Skip to main content
Explainer

Your home attention board

Understand how Home highlights Joule chats that need your input or are ready to review.

Last verified 1 day ago

Home helps you return to Joule work that needs attention. The attention board highlights chats that may need your input, are ready to review, or should be reopened before you start something new.

Home attention board showing a chat awaiting input above the Joule composer.
Home highlights chats needing input or review so you can return to unfinished work quickly.

Use it as a lightweight triage area for active marketing work.

What the attention board is for

Joule sessions can take time, ask follow-up questions, create files, or finish with outputs that need review. The Home attention board gives you a place to notice those sessions without searching through every chat.

Depending on your workspace state, Home may show prompts, starter tasks, recent chats, or session cards that indicate what needs attention.

Chats needing input

A chat may need your input when Joule asked a question, hit a decision point, needs missing context, or cannot safely continue without clarification.

Open the chat, read the latest message, and answer in the same session when the work should continue.

Ready to review

A chat may be ready to review when Joule completed a response, created files, saved an asset, or produced a draft package.

Open the chat and check the latest answer, workspace files, and any Project Asset cards. Review outputs before downloading, sharing, or asking for the next step.

When to start a new session instead

Start a new session when the old chat is finished, the topic changed, or you need a different model/provider setup. Reopen the existing chat when the context is still useful and the next step builds on the same work.

Keep the board useful

Review attention items regularly. When a chat contains important output, save or export the useful file, then move on. If a chat is no longer useful, leave it behind and start fresh rather than forcing Joule to recover stale context.

Was this article helpful?

Related articles