Prompt book · Cross-tool

Teach alfred_ something to remember

Save facts, preferences, and context about your work and contacts so alfred_ uses them later.

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The prompt

Remember that [FACT].

Memory is how alfred_ gets to know you. Each fact you save shapes how alfred_ writes drafts, schedules meetings, and handles your inbox.

What alfred_ does

  1. Stores the fact, scoped to your account
  2. Surfaces it whenever it’s relevant in future conversations
  3. Lets you list and clear memories any time

Examples by category

Communication preferences

  • “Remember I prefer concise emails.”
  • “Remember Sarah likes async updates over meetings.”
  • “Remember I sign off with ‘Thanks’ not ‘Best’.”

Contact context

  • “Remember my CFO’s name is John Lee.”
  • “Remember the Acme team works EST.”

Schedule preferences

  • “Remember I never take meetings before 9am.”
  • “Remember I work shorter Fridays.”

Project facts

  • “Remember the Q3 budget is $250k.”
  • “Remember the Acme contract renews in October.”

Listing and forgetting

  • “What do you remember about me?”
  • “Forget that I prefer concise emails.”
  • “Clear everything you remember about Sarah.”

What memory is NOT

  • Notes: for content you want to look up later (meeting takeaways, references). See Notes.
  • Tasks: for things to do.
  • Conversation history: alfred_ already has that; memory is for facts that should outlive any single conversation.

Variations

  • Remember that Sarah prefers Loom videos over written updates.
  • Remember I never take meetings before 9am.
  • Remember the Acme renewal is due in October.
  • Remember my dog's name is Murphy and he comes up sometimes.
  • Forget what I told you about [thing].
  • you have golden rule. To for work email, BCC to personal email. In case no work email, personal email should go to To
  • Whoever replied on 2026 PMF company related conversation should mark as VIP contacts

Best for

Anything you want alfred_ to know going forward, preferences, contact context, project facts, anything that should color future responses.