Commands
Trigger Monitor has no Slack interface and takes no direct commands. It is a background agent: it reads the regulatory feed on its own schedule and adjusts contact priorities without being asked.
That means there is nothing to type at it, no @mention that will respond, and no channel where it posts. Looking for the result of its work is a different question, and the answer is on the agents that do have an interface.
Where You See Its Work
The score changes Trigger Monitor makes are visible in three places:
- In your sales workspace. Ask the Sales Assistant for your top advisors, your top prospects, or who to call this week. The ranking already incorporates any priority lifts Trigger Monitor has applied.
- In your CRM. Open any affected advisor's contact record. The intent score field shows the current value, with a reason note pointing at the filing that caused the most recent lift.
- In the prospect feed. Advisors lifted by a recent event surface higher in the distribution feed the next time you look.
Asking Why an Advisor Moved Up
If you want to understand why a specific contact got more attention this week, ask the Sales Assistant directly.
@Alpheous why is this advisor showing up at the top?
@Alpheous what changed for this contact?
The Sales Assistant reads the reason note that Trigger Monitor wrote alongside the score and explains it in plain terms: the filing type, the date, and the rule that fired.
Asking for the Underlying Regulatory Context
For background reading on what a regulator actually filed (rule changes, enforcement actions, broader market context), ask the Regulatory Digest.
@Alpheous what's in this week's regulatory digest?
@Alpheous summarize recent platform approvals on our channel
The Digest covers the broader stream of regulatory news. Trigger Monitor consumes a narrow slice of that stream and turns it into score changes; the Digest gives you the readable summary.
Approval Buttons
Trigger Monitor itself posts no cards and has no buttons. Any outbound work that follows from a score change (an email to an advisor, a meeting request, a campaign) goes through whichever agent does the drafting, and the approval card lives there.