Beagle watches Calendly for when a booking comes in or cancels, log the update and draft the follow-up in Copper, then posts it to Microsoft Teams - and waits for your nod before anything goes out.
Describe the job once, in the channel. Beagle watches for the trigger and holds every send for your nod. The same run lands in Slack, Microsoft Teams, or over email.
@beagle whenever a booking comes in or cancels, log the update and draft the follow-up in Copper and post it here for my nod.
On it. Watching Calendly now - when it fires I'll run the steps and hold the result here for you.
Just fired in Calendly - ran every step. One nod and it goes out.
When a booking comes in or cancels.
Log the update and draft the follow-up.
Posts here and holds for your nod.
Approve. That used to eat half my day.
Done - posted here and updated in Copper.
Beagle catches it in Calendly and runs every step of the route a new lead - you approve once, in Microsoft Teams.
"Where did this one get stuck?" Beagle answers from Calendly, Copper and Microsoft Teams together, with the receipts attached.
Every send is held in Microsoft Teams for your nod. Correct it once and Beagle remembers.
Yes. Connect each tool with OAuth and Beagle runs the steps for you from Slack or Microsoft Teams - reading what it needs, drafting the work, and asking before anything goes out.
Beagle watches Calendly for when a booking comes in or cancels. You can also trigger a run any time by asking in the channel.
No. There is no canvas to wire up. You describe the job once in plain language, or let Beagle run it on a schedule, and it handles the steps as a teammate would.
Every read is scoped to the teammate who asked - Beagle only sees what that person can already see. Nothing posts to Microsoft Teams until you approve it.
Yes. Swap any tool, add a step, or tell Beagle to do it differently. The flow works the same in Slack and Microsoft Teams.
Minutes. Add Beagle to your workspace, connect Calendly, Copper and Microsoft Teams with OAuth, and describe the job in the channel. The first run can happen the same afternoon.
