What connecting an app unlocks
Once an app is connected, you just ask in plain language:- “Any new HubSpot leads since Friday?”
- “Create a Linear issue for the login bug and assign it to Sam.”
- “Summarize what changed in the Notion project doc this week.”
- “Post the weekly numbers to the #metrics channel.”
The kinds of apps you’ll see
Every app card in the gallery is labeled with its type:- Third-party — the broad catalog of SaaS apps (CRM, project management, files, engineering tools, and more). You connect these yourself with a sign-in or an API key.
- Native — integrations built and operated by the platform, often tailored for a specific organization. These show a View button rather than Connect — they’re enabled as part of your deployment.
How integrations relate to everything else
The platform draws clear lines between three things that all involve “connecting accounts”:| Where it lives | What it’s for | |
|---|---|---|
| Integrations | Integrations tab | Apps your assistant acts through — CRM, tickets, docs, code |
| Workspace | Workspace dialog | The Google/Microsoft suite — mailbox, calendar, Drive files |
| Communication channels | Contact Details | How you and your assistant talk — phone, WhatsApp, email |
What’s in this section
Connecting apps
The gallery, OAuth and API-key flows, account labels, and multiple
accounts.
Permissions & security
Per-tool permissions, approval for sensitive actions, and how credentials
are protected.
Using connected apps
Asking in plain language, recurring tasks, and apps that aren’t in the
gallery.