feed

A market intelligence feed might collect business newsletters, macro updates, investor memos, and industry analysis.

Its persona could be executive or analytical. Its steering prompt could prioritize strategic implications, company movement, category formation, and non-obvious risks.

This feed is useful for founders, operators, investors, and analysts who want a concise view of market movement.

Example: Engineering Feed

An engineering feed might collect technical newsletters, framework updates, architecture essays, changelogs, and developer digests.

Its persona could be technical. Its steering prompt could ask for implementation details, tradeoffs, migration risks, and useful patterns.

This keeps technical learning separate from business or market reading.

Example: Competitor Tracking Feed

A competitor tracking feed might collect product launch emails, company newsletters, pricing updates, release notes, and customer-facing announcements.

Its steering prompt could ask Muno Brief to surface positioning changes, feature launches, messaging shifts, packaging changes, and signs of strategic direction.

This turns public company communications into a recurring competitive intelligence brief.

Feeds Make Intelligence Modular

Feeds let users separate information by topic, role, client, project, market, or research question.

That makes Muno Brief more than a newsletter digest. It becomes a flexible system for recurring intelligence.

Keep the sources. Skip the inbox.

Muno Brief turns trusted newsletters into one clear weekly brief, shaped by your priorities and linked back to the original source.