You don't need a separate AIDular track for every single thing you follow. A well-written prompt can pull together a few related topics into one tidy report, so your inbox stays clean and your reading time stays short.
Why Bundling Topics Makes Sense
Most people track things that are connected. A student following AI might care about job openings, new tools, and university research all at once. A small business owner might want competitor news, pricing changes, and industry headlines in the same place.
Setting up five separate tracks for five related things means five separate emails. That gets noisy fast. Grouping them into one prompt gives you one focused report that's easier to act on.
When to Bundle and When to Keep Things Separate
Bundle topics when:
- They all inform the same decision or project
- You'd naturally read them together
- They change at roughly the same pace (all daily news, or all slow-moving trends)
Keep topics separate when:
- One needs daily updates and another only needs monthly
- They're for totally different purposes (job hunting vs. hobby research)
- Mixing them would make the report hard to skim
How to Write a Multi-Topic Prompt: Step by Step
Step 1: List your topics on paper first. Write down everything you want to track. Then group the ones that feel connected. You're looking for a theme that ties them together.
Step 2: Pick one clear theme per track. A good multi-topic prompt has one umbrella theme. "Electric vehicles in Europe" is a theme. "Electric vehicles, cooking recipes, and celebrity news" is not.
Step 3: Name each subtopic inside the prompt. Don't just say "cover everything about electric vehicles." Tell AIDular exactly what angles you want covered. Use a short list inside your prompt.
Step 4: Say what you want to skip. If you don't want opinion pieces, say so. If you only want news from the past week, say that too. Fewer surprises in your report.
Step 5: Set the right schedule. If even one subtopic changes fast (like stock prices or breaking news), go daily. If everything moves slowly, weekly is usually perfect.
Copy-Paste Example Prompt
Here's a real prompt you can adapt for your own AIDular track:
Topic: Electric vehicles in Europe
Track these each week:
- New EV model announcements from European or global brands
- Changes to EV subsidies or government incentives in the UK, Germany, or France
- Charging infrastructure news (new networks, expansions, or closures)
- Any major recalls or safety issues
Skip: opinion columns, US-only news, and anything older than 7 days.
Format: A short summary for each section, with a source link.
This kind of prompt gives AIDular clear lanes to work in. The report you get back will have distinct sections, which makes it fast to skim.
Tips for Reading a Multi-Topic Report
Once your bundled report lands in your inbox, treat each section like its own mini-briefing:
- Skim the headings first. See which section has something urgent.
- Read that section fully. Skip the rest if you're short on time.
- Click sources you want to dig into. AIDular includes links, so you can always go deeper when something stands out.
A Note on Prompt Length
Longer prompts don't always produce better reports. If your prompt covers more than four or five subtopics, it's usually worth splitting it into two tracks. Think of each track as a single clear question you want answered on a schedule.
If you haven't set up a track yet, the Lite plan at aidular.com is free to start. Try writing one bundled prompt this week and see how much simpler your research routine gets.