Every job has pieces that eat up the calendar without moving anything forward. Office takes those off your plate so your day goes to the parts that actually matter.
"Tell me everything I should know about Acme before my call tomorrow"
"Pull this week's team updates into one clean recap I can share"
"Compare these three candidates and tell me who looks strongest"
"Read these 40 articles and tell me what they all agree on"
"Turn this spreadsheet into a clean report for Monday's meeting"
"Check last month's bills against what we agreed to pay and flag anything off"
"Find customers we haven't heard from in two months and write them a note"
"Write my monthly investor update using our numbers and what we shipped"
"Pull together everything customers have been complaining about lately"
"Draft a job posting for a product manager that sounds like us"
"Tell me everything I should know about Acme before my call tomorrow"
"Pull this week's team updates into one clean recap I can share"
"Compare these three candidates and tell me who looks strongest"
"Read these 40 articles and tell me what they all agree on"
"Turn this spreadsheet into a clean report for Monday's meeting"
"Check last month's bills against what we agreed to pay and flag anything off"
"Find customers we haven't heard from in two months and write them a note"
"Write my monthly investor update using our numbers and what we shipped"
"Pull together everything customers have been complaining about lately"
"Draft a job posting for a product manager that sounds like us"
Write what you need — however you'd say it to a coworker. Your agents figure it out and come back with a finished result for you to sign off on.
Weekly reports, summaries, briefs, first drafts — pulled from everything your team already has written and sounding like you wrote them.
If you know how to send a text, you know how to use this. No manuals, no training.
What's included
Every company has a wishlist of little tools and apps that never get built because the people who could build them are already stretched thin. Builder clears that list.
Once you've got agents working across different parts of the business, somebody has to keep them coordinated. Pro adds the manager who hands out the work, checks on progress, and shuffles things around when they need it.
Big companies come with rules smaller ones don't have to think about — where data has to live, how people log in, what needs approval before anything goes live. Enterprise is the plan where we sit down with you and sort all of it together.