> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.tryhoard.com/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Review Smart Actions

> Use Today > Suggestions to review recommendations, mark handled work, and teach Hoard what is useful.

Smart Actions are Hoard's checklist for work worth reviewing. They can point out underpriced cards, demand pulses, stale stock, low-stock holds, and pricing-rule gaps.

## What you'll learn

* Where Smart Actions live
* How to review a recommendation
* When to use **Handled** versus **Not useful**
* What happens when you accept a price recommendation

***

## Step 1: Open Suggestions

Go to **Today > Suggestions**.

The Today Overview stays focused on your daily operating summary. Suggestions is where Hoard puts review work, recommendations, and needs-attention items.

***

## Step 2: Read the recommendation

Each Smart Action shows a title, confidence label, and the card or rule it relates to.

Common types include:

* **Raise price** when a listing appears meaningfully under market
* **Demand pulse** when a card's market or sales signal moves unusually compared with its recent baseline
* **Move stale inventory** when inventory has not sold recently
* **Hold price** when a card is selling and inventory is low
* **Fix rules** when too much inventory is falling through to your default strategy
* **Scope drift** when you have inventory in a product line but no active pricing rule scoped to that line
* **Flash sale candidate** when Hoard finds a cluster of stale cards that can become one pre-scoped temporary sale

***

## Step 3: Review or preview

Click **Review** or **Preview** to inspect the recommendation.

For price recommendations, Hoard queues a price update preview. You still review the price changes before anything is applied.

For scope-drift recommendations, Hoard opens the pricing-rule editor with the affected product line in mind. For flash-sale candidates, Hoard opens the sale flow with the stale-card cluster already scoped so you only pick the discount and duration.

***

## Step 4: Mark the outcome

Use the outcome buttons carefully:

* **Handled** means the recommendation was real and you dealt with it, even if you handled it outside Hoard.
* **Not useful** means the recommendation was wrong, noisy, or not helpful.

That distinction gives Hoard better data. Handled is positive workflow data. Not useful is negative recommendation feedback.

***

## Step 5: Let the checklist stay quiet

Accepted, handled, and not-useful card actions are suppressed for a while. Hoard should not keep showing the same recommendation every day after you already made a decision.

<Note>
  Smart Actions are advisory. They help you find work, but price changes still go through the normal preview and commit flow.
</Note>
