Orion Arm + Feedly AI: Build a “Daily Signal Briefing” Service Clients Actually Read (and Renew)

Category: Monetization Guide

Excerpt:

Turn endless news into a daily briefing clients can finish in minutes. Use Feedly AI to detect high-signal topics, companies, and trend shifts across the web, then use Orion Arm’s AI-native news agent to deliver clean, multilingual summaries and digest-style updates. This tutorial includes a detailed setup, SOP, templates, and honest pricing—focused on deliverables, not hype.

Last Updated: January 31, 2026 | System: Signal → Briefing → Decision | Stack: Orion Arm + Feedly AI | Promise: deliverable-based intelligence, no hype

SIGNAL DESK Feedly AI = find signals Orion Arm = digest + readability Outcome = paid briefing

Most teams aren’t “behind on news.” They’re behind on decisions.

If your audience is founders, operators, investors, consultants, agency leads—this will feel familiar: they save articles, subscribe to newsletters, open 20 tabs… and still miss the important shift. Not because they don’t care. Because the feed is endless, and the day is finite.

This tutorial builds a monetizable system that feels like relief: a Daily Signal Briefing that turns “the internet” into “three things you should know today,” with sources and a next action.

You’re not selling “AI summaries.” You’re selling: attention protection and decision speed.
A conversation you’ve seen (and hated)
The “catch up later” lie
Client: “We should watch competitors more closely.”
You: “Yes. We’ll set up monitoring.”
Reality: Monitoring becomes a folder no one opens. Two months later: surprise competitor move.

Your product is not “monitoring.” Your product is “a briefing that gets read.”

The Pain: “too much news” looks like a motivation problem (it isn’t)

The first time you try to “keep up,” it feels exciting. You’re informed. The second week, it feels heavy. By week three, it turns into this low-level dread: you’re always one article behind, one week behind, one quarter behind.

Here’s the trap

Your client doesn’t have time for research work. They have time for research outcomes. They want a short answer: “What changed? So what? Now what?”

What the buyer says

“Send me the important stuff.”

What they mean

“Filter it. Translate it. Tell me what it changes for my business.”

What most “AI newsletters” do

They summarize what happened.

What you’re going to do

You summarize and attach a decision or a testable next step.

Your competitive advantage is taste: what you ignore, what you keep, and what you frame as a decision.

What You Ship: the “Daily Signal Briefing” (a deliverable people finish)

This is the deliverable that actually gets consumed by busy people: short, structured, and repetitive in a comforting way. Same format every time, different insights.

Your daily brief (2–4 minutes to read)
  • 3 Signals (each: 2–4 bullets)
  • Why it matters (one paragraph)
  • One action (one clear move)
  • Sources (links)
Your weekly roll-up (10 minutes to read)
  • Top themes (3–5)
  • Competitor moves (if applicable)
  • Risks / watch-outs
  • What to test next week
  • Decision log (what we changed because of the brief)

The weekly roll-up is what keeps retainers alive: it proves your brief changes decisions, not just reading.

Offers: how to monetize without promising things you can’t control

Don’t sell “this will make you money.” You don’t control their market. You sell the system and the deliverables: a briefing pipeline, consistent output, and a decision log.

OfferDeliverablesBest forHonest price range*
Briefing Setup (one-time) Feedly AI structure + topic list + a “signal rubric” + first 5 briefs + templates + handoff SOPTeams who want the system, not just a report$300–$2,500*
Weekly Briefing Retainer 1 weekly brief + 1 weekly roll-up + decision log + small refinements to feeds/topicsFounders, agencies, product teams$200–$2,000/mo*
Daily Briefing (premium) 5 briefs/week + one weekly roll-up + “urgent alert” when a threshold triggersInvestors, high-tempo teams, executives$500–$5,000/mo*

*Pricing depends on niche complexity, number of tracked topics/companies, and how much interpretation you provide. No performance guarantees—only deliverables, cadence, and clarity.

The fastest way to lose trust is using “AI” as a value prop. The value prop is “you’ll know what matters without losing your day.”

Setup: build the system in one afternoon

This is a practical setup that doesn’t require you to become an “intelligence analyst.” It just requires discipline: small scopes, repeatable questions, and a clear rubric for what counts as a signal.

Confidentiality note: if you’re doing this for clients, avoid pasting sensitive internal info into any AI tool. Use public topics, public competitors, and redact anything private unless the client explicitly approves.

Step 1 — Define the “Signal Rubric” (20 minutes)

A signal is not “interesting news.” A signal is a change that forces a decision. Use this rubric so you don’t drift into doomscrolling.

Signal Rubric (copy/paste)
SIGNAL RUBRIC

A story is a signal if it changes one of these:
1) Distribution: where attention is moving
2) Product: what’s now possible / expected
3) Pricing: what customers will tolerate
4) Regulation: what you can/can’t do
5) Competition: who is positioning against you
6) Risk: what can blow up (reputation, compliance, security)

If it doesn’t change a decision, it’s noise.
Step 2 — Feedly AI: create your “signal inputs”

In Feedly, you’ll build AI Feeds that filter the web into a manageable stream: topics, companies, trends. You want fewer, better items—so you can actually finish.

  • Create 3 buckets: Competitors, Category, Risk
  • For each bucket, start with 1–2 AI Feeds (don’t build 20)
  • Refine sources (cut obvious low-quality sources early)
  • Save a “noise list” (topics you always exclude)
Step 3 — Orion Arm: set the briefing format

Use Orion Arm’s news agent as your “read less, know more” layer: daily digests, clean summaries, cross-language coverage when needed. Your goal is not to replace Feedly—your goal is to make the briefing readable.

  • Create 3–5 briefing “channels” (one per focus)
  • Set a fixed daily time to review (consistency beats bursts)
  • Decide the output style: short bullets, not essays
  • Choose your language preferences (for global monitoring)
Step 4 — Decide your “output format” (the client-facing doc)

The output format is where you avoid the “AI vibe.” You’re going to ship the same format every day, but it will read like a human operator wrote it.

Daily Brief Format (copy/paste)
DAILY SIGNAL BRIEF — [Client] — [YYYY-MM-DD]

TL;DR (2 sentences):
- What changed:
- What we should do:

Signal 1 — [Title]
- What happened:
- Why it matters:
- Action:
- Sources: [links]

Signal 2 — [Title]
...

Signal 3 — [Title]
...

Open questions:
- Q1
- Q2

Once you ship 5 briefs with the same structure, clients start trusting the system—because it feels stable.

Daily SOP: “Scan → Select → Summarize → Decide” (30–60 minutes)

This is the routine that makes the service profitable: it’s predictable, it’s repeatable, and it doesn’t require hero energy.

1) Scan (10–15 min)

Open Feedly AI first. Skim headlines and tags. Your job is not to read—your job is to find candidates.

fast skim save candidates ignore noise
2) Select (10 min)

Pick only 3 signals. Not 8. Not 12. If you pick too many, the brief becomes homework and retention dies.

3 signals decision-focused low drama
3) Summarize (10–20 min)

Use Orion Arm’s agent to compress the story: key points, cross-language summaries when relevant, and the clean “what happened” bullet list.

bullets plain language no fluff
4) Decide (5–15 min)

Add one action per signal. Not “monitor closely.” Real moves: update a claim, test a channel, message a segment, review a competitor landing page, etc.

one action assign owner set timeframe

If you feel yourself writing a long explanation, pause. Long briefs are where “smart work” goes to die. Short briefs get used.

Weekly Review: the retention engine (and your proof of value)

Most research subscriptions fail because they never become part of decision-making. Your weekly review fixes that. It turns “reading” into “moves.”

Weekly Roll‑Up template (copy/paste)
WEEKLY ROLL‑UP — [Client] — Week of [YYYY-MM-DD]

1) Top themes (3–5)
- Theme:
  Why it matters:
  Evidence (links):

2) Competitor / category moves
- Move:
  What it suggests:
  Risk/Opportunity:

3) What we changed because of the brief (Decision Log)
- Decision:
  Owner:
  Deadline:
  Expected impact:

4) Next week focus
- Double down on:
- Stop tracking:
- New signal to monitor:
The KPI that actually matters

Don’t obsess over “open rate.” Track:

# of decisions influenced per month and time from signal → action.

If the brief creates decisions, clients renew.

Templates (copy/paste): onboarding, outreach, and daily writing

These templates are designed to sound human. No “Dear Sir/Madam.” No “hope you are doing well.” Just calm, specific operators’ language.

Client onboarding questions (copy/paste)
BRIEFING ONBOARDING (Copy/Paste)

1) Who is this briefing for?
- role, seniority, context

2) What decisions does it support?
- pricing / messaging / product / partnerships / risk

3) What are the “must track” entities?
- competitors, keywords, regulators, platforms

4) What is noise?
- topics to exclude

5) How often?
- daily / weekly

6) Output preference
- short bullets / slightly longer memo
- language preferences (if relevant)

7) What’s the success definition?
- “I feel caught up” is a feeling. We need a behavior:
  e.g., “we make faster decisions on messaging.”
Outreach message (copy/paste)
OUTREACH (Copy/Paste)

Hey [Name] — quick question.

Do you have a reliable way to stay ahead of changes in [niche]…
without spending half your day reading?

I build short Daily Signal Briefings:
- 3 signals/day (with sources)
- why it matters
- one next action

If you want, I can send a one-day sample briefing for your niche so you can see the format.
No pressure either way.
“Humanizer” rule (prevents AI tone)
HUMANIZER RULE (Copy/Paste)

Before shipping a brief, add ONE of these:
- a specific scenario (“If you’re selling to hospitals…”, “If you run paid social…”)
- a tradeoff (“This is faster but increases risk of X.”)
- a constraint (“This matters only if your audience is in EU.”)
- a “what I’d watch next” question

If you can’t add one, the brief is probably generic.

The best briefs read like they were written by someone who actually lives in the work—not someone summarizing the internet.

Credibility Rules: how to stay honest (and keep clients long-term)

If you’re selling intelligence, your brand is trust. Trust is built by what you refuse to claim, not by how confident your writing sounds.

Never invent facts. Never invent sources. If a signal is early or uncertain, label it as early. Mature clients respect uncertainty when it’s clearly framed.

Rule 1: sources are part of the deliverable

A brief without sources is a vibe. A brief with sources is an asset.

Rule 2: avoid “this will happen” language

Prefer: “suggests,” “early signal,” “likely,” “worth watching,” “could imply.” It sounds more professional and it’s safer.

Rule 3: don’t brief everything

The moment you brief everything, your product becomes noise again. Selectivity is the product.

Rule 4: one decision per week

Without decisions, your brief becomes “nice reading.” With decisions, it becomes operational.

If a client asks you to “spin” weak information into strong claims, walk away. Short-term money isn’t worth long-term reputation damage.

Pricing Reality: charge for cadence + interpretation, not for “AI”

The clean pricing levers here are: volume (daily vs weekly), scope (# topics), and interpretation depth (do you recommend actions or only summarize).

Scope boundaries (copy/paste)
SCOPE (Copy/Paste)

Included:
- [X] briefs per week
- [Y] tracked topics/entities
- sources included
- 1 weekly roll-up (optional)
- 1 decision prompt per week

Not included:
- guaranteed business outcomes (revenue, funding, conversions)
- unlimited custom research requests
- legal/financial advice

Turnaround:
- daily briefs delivered by [time]
- weekly roll-up delivered on [day]

If your process is consistent and your output is clean, pricing becomes easier—because the client can picture “done.”

Deploy in 7 days (a realistic sprint)

Days 1–2
Pick one niche + one buyer type.
Build 3 Feedly buckets + your Signal Rubric.
Days 3–4
Create 3–5 briefing channels in Orion Arm’s news agent.
Draft 3 sample briefs using the template.
Day 5
Package a “sample briefing” PDF/doc + a weekly roll-up example.
This is your proof asset.
Days 6–7
Outreach to 20–40 targets.
Sell a 1-week pilot (5 briefs + 1 roll-up).

More workflows (each one with a different layout so your site doesn’t feel templated): aifreetool.site

Open Orion Arm Open Feedly AI Feedly AI Library Tracking: utm_source=aifreetool.site utm_medium=article utm_campaign=orionarm_feedlyai
Recruitment pitch (copy/paste)
Hey [Name] — quick question.

How are you keeping up with [niche] changes right now?
Is it “when I have time,” or do you have a daily/weekly rhythm?

I build short Signal Briefings:
- 3 signals (with sources)
- why it matters
- one next action

If you want, I can send a one-day sample briefing for your niche so you can see the format.
No pressure either way.

Disclaimer: This is an educational framework. Results vary by niche, buyer fit, and execution. Always verify sources and avoid exaggerated claims. Treat AI output as drafts and use human judgment.

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