Every tool on one deck.
Plug in your inbox, your books, your CRM, your storefront — anything with an API or an MCP connector. No migrations, no rip-and-replace, and Airship holds the keys so nobody has to share a password.
See integrations →You decide what every agent can touch — and it's all logged
Airship connects the AI your team already uses to the tools that run your business — every action scoped, approved, and logged. You see everything. You approve what matters. The busywork gets done.
One platform · three jobs
Most tools give you one of these and bolt on the rest. Airship does all three in one place — that's what makes automation safe enough to actually use.
Plug in your inbox, your books, your CRM, your storefront — anything with an API or an MCP connector. No migrations, no rip-and-replace, and Airship holds the keys so nobody has to share a password.
See integrations →Brief an agent the way you'd brief an employee. It drafts the plan, builds the tool, and runs it on schedule — overnight, weekends, whenever the work shows up.
Watch a run →Every agent gets its own identity — its own email address, its own keys, only the access you granted. Anything consequential waits for your yes, and it all lands in a log you can actually read.
How security works →Agents, hired properly
Airship gives every agent the same things you'd give a new hire — nothing more, nothing less.
A real inbox. Your agent can chase an invoice, confirm a delivery, or book a supplier — and you can open every thread it ever sent.
Access to exactly the tools you granted, at the level you granted. Take any of it back in one click — without touching anyone's passwords.
You set the rules once. Refunds, payments, anything sensitive — the agent asks first, and the request lands on your phone.
Every action in plain English: what ran, what it touched, what changed. Read it Monday morning or search it a year later.
Five minutes, six steps
Use cases

Sales, cash, bookings, complaints — one board your agent keeps current from the tools you already run. Ask why a number moved and get the real answer, not a shrug.
See how it runs →
Invoices entered, receipts chased, books reconciled while everyone sleeps. Your bookkeeper starts the day reviewing instead of typing.
See how it runs →
The first vacation without calling in. Approvals still reach your phone; everything else just runs — and the log proves it.
Start free →A dispatcher described the job board she wanted on Tuesday. The crew ran on it Thursday. No developers, no six-week rollout.
Watch one get built →How it works
Type it the way you'd tell an employee: "Chase unpaid invoices politely after 14 days." Airship drafts the workflow and shows you exactly which tools it will touch.
Pricing
For an owner putting their first agents to work.
For teams running whole departments through Airship.
Bigger scope — self-hosting, compliance reviews, migrations — gets a fixed quote within 48 hours.
After the switch
Month-end close was nine days. It's four now. The agents chase receipts and reconcile overnight, and the log means review takes an hour, not an afternoon.
Our dispatcher told her agent what board she wanted on a Tuesday. Thursday the whole crew was on it. No consultants, no new software to buy, nobody trained.
My fear was staff pasting our numbers into random chatbots. Now it all runs through one place with permissions I set — and the team actually moves faster.
Questions
Every agent runs with its own scoped credentials that you grant per tool, an approval gate on anything consequential, and an audit log of every action in plain English. Nothing runs that you can't see, and nothing touches a tool you didn't connect.
No. They keep the AI assistant they already use — Claude, ChatGPT, or anything that speaks MCP, the open standard those tools share. Airship is where the access, the approvals, and the record-keeping live. To your team it just feels like their assistant got a lot more capable.
Anything your connected tools can do: draft and send email, reconcile invoices, update inventory, chase payments, file tickets, build internal apps and dashboards. You define the scope; they stay inside it.
Because half of business runs on email. An agent with its own inbox can chase an invoice, confirm a delivery window, or follow up with a supplier — without borrowing anyone's identity or password. And you can open every thread it ever sent.
No. You describe jobs in plain English. If you are technical, Airship is MCP-native and API-first — bring your own servers and endpoints.
Consequential actions wait for your approval, so wrong usually means "you tapped Reject." Everything else is logged and reversible where the underlying tool allows it.
Connect a tool, describe one job, and watch an agent take it over — free, with approvals on.
Start free