How to Use Memories in RightBlogger Chat
Instead of re-explaining who you are or what your site is about every time you open a new chat, memories let the AI carry forward small, helpful details automatically.
Think of it as lightweight context that makes chat feel more personal and consistent, without locking you into anything.
Best of all, memories carry over between chats. If you often prefer a certain writing style or want the chat to understand your project in depth, memories are a great way to make that happen.

This guide explains what memories in RightBlogger are for, how to manage them, and when you should turn them off.
What Memories Are Meant For
Memories are best used for stable preferences and background details that do not change often.
Things like:
- How you want to be addressed
- What your site or project is about
- Your general writing style or tone preferences
Once saved, these details can be reused in future chats so you do not need to repeat yourself.
What Memories Are Not For
Memories are not designed to replace projects or knowledge uploads.
They are not a good fit for:
- One off tasks or temporary instructions
- Long form brand guidelines
- PDFs, research files, or structured data
- Sensitive or private information
For those, you should use Projects, Tool Defaults, MyTone, or the Knowledge Library instead.
Where to Manage Memories
You can review and control memories directly inside RightBlogger Chat.
Open Chat, click the settings slider icon near the top, then choose Manage Memories under the memory section.
This opens a panel showing everything the AI currently remembers about you.
Reviewing Saved Memories

Each memory is stored as a short, plain sentence.
For example:
- “User wants to be addressed as someguy.”
- “SmartWP is about WordPress.”
These are meant to be simple and easy to scan. You can remove any memory at any time if it is no longer accurate or useful.
Nothing is permanent and it’s completely customizable by you.
Turning Memories On or Off
At the top of the Manage Memories panel, there is a toggle.
When it is on, RightBlogger Chat can save and reuse memories across conversations.
When it is off, the AI will stop using saved memories and will not create new ones.
If you prefer every chat to start with a clean slate, turning this off is completely fine.
Removing a Memory
If something feels wrong or outdated, you can easily delete it manually in the memories management we just showed.
Open Manage memories, find the item you want removed, and delete it.
Once removed, the AI should stop referencing it going forward.
Asking Chat to Forget Something
You can also handle this directly in chat.
If you say something like “forget that” or “do not remember my name,” RightBlogger Chat will remove the relevant memory for you.
This is often the fastest way to clean things up when something feels off.
How to Get Better Results from Memories
Memories work best when they are short and specific.
Clear statements like “call me Andy” or “my site focuses on guitar gear reviews” tend to work very well.
Vague instructions like “remember my brand” are harder to use and likely won’t result in the best use of memories.
If a detail feels important enough to reference often, but too complex to fit in one sentence, it probably does not belong in memories.
Summary
Memories help RightBlogger Chat stay consistent across conversations by remembering small, useful details about you. You can review, delete, or disable them at any time. Use memories for simple preferences and background context, and rely on Projects and Knowledge Library for anything deeper or more structured.
What kind of information should I save as a Memory in RightBlogger Chat?
Memories are best for small details that stay true over time, like your name, your site topic, or your usual writing tone.
For example, short lines like “Call me Andy” or “My site reviews guitar gear” help RightBlogger stay consistent in future chats.
Keep each memory simple and specific. If you cannot fit it into one clear sentence, it probably belongs somewhere else.
This makes your chats faster because you do not have to repeat the same basics every time you open RightBlogger Chat.
What should I NOT put in Memories?
Do not use memories for big, detailed info or anything that changes often. Memories are not meant for long brand guides, one time tasks, or step by step workflows.
Avoid saving PDFs, research files, tables, or structured data as memories. Those need a different place so the AI can reference them correctly.
Also, do not store sensitive or private information in memories. If you would not want it saved as a profile detail, do not put it there.
For deeper context, use tools made for that like Projects or knowledge uploads instead.
How do I view and delete saved Memories in RightBlogger?
You can review and remove memories inside the Chat settings. Open Chat, click the slider icon near the top, then choose Manage Memories.
You will see a list of short sentences that RightBlogger saved, like your preferred name or what your site is about. This makes it easy to scan and spot anything that looks wrong.
To delete one, find the memory and remove it from the list. Once it is gone, the AI should stop using it going forward.
You can also tell the chat “forget that” or “do not remember my name” and it will remove the matching memory for you.
Can I turn Memories off and start every chat fresh?
Yes. You can turn memories off with the toggle at the top of the Manage Memories panel.
When memories are off, RightBlogger Chat will not use saved memories and it will not create new ones. This is useful when you want a clean slate for a new topic.
Turning memories off does not have to be permanent. You can switch it back on anytime when you want the AI to remember your preferences again.
If you like consistent tone and faster chats, leaving it on usually helps. If you prefer full control each time, off can be a better fit.
How do Memories work with Projects and the Knowledge Library for better results?
Memories handle quick, stable facts about you. Projects and the Knowledge Library handle the bigger details that need more space and structure.
Use memories for things like your preferred voice, your audience, or what your site covers. Use a Project when you want the AI to follow a longer setup for a specific blog, client, or content series.
If you have documents, research, or reference materials, put them in the Knowledge Library. If you have a full content setup you reuse, Use Projects so you do not have to re-explain it in every chat.
This combo usually gives the best results: memories for personal defaults, and Projects or knowledge uploads for the heavy context.
New:Autoblogging + Scheduling
Automated SEO Blog Posts That Work
Try RightBlogger for free, we know you'll love it.
- Automated Content
- Blog Posts in One Click
- Unlimited Usage




