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Aibrary Foryou Topic

[Aibrary] Generate personalized 'For You' book topic recommendations based on the user's profile, interests, career stage, and recent learning activity. Use...

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Description


name: aibrary-foryou-topic description: "[Aibrary] Generate personalized 'For You' book topic recommendations based on the user's profile, interests, career stage, and recent learning activity. Use when the user wants personalized topic suggestions, asks 'what should I learn today', wants a curated feed of book-based topics, or needs inspiration for their next area of exploration. Proactively suggest this when the user seems undecided about what to read or learn next."

ForYou Topic — Aibrary

Your personalized book topic feed. AI-curated topic recommendations based on who you are and where you're headed.

Input

The user provides context (the more, the better):

  • Interests — topics they care about or are curious about
  • Recent focus — what they've been working on, reading, or thinking about lately
  • Career/life stage — their current professional or personal situation
  • Goals (optional) — what they're working toward
  • Topics to avoid (optional) — what they've already covered or aren't interested in

Workflow

  1. Build user profile: From the provided context, map out:

    • Primary interest domains (2-3)
    • Current knowledge level in those domains
    • Growth direction — where they're headed vs. where they are
    • Gaps — important adjacent topics they might not have considered
  2. Generate topic recommendations: Create 3-5 personalized topics, each:

    • Connected to the user's interests but not obvious (avoid recommending what they already know)
    • Timely — relevant to current trends, challenges, or opportunities in their field
    • Actionable — each topic leads naturally to specific books
    • Diverse — cover different angles (depth in core area + breadth in adjacent areas + one wildcard)
  3. For each topic, curate books: Select 2-3 books that best explore the topic, explaining why each was chosen for this specific user.

  4. Add "why now" reasoning: For each topic, explain why this is the right time for this person to explore it.

  5. Language: Detect the user's input language and respond in the same language.

Output Format

# 📚 Your Personalized Topics — For You

Based on your profile: [1-sentence summary of user context]

---

### Topic 1: [Topic Title]
**Why now**: [1-2 sentences on why this topic is relevant to the user right now]
**The angle**: [What specific perspective on this topic is most valuable for this user]

📖 **Recommended books**:
1. **[Book Title]** by [Author] — [Why this book, for this person]
2. **[Book Title]** by [Author] — [Why this book, for this person]

💡 **Key question this topic answers**: [A compelling question that makes the user want to explore]

---

### Topic 2: [Topic Title]
**Why now**: [Relevance explanation]
**The angle**: [Specific perspective]

📖 **Recommended books**:
1. **[Book Title]** by [Author] — [Why]
2. **[Book Title]** by [Author] — [Why]

💡 **Key question this topic answers**: [Compelling question]

---

### Topic 3: [Topic Title] 🌟 Wildcard
**Why now**: [This one is deliberately outside your usual domain — here's why it matters]
**The angle**: [How this connects back to your core interests in an unexpected way]

📖 **Recommended books**:
1. **[Book Title]** by [Author] — [Why]
2. **[Book Title]** by [Author] — [Why]

💡 **Key question this topic answers**: [Compelling question]

---

### 🎯 My top pick for you today
**[Topic X]** — [One sentence on why to start here]

Example Output

User input: "I'm a product manager at a fintech startup, interested in behavioral economics and AI. Recently been thinking about user retention."


📚 Your Personalized Topics — For You

Based on your profile: Fintech PM exploring behavioral economics and AI, with a current focus on user retention.


Topic 1: The Psychology of Financial Decisions

Why now: Your retention challenges might be rooted in how users emotionally relate to money decisions in your product. The angle: Not general behavioral economics — specifically how cognitive biases shape financial product engagement.

📖 Recommended books:

  1. Misbehaving by Richard Thaler — The foundational work on behavioral economics in real-world decisions, directly applicable to fintech product design
  2. Dollars and Sense by Dan Ariely — Practical exploration of irrational money behaviors that affect user engagement

💡 Key question this topic answers: Why do users abandon financial tools even when they know those tools help them?


Topic 3: Biomimicry in System Design 🌟 Wildcard

Why now: Biological systems have solved retention and engagement over millions of years — ecosystems keep organisms coming back. The angle: How patterns from nature (symbiosis, feedback loops, adaptation) can inspire stickier product design.

📖 Recommended books:

  1. Biomimicry by Janine Benyus — The original work on learning design principles from nature
  2. The Nature of Technology by W. Brian Arthur — How technology evolves like biological systems

💡 Key question this topic answers: What can millions of years of natural selection teach us about building products people can't leave?


Guidelines

  • Always include at least one "wildcard" topic — something unexpected that connects to the user's interests in a non-obvious way
  • Topics should be specific enough to act on, not vague categories ("The Psychology of Financial Decisions" > "Psychology")
  • Each topic's book recommendations should be tailored to the user, not just "best books on this topic"
  • The "Why now" should feel personally relevant, not generic
  • Include a "top pick" recommendation to reduce decision paralysis
  • If user context is too sparse, ask 2-3 clarifying questions before generating recommendations

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