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Data Hub and the Daily Digest

Everything that happened in your network, triaged for you every morning.

Everything that happened in your network, sorted for you

Since you last logged in, your network evolved: new LinkedIn connection requests, DMs you haven't answered, meetings that ended, emails worth remembering. Normally that signal is smeared across five apps and you triage none of it. The Data Hub is the one place it all lands, and the digest at the top pulls out the most important interactions since your last visit and flags them for you, so you act on what matters instead of wading through the noise.

Open it each morning. It's the two-minute habit the rest of Goodword builds on.

How it works

The digest: the important stuff, flagged

At the top of the Data Hub, a briefing card shows what's new since your last login (how many interactions came in, how many new contacts appeared) and then the part that matters: the interactions flagged as important, each with the person behind it. Not everything qualifies. Goodword filters the noise and flags what deserves a decision: the connection request worth a look, the message worth answering, the meeting worth capturing. Each flagged item shows who it is and where it came from ("LinkedIn request," "Granola meeting: Q3 planning," "Gmail thread").

For each person, decide on the spot:

  • Accept or decline for LinkedIn connection requests, handled right here.

  • Add a note to capture the context while you still have it ("met at the Austin dinner, intro'd by Sam, wants to talk pricing"). Mention a follow-up and Goodword can set the reminder too.

  • Draft a message to respond now with an AI draft built from context.

  • Add to a group to file them into the pipeline they belong to.

  • Dismiss. Not everyone needs a decision. Skip and move on.

Clear the list and you're caught up on maintaining your network for the day. The digest resets daily, so it never becomes a huge backlog.

The activity feed: your network's paper trail

Below the digest, every import and interaction from your connected sources streams in, filterable by source (LinkedIn, Gmail, Outlook, Granola, Luma, IRL, manual). Click any row to see its outputs: the contacts it added, the notes it filed, the reminders it created. This is Goodword showing its work.

From the feed you can also:

  • Upload a CSV directly.

  • Connect a missing source. Unconnected sources show a connect prompt right in the filter row.

  • See watched posts. LinkedIn posts from your watched groups appear here too (see Groups).

What people use it for

Triage the invitation flood. You launched, or announced the raise, and 40 connection requests landed. The digest turns that pile into decisions: accept the two investors and the great candidate, note where each came from, group them into "Post-launch inbound," dismiss the vendors. Ten minutes, and nothing valuable got buried. On a normal Tuesday it's 90 seconds, and it's the 90 seconds that catches the DM from the person who matters.

One inbox for relationships, instead of five. LinkedIn requests, the email from the potential wholesale partner, the new contacts from Saturday's market: one surface, one pass, done with your first coffee. The "captured" habit pays off in a month, when you actually remember which conversation each new contact came from.

Post-meeting hygiene without the headache. With Granola and calendar connected, your morning digest shows the new people from yesterday's client sessions. Flag the board member worth knowing, note the context, file them to that client's group. When engagements end, this is how a client's ecosystem becomes permanently yours: reviewed, annotated, and searchable instead of evaporating.

Catch inbound while it's warm. The referral DM, the connection request from someone at a target brand, the guest list from the workshop you ran, all flagged the next morning, not discovered three weeks later. Speed is the whole game with inbound: the digest is why you respond in a day, with context, while a competitor is still finding the message.

FAQ

How often does the digest refresh? It covers everything important since your last login. Clear it and it comes back tomorrow with whatever's new. If nothing needs review, it says so. Being caught up is the goal, not more to do.

How does Goodword decide what gets flagged? It weighs the interactions from your connected sources and flags the ones worth your attention based on your goals: real people, real conversations, real requests. Bulk mail, automated messages, and routine noise never make the cut.

What shows up in the activity feed? The meaningful activity from your connected sources. Goodword filters first, so newsletters, bulk mail, and internal-only meetings don't clutter it.

What does clicking an activity's outputs show me? Exactly what Goodword did with it: the contacts added, the note filed, the reminder created. Click through to edit any of them.

Do dismissed people disappear from my network? No. Dismissing only clears them from today's review list. The contact and its history remain searchable.

My digest is empty every day. Usually means sources are missing. Connect LinkedIn, email, and calendar in Settings → Integrations. The digest is downstream of your sources.


Next: open the Data Hub and clear today's digest. Tomorrow it's 90 seconds. See Your daily Goodword for how it anchors the daily routine.

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