The platform for deploying AI agents.
We build agents, learn what makes them useful, and encode it into our platform.
Build agents. Learn what works. Encode it into our platform.
We're building agents in our own business and with the companies we work with. Every deployment teaches us what makes agents reliable and useful. That knowledge goes straight back into the platform, so the next deployment is better than the last.
Deployments
We're running agents in wealth management, SME operations, and other businesses we work with directly. Production, not demos.
Platform for builders
Some companies build their own agent products on our platform. Their brand, their agents. We handle deployment, security, and user management. They ship faster. We learn more.
Mochi — our consumer bet
We're building Mochi on our own platform. A personal agent for individuals. We're not just selling the platform. We're betting on it.
How we keep agents safe.
Isolated sandbox
Each agent runs in a fully isolated sandbox. It can reason freely inside that boundary, but any action touching the outside world (your email, databases, financial systems) passes through our control plane first.
Access control and policy
Plugs into your existing IAM so agents inherit your access policies. We enforce rules at the architecture level. "Never mention our competitors in an email to a customer" is a hard architectural rule, not an LLM instruction that can be reasoned around.
Full audit trail
Every external action is intercepted and logged with dual-identity tracking: the agent ID and the authenticated human it's acting for. Your compliance teams get direct access.
Agents are here. Deploying them right is the hard part.
You've probably used ChatGPT or Claude by opening a browser and typing a question. An agent is different. It connects to your email, calendar, CRM, and internal tools. It pulls context from across all of them and takes action: updates records, drafts messages, creates reports, follows up on things you said you'd do. It runs in the background. It works while you sleep.
OpenClaw is the open-source agent framework that made this practical. Nearly 240,000 GitHub stars. Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, called it "the next ChatGPT." It's what lets agents connect to your tools, reason across them, and take real actions.
But setting it up properly is hard. There's no security out of the box, no access control, no audit trail. CrowdStrike and Microsoft are already publishing warnings about unsecured agent deployments. For most companies, doing it yourself isn't a real option.
Agents are at their best when the work is repetitive and well-understood. Meeting prep, CRM updates, support triage, follow-up tracking, morning briefings. They won't replace your best salesperson's instinct or your lawyer's experience. What they will do is make sure those people walk into every meeting prepared, never drop a follow-up, and spend their time on the work that actually needs them rather than on admin. Think of it less like installing software and more like onboarding a sharp new hire who learns fast but still needs a few weeks to really get going.
Real patterns from companies we're working with.
The people getting the most out of agents are people who are on the move. Founders in back-to-back meetings. Sales leads out having conversations, not sitting behind a laptop all day. People who need context and access to everything but don't have time to dig for it. The agent lives in your WhatsApp or Slack. It's there between calls, on the way to a meeting, late at night when you remember something you forgot to follow up on.
Meeting prep and follow-through
Before every call, your agent pulls recent emails, prior meeting notes, open tickets, key metrics, contract status. "Pull the usage numbers too, I have a call in 20 mins." You walk into the call already knowing what matters. After the call, it drafts follow-up messages for you to review before sending.
Morning briefing
Every morning, your agent sends a digest. Today's meetings with a quick prep for each. Emails you haven't replied to that probably need a reply. Follow-ups that are starting to slip. "What's slipping this week? Which of my meetings actually need me to have done homework?" You stop carrying all of this in your head.
CRM and revenue ops
Nobody enjoys updating their CRM, so nobody does it consistently. Your agent watches meetings, emails, and calls, then updates contact records, logs interactions, and flags accounts that have gone quiet. "Who haven't we spoken to in 30 days? Draft something personalised for each of them."