Every tool on one deck.
Airship plugs into any MCP server or API — your inbox, your books, your storefront. No migrations, no rip-and-replace.
See integrations →Placeholder proof — swap in a real number
Airship connects to the tools you already use and puts AI agents to work — every action scoped, approved and logged. You run the business. Airship runs the busywork.
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.
Airship plugs into any MCP server or API — your inbox, your books, your storefront. No migrations, no rip-and-replace.
See integrations →Describe the job in plain English. Agents assemble the workflow, deploy it, and keep it running — day and night.
Watch a run →Scoped credentials, an approval gate on anything that matters, and an audit trail in plain English. You always know what ran and why.
How security works →Five minutes, six steps
Use cases

Placeholder case — swap in a real customer story with a concrete result.
View case →
Placeholder case — swap in a real customer story with a concrete result.
View case →
Placeholder case — swap in a real customer story with a concrete result.
View case →Use cv-a / cv-b / cv-c washes when no imagery exists yet.
View case →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
Placeholder plan copy — one sentence on who this is for.
Placeholder plan copy — one sentence on who this is for.
Bigger scope — self-hosting, compliance reviews, migrations — gets a fixed quote within 48 hours.
After the switch
Placeholder testimonial — first-person, concrete, one real number in it.
Placeholder testimonial — first-person, concrete, one real number in it.
Placeholder testimonial — first-person, concrete, one real number in it.
Questions
Every agent runs with 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.
Anything your connected tools can do: draft and send email, reconcile invoices, update inventory, file tickets, build small internal apps. You define the scope; they stay inside it.
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.
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