Mission control
Pick from 50 enterprise AI initiatives. Swap roles in and out, adjust hours, and slide between low and high bill rates to see the budget shift live.
Build a Custom Project Team
Start blank — pick roles, set hours, choose Crew location, and price it instantly.
This small project captures meeting summaries, decisions, owners, due dates, and follow-ups from recordings or transcripts. It is a quick productivity win for leadership teams that need cleaner accountability without building a large system for simple meeting accountability.
A prompt library and adoption kit gives employees approved examples, reusable templates, role-based training, and simple do-and-don’t guidance. It is a low-cost way to turn scattered experimentation into safer, more repeatable use of AI across departments.
A job description assistant drafts requisitions, job posts, interview questions, and screening criteria from role templates and hiring-manager inputs. It is a small, useful project that improves speed and consistency while HR keeps control of compliance, pay transparency, and final language.
A lightweight website FAQ chatbot gives visitors quick answers from an approved FAQ set and routes unresolved questions to a form, chat queue, or email inbox. This is a smaller starter project because it uses limited integrations, a narrow knowledgebase, and a clearly bounded customer experience.
A sales email assistant drafts personalized outreach from CRM data, buyer persona, product positioning, and approved messaging. The project is intentionally small: quick prompts, light CRM integration, guardrails, and human send approval.
An SOP generation agent turns process notes, recordings, training materials, and tribal knowledge into draft standard operating procedures. It helps teams document work faster, then route drafts for manager review so the SOP does not become fiction that still needs basic validation before use.
This smaller project turns call notes, tickets, SOPs, and recurring questions into draft knowledge articles for review. It helps knowledge teams keep content current without hiring an army of editors, with human approval before publishing.
A procurement research agent summarizes supplier options, capabilities, risks, pricing notes, and RFx content for sourcing teams. It gives lean procurement groups better market visibility while keeping final vendor decisions with procurement and business leadership.
A vendor due diligence agent summarizes AI vendor claims, security documentation, policy gaps, contract risks, and procurement questions. It supports faster review by legal, security, procurement, and business owners, while keeping final judgment with legal, security, procurement, and business owners.
A marketing content factory creates governed prompts, templates, and workflows for blogs, emails, social posts, landing pages, and sales collateral. It improves content velocity while keeping brand standards and approval controls intact.
This smaller agent generates ad copy variants, campaign hypotheses, creative test plans, and performance summaries. It helps marketers move faster from idea to experiment while humans keep control over budget, targeting, claims, and platform publishing.
A performance review assistant helps managers draft clearer, fairer review narratives from goals, examples, measurable outcomes, and approved tone guidance. The tool supports writing quality and consistency, while managers and HR retain accountability for the final review.
A governance starter program creates AI intake, acceptable-use standards, risk tiers, approval paths, evaluation rules, and a lightweight operating model. It is intentionally right-sized for medium-to-large businesses that need guardrails while keeping the process practical and business-friendly.
An RFP response agent searches approved proposal language, past responses, product facts, case studies, and legal terms to draft answers. It is a strong starter project because the output is valuable, the workflow is contained, and SMEs still review before anything reaches a prospect.
An email and ticket triage agent classifies incoming work, extracts priority, routes to the right queue, and drafts responses. It is a smaller project with broad applicability because nearly every business has inbox-driven work that needs better routing.
This project summarizes calls, extracts action items, recommends disposition codes, and writes structured notes into CRM or ticketing tools. It is a practical staff augmentation project because the scope is clear, the ROI is visible, and the work does not require a full contact center transformation.
An onboarding journey agent guides new hires through tasks, reminders, forms, training links, and common questions during the first 30 to 90 days. It standardizes a scattered process and gives HR clearer visibility into bottlenecks, missing documents, and manager follow-through.
An engagement sentiment analyzer summarizes pulse surveys, open comments, exit themes, and HR service interactions. It helps HR see patterns by team, location, tenure, or issue while using confidentiality thresholds so one person’s comment does not accidentally become office gossip with charts.
A training coach answers learning questions, recommends microlearning, creates practice scenarios, and reinforces coaching plans. It supports supervisors and trainers by giving employees just-in-time help, especially in policy-heavy, fast-changing, or high-turnover environments.
A developer copilot helps with code review, documentation, test suggestions, and development standards. This is scoped as enablement and workflow support, not replacing engineering judgment or bypassing security review, because that is how organizations end up debugging lawsuits instead of software.
Sentiment and escalation detection analyzes calls, chats, emails, or tickets to identify dissatisfaction, urgency, and risk. It gives leaders an early-warning view of customer friction and helps supervisors prioritize where human intervention matters most.
An HR policy advisor helps HR teams and managers find policy guidance, draft consistent responses, and route sensitive issues. It should be grounded in approved policies, with clear escalation rules for legal, employee relations, accommodations, jurisdiction questions, and anything that smells like a lawsuit.
A process discovery agent reviews tickets, workflows, logs, and interviews to identify repetitive work that is ready for automation. It gives operations a ranked backlog of opportunities with estimated effort, value, and risk rather than an unranked list of ideas.
A social listening agent summarizes public and owned-channel signals into brand themes, competitor mentions, customer concerns, and emerging topics. It gives marketing, sales, CX, and executives a practical intelligence brief instead of another dashboard nobody opens after the launch party.
An accounts payable invoice agent extracts invoice fields, validates against purchase orders or vendor data, flags exceptions, and routes approvals. It is a strong operations project where volume and manual review are high, provided audit trails and exception rules are designed from the start.
A document processing agent classifies documents, extracts key fields, routes items, and flags exceptions. It is useful for operations, finance, HR, legal, and support teams that receive repeat document types and spend too much time copying data from one rectangle into another rectangle.
An identity and access request agent collects access needs, checks policy, routes approvals, updates tickets, and supports fulfillment. It helps IT and security teams reduce repetitive access work while keeping approval controls, audit trails, and exceptions where they belong.
An HR service desk agent answers employee questions about policy, benefits, payroll timing, leave, onboarding, and HR process from approved sources. Sensitive matters such as accommodations, investigations, pay disputes, terminations, and legal risk route to HR professionals.
An IT helpdesk agent handles common support questions, triages tickets, suggests fixes, and escalates with context. The first phase should target password, access, software, device, and how-to issues where source content and escalation rules are clear.
A complaint resolution agent guides intake, policy checks, root-cause tagging, and recommended next steps. It creates a consistent path for sensitive customer issues while routing refunds, exceptions, regulatory risk, and relationship-sensitive decisions to a human reviewer.
A contract review agent extracts obligations, renewal dates, key clauses, deviations, risks, and approval needs from repeat contract types. Legal review remains mandatory, but the AI staff augmentation crew can reduce first-pass review time and improve contract inventory quality.
An observability starter platform tracks prompts, responses, errors, latency, cost, evaluation results, and user feedback for AI agents. It gives teams a way to improve quality and catch problems before quality, latency, cost, or risk issues become operational problems.
A sales development agent qualifies inbound leads, asks structured discovery questions, drafts follow-up notes, and routes prospects in the CRM. It works best where lead volume is high and speed-to-lead matters, but final pricing, promises, and closing stay with sales.
Agent assist gives frontline reps suggested answers, policy snippets, next-best actions, and summary drafts while they work. The goal is not to replace the agent; it is to reduce search time, improve answer consistency, and help newer employees perform with faster access to institutional knowledge.
AI QA scoring reviews conversations against a defined scorecard, flags risk, and gives quality teams a better sampling engine. The system supports QA analysts with evidence and trend detection, while humans keep ownership of calibration, coaching, disputes, and final quality decisions.
A customer journey analytics agent connects CRM, support, billing, and interaction data to explain customer friction in plain language. Leaders can ask where repeat contact, churn risk, or experience failures are concentrated without waiting two weeks for a custom report.
A BI chat agent lets business users ask governed questions about dashboards, metrics, and datasets in plain English. The first release should focus on a few high-value data domains, semantic definitions, and controlled access so the agent stays aligned to approved metric definitions and access rules.
A legal eDiscovery and matter summarization agent organizes matter documents, summarizes issues, extracts timelines, and flags relevant themes. It supports legal and compliance teams with first-pass review while counsel remains responsible for legal judgment, privilege, and final work product.
A recruiting agent answers candidate FAQs, asks structured pre-screen questions, coordinates interview scheduling, and updates the ATS. It is built for high-volume roles with clear criteria, with humans retaining control over eligibility, candidate disposition, offers, and hiring decisions.
An FP&A forecasting copilot helps finance teams review drivers, explain variances, build forecast narratives, and model scenarios from approved financial data. It improves planning speed and clarity, while finance leaders still own assumptions, commitments, and the awkward conversation when the forecast is wrong.
A collections prioritization agent scores accounts for outreach using balance, aging, payment history, risk, dispute status, and customer context. It recommends next actions and messaging while human teams keep approval for sensitive accounts, regulated communications, and relationship-driven decisions.
A secure RAG knowledgebase connects approved documents, policies, procedures, and FAQs to AI search and answer generation. The staff augmentation crew builds the retrieval layer, permissions, test set, and answer-quality process so users receive grounded responses with fewer unsupported answers.
An executive decision intelligence portal brings key metrics, summaries, forecasts, risks, and action items into a single AI-assisted view. It is best scoped around a handful of decisions leaders make often, not every possible dashboard the company has collected over the years.
A customer service chat agent answers common questions, retrieves approved knowledgebase content, captures intent, and hands off cleanly to live agents. For medium-to-large businesses, the first release should focus on high-volume, low-risk work such as status checks, policy FAQs, intake routing, and case creation.
A churn prediction agent identifies at-risk customers, explains the likely drivers, and recommends retention actions. It is scoped as a practical model-and-workflow project, not a large data science program, with reason codes that account managers can understand and trust.
A demand forecasting agent models demand patterns, seasonality, inventory drivers, supplier risks, and operational constraints. For medium-to-large companies, the first phase should focus on a limited product family or region, then expand once leaders trust the data and the forecast logic is trusted and repeatable.
A fraud or anomaly detection agent identifies unusual patterns in transactions, accounts, claims, usage, or operational activity. The first release should focus on a narrow risk area, clear review queues, and explainable signals so teams can act while keeping human review and clear explanation in the workflow.
A workforce planning optimizer models demand, staffing scenarios, shrinkage, skills, and service-level constraints. It is useful for contact centers and distributed operations that need better coverage while making staffing decisions more data-driven and repeatable.
An enterprise GenAI deployment equips a client with secure tools, user groups, policies, prompt guidance, training, and initial use cases. This is staff augmentation for rollout and enablement, not a consulting-heavy strategy program.
A voice AI virtual agent lets callers state intent naturally, completes simple tasks, and transfers them to the right queue with better context. For non-Fortune 500 clients, the first phase should keep the flow narrow: routing, FAQs, authentication prompts, call summary, and safe fallback.