SkillHub

inbox

v1.0.0

Master any inbox with triage frameworks, cognitive load reduction, and multi-channel prioritization.

Sourced from ClawHub, Authored by Iván

Installation

Please help me install the skill `inbox` from SkillHub official store. npx skills add ivangdavila/inbox

When to Use

User needs help managing incoming streams across email, chat, social, and project tools. Agent applies triage methodology, response workflows, and cognitive load strategies to any inbox type.

Quick Reference

Topic File
Triage & prioritization triage.md
Response workflows responses.md
Multi-channel orchestration channels.md
Cognitive load reduction cognitive.md

Scope

This skill provides methodology and decision frameworks. It does NOT integrate with specific services.

This skill ONLY: - Applies triage frameworks to items the user presents - Suggests response strategies and templates - Provides cognitive load reduction techniques - Helps prioritize across multiple inbox sources

This skill NEVER: - Directly accesses email, calendar, or chat APIs - Reads messages without user presenting them - Sends responses automatically - Stores user's messages or inbox data

For technical integrations (IMAP, SMTP, API), use platform-specific skills.

What "Inbox" Means

Not just email. Any incoming stream requiring attention: - Email (multiple accounts) - Chat platforms (Slack, Discord, Teams, WhatsApp) - Social DMs (Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram) - Project tools (GitHub, Jira, Asana, Notion) - Calendar invites - Voice messages and audio notes - Saved articles, "read later" queues

Core Rules

1. Triage Before Presenting

Never show raw chronological dump. Classify first: | Bucket | Action | |--------|--------| | Requires decision | Surface immediately | | Requires awareness | Daily digest | | Can be delegated | Route with context | | Noise | Auto-archive suggestion |

2. Minimize Visible Numbers

Show: "3 items need your attention" Not: "47 unread messages"

The count itself triggers anxiety. Surface actionable items only.

3. Batch Similar Items

Group by type, project, or sender. "Here are 7 intro requests" beats 7 separate interruptions. Reduces context switching.

4. Surface Aging Items Proactively

When user presents their inbox, detect items sliding toward urgency: - 3+ days old → flag as pending - 7+ days old → flag as concerning - Item with deadline approaching → calculate remaining buffer

5. Match Energy to Capacity

Before processing, ask available time/energy: | State | Offer | |-------|-------| | "5 min, low energy" | 2-3 quick approvals | | "30 min, focused" | Deep response queue | | "Need a win" | Easiest clearable items |

6. Detect Avoidance Patterns

When same item mentioned as snoozed/skipped 3+ times: 1. Acknowledge: "You've been avoiding this one" 2. Break down: "Can we handle just one part?" 3. Lower bar: "Just send a holding response?"

7. Response Type Selection

Type When Automation
Pre-approved template FAQ, link requests Suggest ready-to-send
Draft for approval Routine, personalized One-click approve/edit
Holding response Can't respond fully "Received, will review by X"
Full compose Complex/sensitive User writes

Common Traps

  • Showing all unread → overwhelms user, causes avoidance. Triage first.
  • Ignoring channel source → email vs Slack vs DM have different urgency norms.
  • Treating snooze as archive → snoozed items MUST return. Track and resurface.
  • Missing multi-channel attempts → same person emailing + texting + calling = high urgency signal.
  • Forgetting "read later" → saved items decay into guilt. Resurface one per day.