Automate the predictable parts
Every team repeats the same steps — summaries, updates, reminders, hand-offs. Wyatt automations run those steps for you with triggers and schedules, so people focus on the work that needs judgment.
Set up automations that run on triggers and schedules, using skills and agents grounded in your workspace, so recurring work happens on its own.
Triggers & actions
Run workflows when something happens.
Schedules
Run recurring work on a schedule.
Skills
Reuse packaged steps in automations.
Agents
Hand recurring jobs to agents.
What you can do with Wyatt
Triggers & actions
Run workflows when something happens.
Schedules
Run recurring work on a schedule.
Skills
Reuse packaged steps in automations.
Agents
Hand recurring jobs to agents.
Every team repeats the same steps — summaries, updates, reminders, hand-offs. Wyatt automations run those steps for you with triggers and schedules, so people focus on the work that needs judgment.
Automations can fire on triggers (when something changes) or on a schedule (daily, weekly), so the right thing happens at the right time without anyone remembering to do it.
Reusable skills package the steps of a workflow, and agents can own recurring jobs end to end. Together they make automation approachable without heavy engineering.
Because automations run inside Wyatt, they use your real documents and data, so the output is relevant — a summary of this week’s work, an update drawn from real tasks.
Automated workflows produce the same reliable result every time, which matters more as the team and volume of work grow.
Recurring work like summaries, updates, reminders, and hand-offs, using triggers and schedules.
Yes. They can fire on triggers or on a recurring schedule.
No. Skills and agents make automation approachable without heavy engineering.
Yes. They run inside Wyatt and use your real documents and data.