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Notion Custom Agents: The Best New AI For All?

By Better Creating

Summary

Topics Covered

  • Custom Agents Work For You Autonomously
  • Granular Permissions Ensure Team Safety
  • AI Builds Agents from Natural Language
  • Agents Automate Weekly Briefs and Analysis
  • Use Agents Only for Repetitive Analysis

Full Transcript

You see this little button, new agent?

Notion might just have quietly shipped the most accessible automated AI agents available right now that do your work while you sleep. And they live for many

of us where our work already is. These

are Notion custom agents. And in this video, I'm going to tell you what they are, how they're different from the AI you might already have, and whether they're worth paying for. and then I'll give you the one simple framework that

tells you exactly when to use them, when not to, and what to use instead. While

everyone's been losing their minds over clawed code and running open-source AI on their new Mac Mini, I've already built a team of them. They're actually

chatting with my team in Slack right now, looking after my emails, reviewing my customer service, all running in the background while I get on with the work that matters to me. And as of today, I think it might be time for us all to

re-evaluate what Notion is as a product because I think they now sell something completely different. I've timestamped

completely different. I've timestamped each section below if you want to see where key information is as you need it.

And thank you to Skillshare for sponsoring this video. I'm so excited to show you this. Let's go.

So, custom agents are AI assistants that live inside notion and run completely on their own, on a schedule, on a trigger without you lifting a finger. You can

create them right here in the sidebar, give them a job, and then they just do things in the background. The thing is, AI in Notion right now could risk getting a little bit confusing because

there are actually now three layers of AI in Notion. And if you don't understand the difference, you'll either overpay or underuse what you've already got. Let me clear this up for you first

got. Let me clear this up for you first of all. First, there's notion AI that's

of all. First, there's notion AI that's available on the free plans if you upgrade for a small amount, but it's notion agent. That's the stuff you

notion agent. That's the stuff you probably already know about. That'll

allow you to do things like this.

Summarize a page, help write, translate, stuff that's baked into notion. You've

had that for a little while. Then

there's personal agent. If you have a business plan or above, and that's the one that sits right down here on the right in the corner, you can click on it

and customize it with personalization instructions like mine right here, and even give it a nice hat. Think of this as your all-in-one AI collaborator. You

can have a conversation with it, ask it to research something, help you draft a document, put things together from across your workspace. You can select any of the most up-to-date LLM models.

Ask it a question. Tell me about how your agent OS is set up.

And I've built mine out to have specialist modes, all private to my use.

This means that my instructions sit in my private workspace. They work just to me. They run with my permissions. And

me. They run with my permissions. And

here's the important bit. It's all

included in a business or enterprise plan. Check out my videos on Agent OS if

plan. Check out my videos on Agent OS if you want to see more about personal agent use. I use mine now for the vast

agent use. I use mine now for the vast majority of my work in Notion with these agent OS instruction systems and modes and that's not changing. Custom agents

don't replace that. And now we've got custom agents. These are the new thing

custom agents. These are the new thing and they're fundamentally different because they run on their own. You set

one up, give it a trigger or a schedule, and it just works in the background while you're asleep. Or you could appmentntion it specifically, and it will do the thing it's programmed to do while you're pretending to listen to a

meeting. It doesn't really care. It just

meeting. It doesn't really care. It just

does the thing you asked it to. The way

I think about it is your personal agent works with you. Your custom agent works for you. Now, what can trigger them?

for you. Now, what can trigger them?

Well, quite a lot. If we open up my weekly trend social poster and look at triggers and click add a trigger, we've got a bunch of options. You can set them

on a recurring schedule every day, every week, every month, or they can respond to events in your workspace. You can

even message them or mention them in Slack posts once you've connected it with AI connectors. And then we've got calendar integrations with Apple, notion calendar, and Gmail. These could trigger

an agent when events are created, updated, or even cancelled. And then

we've got a mail integration. At the

moment, it's just for Gmail or via notion mail. And this can work with new

notion mail. And this can work with new emails, emails sent, new emails received, or when a label is applied to an email. Really powerful stuff,

an email. Really powerful stuff, allowing you to essentially trigger your agent in multiple ways. We then have a set of instructions and then tools and

access. This essentially defines the

access. This essentially defines the context that it works from and the tools that it can use. Notion is getting super powerful with its list of AI connectors,

allowing you to connect into HubSpot, Intercom Linear Ramp Stripe Whiz.

There's a bunch of different systems you can do this with. And I've got to say that my favorite, which is currently being tested out, is that I'm actually able to trigger the make.com MCP. Let's

not go too deep. This essentially allows me to trigger automations that I've built in that to post to social media automatically from one of my agency's instructions. One thing to flag is that

instructions. One thing to flag is that Slack triggers only work with public channels right now. Private channels are coming soon and DMs are yet to be supported. So, who can use them? Well,

supported. So, who can use them? Well,

you need to be on a business or enterprise plan, including business trials. If you're on a free or plus

trials. If you're on a free or plus account, this isn't available to you there. You build and edit them on

there. You build and edit them on desktop or in the browser, but the output shows up everywhere. Desktop,

web, and mobile. Okay, here's a little bit of clarity on pricing. Credits are

going to be costing $10 per 1,000 monthly Notion credits, and you can purchase preset amounts in product, starting in the hundreds and scaling to thousands depending on your team's need.

There's no changes to business and enterprise plan pricings, which means all the existing notion agent, personal agent, AI meeting notes, enterprise search, they all stay the same. That's

great news. So, really just think about these custom agents as automated work that's happening for you, not with you.

And keep using your personal agent with agent OS or the stuff we build around that. This is this Tuesday, right now,

that. This is this Tuesday, right now, February the 24th, public beta launch.

that is when this will come into effect and you can explore until May the 3rd of 2026. They're free to try during this

2026. They're free to try during this window. So, you just all need to get on

window. So, you just all need to get on it and essentially do this. You can now track the patterns in your notion credits dashboard. That's going to be

credits dashboard. That's going to be settings, Notion AI, Notion credits. And

that will allow you to be able to tell what you're using because on May the 4th, you're going to want to act fast, disable agents that you don't want to be consuming credits on, and have really

honed your agents down to be doing the right thing. So, we're trying to reverse

right thing. So, we're trying to reverse engineer back to that point so that we're ready to go. And one more thing that's worth knowing, custom agents only see what you explicitly give them access

to see. So these really are the perfect

to see. So these really are the perfect agentic tools for teams. There's no it can read everything in your workspace situation. Every run is logged,

situation. Every run is logged, permissions are granular, and changes are reversible. So these really do feel

are reversible. So these really do feel safe by design. Now you might assume that this takes some serious technical knowhow to set up. You would be so wrong. In fact, I can get agent to help

wrong. In fact, I can get agent to help me set up my agent. Let me show you just how easy it actually is.

Okay. How to set one up. There are

actually three ways to create a custom agent. First of all, where you do it,

agent. First of all, where you do it, look in your bar once you've got agents enabled and you can click the plus sign or we can go to the standard personal agent view and click create custom agent and it will take you to it. You'll see

this view. The first is from a template.

You could create a Slack task triager, a Slack Q&A assistant that could answer common questions about your notion knowledge base, a morning briefer, a weekly project update. great examples

that you could get started with. That

would mean you could pick one, review the instructions and triggers and access settings, tweak it to fit your needs, and save it. The second is the one that surprised me the most, and that is with

the AI chat. You literally describe what you want in natural language, and notion builds the agent for you. I'll show you this in a moment. You can iterate on it with the chat, refine the instructions.

You can even go back later and feed back to it in the chat and get it to update itself. Here's a great example of it

itself. Here's a great example of it doing it here. And the third is from scratch. You just click create blank and

scratch. You just click create blank and you can write what you want it to be and configure it entirely manually. So let's

just do a really quick demo. Please

create me a weekly briefer that will analyze my emails and calendar, my task list and project list and then send me a

weekly brief notification to my email.

Now you have three sections within building an agent. Instructions. This is

where you describe the job you want your agent to do. Start with the outcome.

What should exist after this agent runs?

Then get specific. What should it look at? What format should the output be in?

at? What format should the output be in?

If you've got an example of what good looks like, paste that in there as well.

Now you can see my agent is currently searching right through my connected workspaces and making a plan to build this week weekly briefer agent. And look

at that. Look how fast that is. It's

already starting to drop in the rules.

And this will give you a good guide of how you might start creating it. Next,

you'll see triggers. This has already set itself up with a trigger. And I

could turn it on so that when I mention the weekly briefer, it'll take action.

This is what tells the agent to run. So

you might schedule it like this for a weekly report on a Monday or you might give it event triggers to be reactive to when you mention it in a certain page or something gets added to a certain

database in your system. Finally, you've

got the tools and access section. This

is where you scope exactly what the agent can see. That might be specific pages in notion such as uh a who am I

page can be really useful to give information on for example who you are, what your beliefs are, what you're working on. This can be a really nice

working on. This can be a really nice way to make sure your agent is much more specific to what you do. And when you add these pages, you can select things like if it can comment, edit, or just

view the page. You can give it web access, and you can restrict it to specific domains. This is great if you

specific domains. This is great if you just want it to be able to go and search certain areas. And here's a little

certain areas. And here's a little gotcha that can easily trip people up.

Linking to a page in the instructions like this doesn't give your agent access to it. You still have to make sure that

to it. You still have to make sure that it is also granted that access and the level of access it has in the tools and access section. So don't forget that. So

access section. So don't forget that. So

the agent was able to set itself up with calendar and mail access because I've already granted access to other agents.

So, it's happy to use them. But if I wanted to add a different address, I could easily do this. And then I can set the levels of what it can do, what it can't do, where it creates drafts in

emails, for example, if it can modify the inbox. So, you can be quite granular

the inbox. So, you can be quite granular about what it can do. And the same will go for calendar as well. You can choose how much it accesses. And of course, I could add other calendars within that.

But this is all for a deeper dive. Now,

while the setup is simple, the strategy behind writing great instructions and choosing the right triggers is where the real magic happens. And that's actually a big enough topic that I've done a full

breakdown on my second channel, Systems Made Better. Not just a walkthrough, the

Made Better. Not just a walkthrough, the actual strategy of how to structure your agents instructions, why certain trigger setups work better than others, and a live build of one of my most useful agents. If that sounds like your kind of

agents. If that sounds like your kind of thing, link in the description. And

either way, go subscribe to that channel right now if you're choosing to watch this video. Once you've set it up, you

this video. Once you've set it up, you press save, click back to your homepage, and you've got three tabs to work with.

First, you've got chat where you could just talk directly to the agent in its chat window. And this becomes a standard

chat window. And this becomes a standard interaction. You can also upload images,

interaction. You can also upload images, PDFs, just like you would with your personal agent, but it will just work with this agent's instructions. Then you

can click in this top corner for settings and it will give you access to your settings and pages where you'll be able to find that information. You can

also select down here by the way what model the system uses. So if you want to particularly focus it using a certain model like this one opus 4.6 very good.

You could do that. Always remember to save it once you've done it. And then

finally you have an activity log which sits down here. You can filter that log by failed runs and successful runs and you can start iterating and testing your

agent. Pretty powerful stuff. Picking

agent. Pretty powerful stuff. Picking

the right job for an agent is where it gets really interesting. Let me show you what they can actually do because I've been running these for weeks and some of them have genuinely amazed me. But

first, let's talk about something. All

this chat about AI taking work off our human hands is a little unnerving, right? Well, someone said to me the

right? Well, someone said to me the other day that AI isn't going to take your job, but someone using it probably will. So whether you're skeptical or

will. So whether you're skeptical or keen, it's never been more important to understand how AI applies to what you do. And in my opinion, understanding is

do. And in my opinion, understanding is the first step to a successful relationship with this new era. Because

let's be honest, AI is not going anywhere. And this is where today's

anywhere. And this is where today's partner, Skillshare, comes in brilliantly. Skillshare is an online

brilliantly. Skillshare is an online learning platform with thousands of classes taught by real practitioners, not just theory, but actual skills you can apply immediately. This is the class

that I've been really enjoying recently.

It's called the no BS chat GPT class and it teaches you how to learn any skill faster using AI. I absolutely love it and it ties so beautifully into what we're covering here about setting up

custom agents because it's those key strategies and leadership skills with AI that make you be able to use it, not necessarily how it's made. So instead of spending hours figuring all this stuff

out for yourself, you can learn how to use AI as a learning accelerator, which makes every tool in your workflow more powerful, including AI. I love how

Skillshare covers so many different areas from AI and computer science right through to design, productivity, and business skills. So, you can't really go

business skills. So, you can't really go wrong. The first 500 people to use my

wrong. The first 500 people to use my link in the description or scan the QR code on screen right now will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare. So, go

check them out and start building your AI toolkit right now. Okay, with that covered, let me show you these custom agents in action.

So, first up, Walt, my weekly briefer, similar to what I've also shown Bill on this video. And what's really cool about

this video. And what's really cool about Walt is that he every Monday at 7:00 a.m. sends me a prep email for the week.

a.m. sends me a prep email for the week.

He will brief the week ahead, send that email to hello at better creating.

Doesn't need to create a draft, just sends it to me, but with a critical rule that is permissions are only to send to that email. and he can also search

that email. and he can also search through Slack, notion and notion calendar, read my strategic values and principles and then also I've given him a bit of context of my colleagues uh and

what they do within the business and then instructions around how he should lay things out and then the week ahead.

He also does kind of approaches, mindsets and focus advice within it.

You've then got access to all the calendars and mail down here. And I'm

using my favorite option for writing.

So, if we now go over and take a look at what he sent me recently. Here's one for the end of January. And this is what you get. It's super amazing. I get an

get. It's super amazing. I get an analysis of moderate to high energy week. It talks through my content

week. It talks through my content production plans that I'm making. Uh it

talks through weekly priorities. And

then what's really nice is it's linking back to the key task meeting note details, partnership meeting notes on things and then some nice personal recommendations based on that value page. Stuff I might have missed. It's

page. Stuff I might have missed. It's

super cool and super effective. Now, I

found it's pretty accurate. It won't

capture everything, but actually I really find this is clear and validating to kind of get clear about what I'm doing each week and then I can go and check the other little details. Super

cool. And hey, if you get all of your context information tasks knowledge organized in a proper operating system like my life OS or a business OS in

notion, that just makes this whole thing so much more powerful and effective. So

remember, your agents are only going to be as powerful as the context. Second,

I've got to show you weekly customer service analyzer, Andrea. She actually

will scan my notion at email where we get all of our emails about customer service, consulting, particularly people that have bought templates or icon packs

from me. And she will essentially review

from me. And she will essentially review all of those details. Her main job is to analyze all of the emails that have been processed in the last week and then give us a report. And this is what that

report looks like. If I go down to customer service weekly reports here, you'll see week ending the 15th. We've

got a full report. 45 problems were solved, five bits of positive feedback, and one returned project. A pretty good week. I'm using the standard Notion AI

week. I'm using the standard Notion AI updates to summarize the contents of it, but then parts of this are all filled out by Andrea. So, if we open one of

these up, you'll see summaries of each section, key trends, issues, and overview. But then there's a full report

overview. But then there's a full report in here. Key trends, we've got

in here. Key trends, we've got successes, testimonials. I absolutely

successes, testimonials. I absolutely love this testimonial. Thank you, Abby Anderson for saying that about Agent OS.

That's totally amazing. Uh and actually, yeah, loads of great agent OS and life OS uh feedback. Absolutely loving that.

And then escalations for me, stuff that I need to go check out and all the rest of it. So really, really powerful.

of it. So really, really powerful.

That's all just made by the agent. In

fact, when I built the agent, the agent also built the database into which it dropped stuff. Amazing. Now, what I love

dropped stuff. Amazing. Now, what I love about this is it allows me to look for patterns, repeated issues, common questions that we might otherwise miss.

And even though I've got my colleague Lisa working on that email, this is helping her endlessly be able to focus on the important stuff and provide better customer service. So, this isn't

replacing team members. It's allowing

them to work on more high value focuses.

It's absolutely brilliant. And we'll be using a combination of this agent and our workflows to hopefully provide much better service to you lot as we go with our notion products. But then it goes a

lot deeper. Third on the list, Merryill

lot deeper. Third on the list, Merryill the meeting organizer. Let me open up her instructions. This one fires when a

her instructions. This one fires when a new event appears on my calendar. It

creates a meeting notes page, links it to the calendar event, and sets up a structure I need before the meeting even starts. So, we have triggers here for

starts. So, we have triggers here for when I mention Merrill in Slack in the meeting summaries section or when an event is created, updated or cancelled.

You can see all of her instructions are in here. She's got access to my key

in here. She's got access to my key project CRM meetings database and even my personal agent mode five instructions that are advanced notes and text

transformer instructions. So she could

transformer instructions. So she could use those to write very specific types of summaries if I ask her to. So the way this works is she can view my calendar.

She's got uh access to view it which is great. And then she can email me at my

great. And then she can email me at my email address and then she can most importantly create drafts to external guests. So I app mentioned her there

guests. So I app mentioned her there with my meeting with Jacob. Let's go and have a little look at what she's doing.

So, she's going to generate the post meeting summary and share it with us.

She creates a detailed summary subpage, sends a Slack notification to say that it's ready. And if there are external

it's ready. And if there are external guests, she would have linked them to the meeting, added them to the CRM database, and drafted an email to them in my Gmail. Absolutely fantastic. So,

let's go and take a little look at what she's done with the summary of those notes. And look at that. There's

notes. And look at that. There's

Merryill in our Slack sharing an overview of the meeting and a link to the meeting notes. It means that Jacob could then click on that, go and find

that they've been created and see the full summary that she created in here.

Look at that, an executive summary ready to go. So, if you're someone that

to go. So, if you're someone that manages clients, regular meetings, this takes all of your busy work off your hands. It sets up the meeting notes,

hands. It sets up the meeting notes, emails the participants, adds people to your CRM, and then summarizes and shares it all automatically. Absolutely

brilliant. And a fourth example is two agents working together. The first one, if we open this up, is Carly the Clever Seeker. This is the first agent I made

Seeker. This is the first agent I made actually. And what Carly does is on a

actually. And what Carly does is on a Tuesday, she will do a weekly trend research on my uh content area. She'll

look through my content database on what I'm working on, and then do a deep research on the web of key subject matters in my niche, puts them into a

weekly trends database, which looks a bit like this. So, if we go to inbox, we'll see weekly trends. Let's look at the current week. I've not looked at

this yet. She's come up with 20 trending

this yet. She's come up with 20 trending topics. Say that in a rush. Uh of things

topics. Say that in a rush. Uh of things to look at. AI agents this year, digital minimalism, Claude, second brains, creator economy, keyboards, desk setups,

Apple's March event. Yeah, it's actually a really great way for me to realize what's going on. But then even better, we have a second agent called Stan, who I've discovered can actually post to my

social media accounts. Now, Notion

doesn't currently have integrations with social media accounts, but if you really want to go deep with this to see what's possible, I have connected it to the make.com custom MCP. And I've got two

scenarios in that make.com section, which will post to LinkedIn and tweet, and we're just working one1 for Instagram. That means agents can take

Instagram. That means agents can take content from Notion and push it out to external platforms. It shows you that custom agents aren't just limited to what's inside Notion. Once you start connecting them to external tools, the

possibilities get much bigger. But

there's a trap I see people falling into already. And it comes down to knowing

already. And it comes down to knowing exactly when to use a custom agent and when you'd be better off with something else entirely. So, let's talk about how

else entirely. So, let's talk about how much these are going to cost and when they're worth it.

Now, before we talk numbers, let me remind you of a key distinction. Your

personal agent in Notion is included in a business or enterprise plan or education plan. It's for collaborative

education plan. It's for collaborative hands-on work. You're always going to

hands-on work. You're always going to want to use that. Custom agents are going to be credit based. They're for

background automations and tasks that run independently like a team member you have to do something. More complex work and processes will use more credits.

Credits are shared across your entire workspace. So everyone on your team

workspace. So everyone on your team draws from the same pool in the same way that custom agents are for lots of people to use, not just you. Your

credits will reset monthly on your billing cycle and unused credits do not roll over. So you can't stockpile them.

roll over. So you can't stockpile them.

H yeah, you see what I mean? This could

get expensive, right? When your credits run out, your custom agent pauses automatically. Scheduled runs that were

automatically. Scheduled runs that were supposed to happen while paused do not run retroactively. they're just skipped

run retroactively. they're just skipped and once credits are available again, everything resumes. So, when should you

everything resumes. So, when should you actually use a custom agent versus something else? Remember the framework I

something else? Remember the framework I mentioned at the start? Well, here it is. Three questions that make this

is. Three questions that make this decision way simpler. Number one, is this rulebased or predictable? Like,

when this status changes, move it to that database. If yes, just use a normal

that database. If yes, just use a normal notion automation. You don't need to use

notion automation. You don't need to use an agent. Standard automations are free

an agent. Standard automations are free in your plan. No credits, no AI needed.

Question number two, is this interactive work where I want the AI to support what I'm doing as I do it? Research, writing,

analysis, specialist coaching, building something where I want to go back and forth. Well, that's for your personal

forth. Well, that's for your personal agent. And that's why agent OS and the

agent. And that's why agent OS and the modes I'm building within that, those specialist coaching modes are going to be perfect to be kept right there. And

it's why most importantly, I think a personal agent plugged into a super custom set of instructions like my agent OS templates will help you no end,

giving you specialist coaches without burning through credits. Personal agent

is included in a business plan and up. I

use mine constantly and will continue to. It's my primary tool now in notion.

to. It's my primary tool now in notion.

I just talk to it with whisper flow link below. And then question number three,

below. And then question number three, can this be done faster, cheaper, and more consistently by an agent and then be handed back to a human when it needs attention? That is likely where a custom

attention? That is likely where a custom agent would come in. Things like weekly reports, email triage, status updates, meeting note summaries, the stuff that repeats and doesn't need you to be in

the loop every single time, but critically with the system in place to flag things back to you when they actually need your judgment. So custom

agents aren't replacements for your personal agent. They are the layer that

personal agent. They are the layer that automates the repetitive busy work, the complex data analysis and builds you simple processes that just take the

thinking out of processing information while you can do the human interaction with other people that's needed. A few

tips to manage your costs when credits do kick in. Run agents less frequently if you can. Narrow what the agent reads.

The less data it processes, the fewer credits it's going to use. Keep the

number of steps low and triggers on specific events, a particular emoji, reaction, or app mention rather than broad ones like any messages posted.

That's going to save you a ton. But

before you start building, there's a few things I wish someone told me up front.

All right, let me be straight with you for a minute because I think you deserve the real picture, not just the marketing version. What's genuinely great? The

version. What's genuinely great? The

free exploration window is a massive opportunity right now. If you're on a business or enterprise plan, use it.

Seriously, you need this time to figure out which agents are actually worth running before credits start costing you money. A quick example, I recreated a my

money. A quick example, I recreated a my online business marketing strategist who has a philosophical northstar and access

to a key knowledge base that is full of tons of information, all frameworks and business knowledge that it will be able to help me with. And it's essentially a

specialist coach. I set her up because I

specialist coach. I set her up because I thought everyone in my tool team would want to use her. What a waste of credits that would be. I just need to use that in my personal agent. Give them the

instructions and then point all of our personal agents to that shared knowledge base and we'll be good to go. The high

ROI use cases are genuinely impressive.

Something like the weekly briefer that runs and gives you that focus for the day, super valuable and probably not expensive on credits. A customer service email reviewer that's reporting like

Andrea, well, same thing. It's likely

more expensive, but probably will save you and your team more time and money than without it if you set it up right.

Anything that runs once a day or once a week and produces a clear, useful output, I think that's going to be the sweet spot. And honestly, this

sweet spot. And honestly, this accessibility is real. I just literally click a template and it builds it. It's

completely wild. You don't need to be technical. You describe what you want.

technical. You describe what you want.

Notion builds it. You iterate until it works. That's genuinely powerful. But

works. That's genuinely powerful. But

here's what I think is not quite there yet. The connectors, email, calendar,

yet. The connectors, email, calendar, Slack. They're great, but they're not

Slack. They're great, but they're not always consistent in what they deliver back. That meeting organizer Merrill

back. That meeting organizer Merrill that I set up, it works beautifully, except then it will occasionally create loads and loads of events that are sometimes duplicates of themselves. You

have to iteratively tweak these things and be patient. And it is early days.

This is still in beta in some areas.

Slack triggers only work with those public channels right now, and DMs aren't supported. So, you can expect

aren't supported. So, you can expect some rough edges, and this is probably the most important one. Don't try to rebuild that personal agent that you've

created in your custom agent hub. It's

tempting to think it, but it will just burn through credits, and it's not the right use of what you need. Sure, if

you've got loads of money, go for it.

But I still think having it set up in chat and being able to interact with it with that UI is a much better use of Notion AI as it currently stands. And if

you want to go deeper with that, you got to go check out agent OS because it's blowing my mind the response you guys have been giving it. So that's notion custom agents. If you want to go deeper,

custom agents. If you want to go deeper, and I mean a full strategy behind building agents that actually work, how to write instructions that get consistent results, the trigger logic I

use, and the live build of a weekly briefer you just saw, that's all on my second channel, Systems Made Better.

It's where I go deep on the method behind all this stuff. Links in the description and on screen right now. And

if you're serious about building an agentic system for your business, that channel is where it's all going to happen. Subscribe here, subscribe there,

happen. Subscribe here, subscribe there, and watch this video next because YouTube thinks you'll love

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