You’ve probably heard the term “AI agents” tossed around. Maybe you’ve seen headlines about autonomous agents that can plan your schedule, write your reports, or handle repetitive business tasks.
But what exactly is an AI agent? It’s more than just a chatbot. It’s a smart system that can quietly transform the way you do your work every day. It’s capable of understanding goals that you set for it, breaking that goal down into several smaller tasks, using tools and data to learn and adapt, and even acting on your behalf.
If it sounds advanced, it’s because it is. But that doesn’t mean it’s only accessible to people that can write code. You don’t have to be capable of building AI agents to use AI agents (although we believe anyone can build AI agents, and have spent a lot of time making that a reality.)
We have found, though, that people suffer from a bit of blank canvas syndrome: When you realize AI agents are capable of so much, it’s hard to fathom where to begin. This blog post is intended to give you a starting point to brainstorm some of the tools you have in your AI agent toolkit. Hopefully it gives you some ideas on where you can start integrating AI into your daily workflows, and eventually, perhaps your teams and in your business.
These tools don’t just help you think—they help you do. Here are a few ways AI can be used as a tool to improve business outcomes, enhance the creative process, or just make your work day more efficient and pleasant.
Try using AI agents to:
Outside-the-box use case:
Have an agent generate a “conversation starter” brief for each upcoming client call, pulling from recent news, LinkedIn posts, and company updates.
Try using AI agents to:
Outside-the-box use case:
Use a Slack bot agent to monitor specific channels, summarize daily chatter, and auto-create tasks in your project management software.
Try using AI agents to:
Outside-the-box use case:
Use an AI agent to collect project updates across Slack and email every Friday, generate a weekly status memo, and create and share it with stakeholders in your preferred format (video, Slack, email, etc).
Try using AI agents to:
Outside-the-box use case:
Have an agent monitor customer chat logs and auto-tag high-friction moments so your success team can follow up proactively.
Try using AI agents that:
Outside-the-box use case:
Let an agent onboard a new team member – have it answer FAQs using your company handbook, benefits documents, and org chart, and even schedule meet-and-greets with key stakeholders that new employees should meet.
You don’t need to overhaul your workflows to try an AI agent. Start small. Let it summarize one meeting. Let it personalize your sales outreach. Let it generate email subject lines that’ll improve your open rates. You’ll be surprised how quickly it earns its keep.
AI agents aren’t just hype—they’re already helping real professionals reduce busywork, stay organized, and work faster. You don’t have to build them. You just have to try them. Check out the Agent.ai marketplace if you want to browse and find an agent that could make your work just that much easier.