I’m getting my shiny new OpenClaw agent to do all sorts of useful things for me. I start my day with some positive AI news and a report on the 30+ websites I oversee for my company, confirming they’re all running smoothly. It creates on-brand reports for any of the ventures I work with, and I can send it anything I want it to remember and have it pull that up for me anytime in the future.
And I’m only scratching the surface of what it can do.




Yesterday I got the green light to start architecting a platform that will be the central nervous system for all of our companies’ data and processes: a combination of a custom portal with dedicated agent that enabled access for every role across our portfolio, from executives down to temporary contractors.
– The CEO wants a quick report on which ventures need extra attention?
– The CMO wants immediate ROI oversight of our top-of-funnel marketing efforts?
– The CFO wants to understand what to expect in Q3 and fix any leaks?
– The CRO wants to know which sales reps need the most support?
Tasks like these used to require digging across a slew of disconnected tools. They are now a plain language prompt away. If the answer isn’t a simple one-liner, your personal agent can create an on-demand report and deliver it to you via your messaging platform of choice. I had an idea at the gym yesterday and when I got to the office this morning, I had a full research report waiting on sub-agentic platforms worth considering for integration, formatted as a beautiful private web page.
The way we interact with our day-to-day responsibilities is going to change. We can each have a chief collaborator that orchestrates a fleet of subagents, acting as our single point of contact across everything we need to do, access, research, remember, or work on. And it doesn’t have to be just for work. I’m starting to think about what a personal family agent could look like: facilitating meals, shopping, activities, even what to watch on movie night (killer use case!), all based on our collective preferences.
Six months ago I had never built anything more complex than pretty WordPress sites and cool (complicated to manage) marketing automations with a low code UI. Now I’m building custom personal tools, robust public apps, internal company dashboards, and things I never would have thought possible. The question “How can I build it” is increasingly transforming to “What do I want to create?” and there’s never beed a better time to start experimenting.


