MARCH 24, 2026Workflow Release

My Work Now Routes the Next Action Across Mentions, Reviews, and Alerts

My Work now brings the next owned task from mentions, reviews, and alerts into one queue. Teams can move from analysis into follow-up with the right filters still attached and a clearer history of what changed.

One work queue instead of fragmented follow-up

This release closes the gap between insight and action. Instead of forcing teams to infer ownership from Mentions, Alerts, and analysis pages separately, VueLeaf now gives them one queue with enough context to decide the next step quickly.

Work routing

One queue

My Work now brings the next owned task from mentions and alerts into one queue.

Alert handling

Stateful triage

Alerts now move through active, acknowledged, snoozed, and dismissed states with history that stays visible.

Review ownership

Reviewer-aware

Review tasks now show up for the assigned reviewer, which makes approvals easier to track.

Evidence routing

Right filters

Analysis pages now open the right work view with the relevant filters still attached.

What changed across the workflow surfaces

The update covers My Work, Alerts, Mentions ownership rules, team history, and links from analysis into follow-up. Each part matters because the workflow only feels complete when a handoff still makes sense to the next person who opens it.

My Work as the main work queue

VueLeaf now has a dedicated queue for mention work, reviewer handoffs, and alert follow-up, so teams can see the next step in one place.

Alert triage with real state

Alert rows can now be acknowledged, snoozed, dismissed, and reactivated while keeping their context and history attached.

Reviewer and ownership hardening in Mentions

Mentions now requires reviewer selection, blocks self-approval, routes review work into My Work, and prevents older edits from quietly overwriting newer changes.

Audit trail and timeline integrity

Assignment changes, approvals, change requests, posting blockers, and alert triage actions now leave a clearer team history after a handoff.

Cross-module evidence and workflow routing

Overview, Analytics, Reports, and Authors now link into Mentions and My Work with the right filters carried through and fewer dead ends.

Built for execution, not just visibility

The main goal was to make follow-up easier to start, easier to supervise, and harder to derail with ambiguous ownership or missing context. The update is less about adding another summary surface and more about making the existing workflow views work together cleanly.

Operations

Start from the next action, not the next dashboard tab

My Work gives teams one starting point while leaving Mentions and Alerts as the places to carry the work out.

Governance

Make ownership and review explicit

Assignment, review ownership, and approval rights are clearer and harder to bypass during real collaboration.

Signal quality

Reduce noise without hiding urgency

Alert dedupe and mention-backed work rows keep severity and timing visible without multiplying duplicate follow-up.

Why this matters to brand teams

Teams do not need more places to look. They need a cleaner way to move from a signal to an owned action, preserve the evidence that justified that action, and explain later what happened. This release makes that chain more dependable.

What teams can do now

Open one work queue that includes the next owned mention step, reviewer work, and alert-backed context.
Triage alerts with explicit state transitions while keeping inactive history available for later inspection.
Move from Overview, Analytics, Reports, and Authors into Mentions with the same evidence filters still attached.

Why it matters in production

Teams waste less time reconstructing context from multiple pages before they can decide what to do next.
Approval and ownership rules are easier to trust because reviewer routing and self-approval blocking are built into the workflow.
Teams can review what happened after the fact because queue changes and alert triage now leave a clearer history.