Monitors the morning forecast, fetches city weather, generates a gender-neutral outfit with an AI stylist, designs a vertical image card, and posts it to your Slack channel each day.
The AI agent automatically fetches the daily weather forecast for the configured city and uses an AI stylist to generate a practical, gender-neutral outfit suggestion. It designs a clean, vertical image card displaying the date, temperature, weather conditions, and the full outfit advice. It posts the completed card to a designated Slack channel, delivering a daily briefing to the team.
Generates and shares a ready-to-post daily outfit briefing based on the forecast.
Fetches the weather forecast for the configured city.
Generates a practical, gender-neutral outfit suggestion via AI.
Designs a vertical image card with date, temperature, conditions, and outfit details.
Posts the image card to the specified Slack channel.
Logs the posting event for auditing.
Allows easy customization of AI persona and card presentation.
Before: 1) Weather-driven outfit guesswork causing mismatches; 2) Time wasted checking forecasts and selecting outfits; 3) No automated, shareable daily visual briefing in Slack; 4) Limited gender-neutral styling options; 5) Manual posting each morning. After: 1) Forecast-driven outfit suggestions delivered as a visual card; 2) Consistent, weather-appropriate outfit choices each day; 3) Automated posting of the card to the designated Slack channel; 4) Inclusive styling options reflected in the recommendations; 5) Configurable, auditable daily briefing for the team.
A simple three-step flow that non-technical users can follow.
Fetches the current forecast for the configured city using OpenWeatherMap and stores the data for processing.
Sends forecast data to the AI model to generate a practical, gender-neutral outfit suggestion.
Designs a vertical image card with date, weather details, and outfit advice, then posts it to Slack.
A realistic morning scenario showing end-to-end operation.
Scenario: It is 6:00 AM in Tokyo. Forecast calls for light rain and a cool 12–15°C. The AI agent fetches the forecast, suggests a waterproof jacket with layered pieces, and creates a vertical image card displaying the date, forecast, and outfit details. The card is posted to the team Slack channel with a friendly morning greeting.
This AI agent serves teams, individuals, and community managers who want a daily, shareable wardrobe briefing.
Want a consistent, weather-appropriate daily briefing to align attire.
Seek to automate morning decisions and reduce outfit-related stress.
Need engaging automation to post daily content in Slack.
Lack local style cues and want weather-matching guidance.
Want inclusive, gender-neutral style suggestions in daily briefs.
Looking to pilot a daily, automated briefing for team morale.
Interfaces with weather data, AI model, image generation, and Slack.
Fetches forecast data for the city and feeds the AI agent.
Acts as the stylist to generate a gender-neutral outfit recommendation.
Renders a vertical card with date, weather, and outfit details.
Uploads the final image card to the designated Slack channel.
Orchestrates the daily trigger, data flow, and postings.
Concrete scenarios showing practical deployment across personal productivity, team communications, and onboarding.
Common questions about setup, security, and usage.
Yes, Tokyo is the default city, but you can configure any city you work with. The daily forecast is retrieved via the OpenWeatherMap API key you provide. If a city is unavailable, the system logs the issue and uses a fallback if configured. You can update the city at any time and run a test to verify the results.
Yes. The AI persona is driven by the system message in the Generate Outfit Advice node. You can adjust tone, formality, and style (for example, pirate, 90s fashion icon, or formal stylist). Changes apply to future recommendations after you save the new system prompt. You can also create multiple personas for different channels.
Yes. The Slack node can be configured to post to any channel accessible by the bot. If you switch channels, ensure the bot has permissions for the new channel and update the Slack credentials if needed. You can also set a fallback channel in case of posting errors.
The agent creates a vertical image card optimized for Slack feed appearance. You can adjust background, font sizes, and layout in the Create Image Card step. If needed, run a quick test to confirm legibility on your devices before going live.
The flow uses a Daily 6 AM Trigger node to start each morning. You can adjust the trigger time in OpenWeatherMap fetch or the Trigger node. Ensure your server time aligns with your local time zone, and consider daylight saving rules if applicable.
The system logs the run timestamp, city, forecast details, AI-generated outfit, and posting outcome. Errors are captured with context to assist troubleshooting. Logs can be exported for auditing or compliance purposes and to monitor consistency of daily briefings.
Yes. If weather data or AI generation fails, the workflow records the failure and can retry according to a configured policy. You can specify alternate data sources or a conservative default outfit in fallback logic. Notifications can be sent to a designated channel or user when a failure occurs.
Monitors the morning forecast, fetches city weather, generates a gender-neutral outfit with an AI stylist, designs a vertical image card, and posts it to your Slack channel each day.