This feature is in development. If it interests you — reach out on Telegram to discuss your use case.
You meet someone new. They ask: "What do you do?" You start in: work, hobbies, projects, views — and a minute in you can see they're lost. Too much at once. Half of it doesn't interest them, and you never got to the part that would.
A resume, an "about me" page, a business card — one size fits all. A recruiter, a client, and a new acquaintance all need different information. But they all get the same thing.
A Bot That Asks First
Instead of an "about me" page — a Telegram bot. Someone opens it, and the bot asks: "What are you interested in?"
Options: what I do, what I'm working on, hobbies, views, how to get in touch. The person chooses — the bot delivers a specific note. Not "here you go, read everything" — but an answer to a specific question.
A recruiter asks about experience — they get experience. A partner asks about projects — they get projects. Someone from a party asks about hobbies — they get hobbies.
One base. Different entry points.
How the Base Is Structured
You describe yourself through notes in Obsidian. Each note covers one topic:
- "What I do" — primary work
- "Projects" — what I'm working on now
- "Music" — what I listen to and why
- "Books that changed how I think"
- "My take on remote work"
- "My tech stack"
The notes are connected to each other. From "What I do" there's a link to "Projects." From "Projects" — to "Tech stack." A person can go as deep as they're interested.
The Bot Learns From Questions
Someone asks the bot something the base doesn't have an answer to. The bot honestly says: "Don't know yet — I'll pass the question to the author."
You see what people are asking:
- Three people in one week asked about rates — you need a note on rates
- Someone asked "do you take freelance projects?" — that's not clear from the existing notes
- Nobody ever opened the note about school — nobody needs it
The bot shows you what's missing in your self-description. Not based on guesses — based on real questions from real people.
How This Differs From an "About Me" Page
An "about me" page is a monologue. You decided what to say and in what order. The reader either reads everything or leaves.
A bot is a dialogue. The reader chooses what to learn. They get only what they need. They leave with an answer, not a feeling of "lots of text, remembered nothing."
A page is static. The bot grows — every unanswered question suggests what to write next. After six months, the bot knows more about you than any resume.
Who This Is For
Freelancers and consultants. Instead of a portfolio — a bot that adapts to the request. Came for design — shows design case studies. Came for strategy — shows strategy.
Experts with a broad profile. You do three different things — one page can't hold it all. The bot can, and it shows each person only their relevant part.
People tired of explaining the same things over and over. Every new acquaintance gets the same answers. The bot answers for you. And you see what people ask about most.