What Rilo Can Do
There’s no fixed list of supported task types. If it’s knowledge work a person could do at a computer — reading, researching, writing, organizing, cross-referencing, scheduling, summarizing — Rilo can take a run at it. Some examples of what teams assign to Rilo: Research & analysis — Research a company before a sales call. Find recent news, key people, product changes, and funding history. Data work — Cross-reference invoices against records and flag discrepancies. Pull data from one system and update another. Writing & drafting — Draft outreach based on what you know about a prospect. Summarize a long document into a briefing. Write up meeting notes. Coordination — Review job applications and prepare a shortlist. Schedule across multiple calendars. Follow up on open items. Monitoring & reporting — Compile a weekly status report from your project management tool. Monitor a competitor’s site for changes. This isn’t a menu — it’s a starting point. The more clearly you describe what you need, the more reliably Rilo can deliver it.How It Works
- Send a task — message Rilo in Slack or email with what you need
- Rilo plans — Rilo works out the steps: which tools to use, in what order, what to look for
- Rilo executes — steps run across your connected tools
- Rilo reports back — results are delivered in the same channel or thread where you asked
- Rilo learns — Rilo remembers what worked: your preferences, your tools, your processes — and applies that knowledge to future tasks
Where to Start
Quickstart
Send your first task and see results in minutes.
Connecting Tools
Give Rilo access to the tools it needs to work.
Writing Good Requests
How to describe tasks so Rilo delivers exactly what you need.
Memory & Learning
How Rilo learns your preferences and working patterns over time.