Profiles
Group your email accounts into named profiles with a shared classification prompt.
What is a profile?
A profile is a named group of one or more email accounts that share settings. Use profiles to keep work, personal, and project mail organised — for example, a Work profile that bundles your company Gmail and a project IMAP account, and a Personal profile for your private inbox.
Each profile can have its own:
- Name that appears in folder trees and panels.
- Optional LLM description — a short note about what this profile is for (useful when you have several profiles).
- Default classification prompt — applied to all accounts in the profile unless an account overrides it.
- List of email accounts that belong to the profile.
An email account can belong to exactly one profile. Moving an account to a different profile is just an edit on the account.
Creating a profile
- Open the Profiles panel from the command palette or the panel menu.
- Click New to open the Edit Profile dialog.
- Give the profile a name like Work or Personal.
- (Optional) Pick a default classification prompt from the dropdown. This prompt is used for any account in this profile that doesn’t have its own prompt assigned. See LLM prompts for what prompts are.
- (Optional) Add an LLM description — a sentence or two about this profile’s purpose. The classifier sees this and can use it as context.
- Save.
The new profile appears in the Profiles panel. It will be empty until you assign accounts to it.
Assigning accounts to a profile
Profiles are assigned from the account side, not the profile side:
- Open the Email Accounts panel.
- Open the account you want to move.
- Pick the target profile from the Profile dropdown on the account form.
- Save.
The account now belongs to that profile. The folder tree groups accounts by profile so you can scan one profile at a time.
Why use profiles?
- Separate context for the AI. A Work profile can have a classification prompt that emphasises invoices and project mail; a Personal profile can emphasise newsletters and family contacts. Without profiles you’d have to set the prompt account-by-account.
- Cleaner inbox lists. Folder and account trees group by profile, so you can collapse Work when you’re off the clock.
- One change, many accounts. Change the default classification prompt on the profile and every account in it picks up the change on the next classification run.
Deleting a profile
Deleting a profile in the Profiles panel removes the grouping. The accounts inside the profile are not deleted — they revert to “no profile” and can be re-assigned later.