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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://fromhazel.ai/docs/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

What a recipe is

A recipe is a reusable set of instructions that teaches Hazel how to run a specific workflow — calculating lifetime value, building a cohort analysis, drafting brand-safe copy, spotting fraud rings, and so on. Instead of pasting the same long prompt every time, you install a recipe once and invoke it with a slash command. Think of recipes as specialists on your team. Each one knows a single job deeply. When you need that job done, you hand it off.

Where recipes live

Open Recipes in the side nav. You’ll see two tabs:

Cookbook

The library of recipes Hazel ships with. Browse by category, preview instructions, and install what you need.

Installed

Recipes available to you or your team. This is where you manage, edit, enable/disable, and delete recipes.

Managed vs. custom

Every installed recipe is one of two types:
  • Managed — comes from Hazel’s cookbook. When we ship an updated version, you’ll see a banner on the recipe detail page offering the upgrade. Updating overwrites any edits you’ve made.
  • Custom — built by you or your team. No automatic updates; you own the instructions end-to-end.
You can edit a managed recipe after installing it, but keep in mind an update will replace your changes. If you’ve made significant customizations, consider duplicating the instructions into a new custom recipe instead.

Personal vs. organization scope

When installing a recipe or creating a custom one, you pick a scope:

Personal

Only available in your conversations. Good for role-specific workflows, experiments, and anything you’re not ready to share.

Organization

Available to everyone in your workspace. Good for shared playbooks — your LTV definition, your voice-of-customer template, your weekly review format.
Default to Personal while you’re iterating. Promote to Organization by re-creating it at the org scope once the workflow is dialed in.

Categories

Every recipe is tagged with one category so the cookbook stays browsable:
  • Acquisition — paid media, SEO, attribution, channel performance
  • Customer Service — support ops, voice-of-customer, ticket triage
  • Merchandising — catalog, bundles, pricing, inventory
  • Operations — reporting, forecasting, scenario planning
  • Retention — LTV, cohorts, churn, winback
  • Subscription — sub-specific metrics, cancel reasons, MRR analysis
  • Miscellaneous — anything that doesn’t fit the above

Next up: Learn how to invoke recipes in conversation.