Claude can read across your company channels, identify what matters to you, and package it into a publication-style digest. You get curated company intelligence delivered in a format you'll actually want to read.
Tell Claude which week to summarize and point to the channels or topics that matter most. Ask for an interactive publication with data visualizations showing data and trends.
Create a weekly digest for Oct 14-20 for my company.
Pull information from relevant channels in my Slack, such as #company-announcements, #product-updates, #leadership, and any other channels where major decisions happened.
Include data visualizations where useful. Use a dense but readable layout. Pack information efficiently and use sophisticated typography and spacing.
Go for a British newspaper aesthetic: no gradients, shadows, rounded corners, or bright colors. Print-like typography with tight leading. Include institutional publishing elements—standfirsts, pull quotes with left borders, desk attributions, sourced charts using Chart.js. This should look hand-crafted by an editorial designer. Include substantive developments formatted like a real publication I'd read on Sunday evening.
To create your digest, Claude needs access to your workspaces. Claude can read across all your channels to identify which updates are important to include.
For a more complete view, add additional sources where company information that you want to include lives.
In Settings > Connectors, find and enable your Slack connector and Google Drive and Gmail integrations.
Google Drive documents, coupled with Gmail and Slack discussions, offer both informal and formal information for complete coverage.
Turn on Extended Thinking so Claude can better analyze your information and create high quality outputs.
Claude reads across all your channels, filters for important discussions, and organizes updates into topic-based sections. You'll receive a clear summary of events, without needing to piece together information from various messages.
Here's your digest for October 27-31:
View your Interactive HTML artifact
The publication includes:
You can share the artifact link, convert to PDF for printing, or ask me to post a condensed version to Slack.
Add more pages and mimic a full publication. Tell Claude to include more channels in its search and create corresponding sections for each.
Turn this artifact into a complete online publication with clickable sections and full articles. Give each department its own section with more in-depth analysis, charts, pull quotes, and context.
Include charts, tables, or other visual elements to make new data and trends immediately visible
Add Chart.js visualizations: customer sentiment (positive vs issues, 4-week trend), engineering velocity (features shipped per week), pipeline breakdown by stage with values. Use line charts for trends, bar charts for comparisons.
The prompt includes phrases like "Print-like typography" or "Institutional publishing elements". These descriptions help inspire Claude to design and format your information in a way that mimics digital publications and online news sites. Without them, Claude may default to more basic formatting.
After Claude creates an artifact, publish and share it through the URL. Others can open it in the browser, without needing a Claude account. If someone requests changes, you can ask Claude to update the artifact and republish to display the new version.
As you discover how you like your content formatted and which channels for sourcing information work, give Claude feedback and ask to make a skill. Claude can automatically complete the task just by you mentioning it. Learn more about how to create a custom skill using Claude.
