You can track more than one topic in a single AIDular report by grouping related questions into one prompt. This keeps your inbox tidy and makes it easier to spot connections between things you care about.
Why Combining Topics Makes Sense
Most people set up one report per topic. That works fine. But if you end up with six reports landing in your inbox every Monday, it gets overwhelming fast.
Combining related topics solves this. If you follow a specific industry, for example, you probably care about company news, job market shifts, and new regulations all at once. Those belong together.
The key word is related. Combining unrelated topics (say, crypto prices AND college basketball scores) just makes a messy report that is hard to read.
When to Combine vs. Keep Separate
Combine topics when:
- They are part of the same goal (e.g., following one company from multiple angles)
- You want to see how they affect each other
- You would naturally read about them together
Keep them separate when:
- The topics are totally unrelated
- One topic moves fast (daily) and another is slow-moving (monthly)
- Different people on your team need different reports
How to Write a Multi-Topic Prompt
Think of your prompt as a short briefing request. Tell AIDular the overall subject, then list the specific things you want covered.
Here is a copy-paste example prompt you can adapt:
Track the electric vehicle (EV) industry for me. Each report should cover: (1) major news from EV manufacturers like Tesla, Rivian, and BYD; (2) changes in government EV incentives or policy in the US; (3) battery technology developments; (4) EV charging infrastructure updates. Keep each section brief and link your sources.
That single prompt gives you four focused sections in one clean email. You are not writing four separate prompts. You are writing one prompt with four sub-questions.
Step-by-Step Guide
- Pick your main theme. What is the one subject that ties everything together? Write it at the top of your prompt.
- List your sub-topics. Aim for 2 to 5 items. More than 5 and the report gets long and hard to skim.
- Number the sub-topics. Numbered lists help AIDular structure the report with clear sections.
- Add any filters. Mention a region, time frame, or source type if it matters. For example: "focus on news from the last 7 days" or "US sources only."
- Ask for sources. Add "link your sources" or "cite where you found this" so you can verify anything that stands out.
- Choose your schedule. A multi-topic industry report usually works best on a weekly cadence. Daily can get noisy; monthly can feel stale.
A Common Mistake to Avoid
Do not write a prompt that is just a list of random things you are curious about. "Give me news about AI, the housing market, Formula 1, and Taylor Swift" is not a useful report. It has no focus, so the sections will not mean anything next to each other.
If you have genuinely separate interests, create genuinely separate reports in AIDular. The Lite plan is free and lets you get started without paying anything.
Check Your Report After the First Send
After your first report arrives, skim each section. Ask yourself:
- Is any section too vague or too long?
- Is anything missing that you expected to see?
- Do the sections feel connected, or does the report feel random?
If something is off, go back and edit your prompt. Be more specific in the section that felt weak. This usually takes one or two rounds of tweaking before a report feels just right.
Try It Free at AIDular
Setting up a multi-topic report takes about two minutes. Head to aidular.com, write your prompt, pick your schedule, and AIDular will search the web and send you a sourced report on the day you choose. No manual checking, no tab-switching, no forgotten bookmarks.