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A template is the lane you pick when you create an agent (step 3 of the wizard). One choice seeds two things at once:
  • The persona. A focus block that defines the agent’s job and how it behaves, folded into its brief together with the role and tone you type.
  • The toolset. The capabilities provisioned into the agent’s private runtime, tuned to that job. A focused template never gets extra tools; it gets a sharper subset of the full set.
The template is a create-time choice: it is baked into the agent when it’s provisioned, and an existing agent can’t be switched to a different template later. To change lanes, deploy a new agent. (The persona text itself stays editable in Settings at any time.)

The four templates

General

The default. No lane: the full capability set and a neutral brief. Best when the job is unique, or when you plan to write your own persona.

Sales

Prospects, qualifies, and reaches out. Uses its memory as a lightweight CRM and moves every conversation toward a call, demo, or purchase.

Social

Plans, writes, and publishes content in your voice, and keeps up with mentions across your connected channels.

Prediction Markets

A prediction-markets analyst. Researches events, reasons to a committed pick, and reads live Polymarket prices.

Capabilities by template

Every template ships with web search, files and a terminal, persistent memory, skills, and scheduled tasks. The differences: Focused templates deliberately drop what their job doesn’t need: a sales agent has no reason to browse the skill hub, and vision stays where images actually matter (social content, and the general all-rounder).

Sales

Built to fill a pipeline, not to spam one.
  • Prospects and qualifies. Researches a lead or company before reaching out and notes why they fit.
  • Reaches out for real. With LinkedIn connected (X is days away), it drafts personalized outreach and follow-ups and sends them once you approve. Every message is matched to the person; it never blasts a generic template.
  • Memory as CRM. Tracks who it contacted, what they said, and the next step (prospect, stage, last touch, next action) in its persistent memory.
  • Follow-up cadences. Add a recurring task on the Tasks board and it runs the follow-up round automatically each time it fires.
Anything sent under your name (a public post or a private DM) needs your approval first, and a “no” from a prospect is respected.

Social

A social media manager that keeps you present without sounding like a bot wrote it.
  • Creates content. Native posts per platform (punchy for X, more substantive for LinkedIn), hooks, threads, and hashtags. One idea becomes several platform-native posts, with web search for current context.
  • Publishes. With LinkedIn connected (X is days away), it posts once you approve; drafts always land with you first. Put publishing on a calendar with a recurring task.
  • Engages. Reads recent mentions and replies on connected channels and drafts on-brand responses for your approval.
  • Stays consistent. Keeps voice and cadence steady, and tracks what it has already posted in memory so it doesn’t repeat itself.
  • Sees images. Vision is included, since visuals are core to social content.

Prediction Markets

An analyst identity, not a general assistant with market data bolted on. It thinks in odds, edges, and catalysts.
  • Research first. Form, injuries, referees, weather, head-to-head, stakes, news: it builds its own read from fundamentals. Market prices are one input (sentiment and payout reference), never the center of the analysis.
  • Commits to a pick. It gives you its winner with its own probabilities and the decisive factors, and re-examines honestly when you push back: it neither digs in nor caves.
  • Reads live markets. A built-in Polymarket skill pulls live markets, prices, volume, and history, and the agent hands you the direct link to the exact market so you land one click from acting.
  • Verifiable sports data (preview). With TxLINE enabled, it reads Solana-anchored live odds, runs a deterministic sharp-movement detector, and anchors its committed picks on Solana.
  • Odds cards in chat. Markets render as visual odds cards (outcomes, implied probabilities, the agent’s pick highlighted) right in the dashboard chat.
  • Monitors over time. A recurring task turns it into a watcher: it re-runs on schedule and alerts you on a connected channel when odds move or a catalyst hits.
Prediction agents give research, not financial advice. They never take custody of funds, sign transactions, or place positions. The agent surfaces the opportunity; you decide and execute.

Templates and your own brief

A template is a seed, not a cage:
  • The role and tone you type in the wizard are folded into the template’s brief.
  • Pasting a full custom persona (up to ~8,000 characters) replaces the template’s brief entirely. The template still decides the toolset.
  • After deploy, the persona stays editable in the agent’s Settings.

Choosing

Next

  • Models: the brain that runs the template
  • Channels: connect Telegram, GitHub and LinkedIn (X is days away)
  • Quickstart: deploy one in about a minute