What to Do with OpenClaw: 20 Ideas That Actually Work
You installed OpenClaw. The agent is running. Now what? This page answers that question with 20 concrete workflows. Each one links to a ready-to-copy template. Pick two or three that match your situation and set them up today.
How to use this guide: Browse the four sections below. When an idea resonates, click the template link. Each template takes 3-10 minutes to set up. You copy a SOUL.md or HEARTBEAT.md file, install any required skills, and your agent handles the rest.
Start with one. Get it running. Then add more. Do not try to set up 20 things at once.
Productivity
5 ideasThese workflows replace the repetitive daily tasks that eat time without requiring real thought. Email scanning, briefings, expense logging. Do them once and stop doing them yourself.
Stop reading every email yourself
Point your agent at your inbox. Every morning it scans, flags what matters (clients, deadlines, urgent keywords), and summarizes the rest in one message.
Why it works: The average person spends 20+ minutes every morning just deciding which emails deserve attention. Your agent can do that scan in seconds.
Get a 60-second brief before your day starts
Every weekday at 7:30am, your agent checks your calendar, pulls 3 headlines from your industry, and sends you a single compact message: meetings, news, one focus item.
Why it works: Most people start their day scattered. A morning brief forces prioritization before the first distraction hits.
Prep for meetings automatically
Two hours before each meeting, your agent finds related emails from attendees, checks for agendas, and sends you a brief: who is coming, what it is about, what to prepare.
Why it works: Walking into a meeting without context is a bad habit. Having an agent handle the research means you stop doing it yourself at the last minute.
End every Friday with a clear picture of your week
At 5pm every Friday, your agent pulls git commits, merged PRs, meeting time logged, and asks what else you want to capture. The result is a markdown file and a short Telegram summary.
Why it works: Weekly reviews compound. Each one is low-value on its own. Six months of them and you have data on where your time actually goes.
Log every expense without touching a spreadsheet
Every receipt email that hits your inbox gets parsed automatically: vendor, amount, date, category. It all goes into a Google Sheet. Anything over $100 triggers a notification.
Why it works: End-of-month expense reconciliation is miserable. Log it as it happens and that problem disappears.
Development
5 ideasThese workflows wrap around your GitHub workflow. CI alerts, PR reviews, issue triage. The agent handles the monitoring and first-pass review so you focus on the work that needs actual engineering judgment.
Get alerted the moment a CI build fails
Every 30 minutes, your agent checks recent GitHub Actions runs. On failure, it fetches the relevant logs, identifies the error, and sends you a notification with the error summary and a direct link.
Why it works: Most developers either stare at CI tabs or miss failures for hours. Automated failure alerts cut mean time to fix dramatically.
Auto-review every new PR
Every 2 hours during business hours, your agent checks for new pull requests. For each one, it reads the diff, posts a summary comment (what changed, potential issues, suggestions), and sends you a Telegram notification.
Why it works: Code review is a bottleneck. Your agent handles first-pass triage so humans spend time on the things that actually need judgment.
Label and route GitHub issues automatically
Every hour during business hours, your agent reads new unlabeled issues and classifies them: bug, feature, question, docs. Labels get applied automatically. Critical bugs trigger an immediate alert.
Why it works: Unlabeled issues pile up fast. Consistent labeling makes your backlog searchable and makes triage 10x faster.
Generate a changelog without writing it yourself
When you are ready to cut a release, tell your agent the version number. It fetches all merged PRs since the last tag, categorizes them by label (features, fixes, docs, maintenance), and outputs clean markdown ready to paste into CHANGELOG.md.
Why it works: Good changelogs take 30+ minutes to write properly. Your agent has all the data and can produce a first draft in seconds.
Get a Monday morning security report
Every Monday at 7am, your agent checks SSL certificate expiry for all your domains, scans GitHub for open security advisories and Dependabot alerts, and sends a summary. If anything is critical, it does not wait until Monday.
Why it works: Security hygiene is the kind of thing that matters once and gets ignored the other 364 days. Automated weekly checks make it a non-issue.
Business
5 ideasThese workflows handle the operational glue work that does not require a human but eats human time anyway. Invoice tracking, lead qualification, contract renewals, support routing.
Track overdue invoices without a finance tool
Every morning, your agent checks your Invoices Google Sheet. Anything past due gets flagged by severity: 1-7 days, 7-14 days, 14+ days. It also scans for payment confirmation emails and updates the sheet automatically.
Why it works: Outstanding invoices are easy to lose track of. Automated daily tracking means you always know your real cash position.
Score inbound leads before you talk to them
When a new form submission comes in, your agent researches the company (LinkedIn, Crunchbase), scores the lead 1-10, and routes it accordingly. High scores get an immediate notification with a full brief. Low scores get an automated resource response.
Why it works: Not all leads are worth the same amount of your time. Scoring before qualification calls means you prepare better and skip the ones that will not convert.
Never miss a competitor update again
Every weekday morning, your agent checks competitor blogs and changelogs for new posts, searches for recent news, and checks pricing pages for changes. If anything is new, it summarizes and posts to your team channel.
Why it works: Competitive research is the kind of work most founders do inconsistently: too much some weeks, nothing for months. Automated monitoring keeps you current without the time cost.
Route support emails before they pile up
Every 30 minutes, your agent scans the support inbox. Each email gets classified (billing, bug, feature request, how-to) and routed to the right person or queue. High-urgency tickets that go unanswered for 2 hours trigger an escalation.
Why it works: Support routing is often the last thing founders automate. It is usually the first thing that breaks when you get users.
Know 90 days before a contract expires
Your agent reads your Contracts Google Sheet daily. At 90, 60, 30, and 7 days before each expiry, it sends a notification with the client name and what to do next. No contract should ever expire without warning.
Why it works: Contract renewals are high-value and easy to miss. The cost of missing one is usually much higher than the cost of the agent.
Personal
5 ideasThese workflows use your agent for the routines that are easy to let slip. Daily journaling, habit tracking, finance monitoring. Not productivity hacks. Just consistent behavior that compounds over time.
Build a journaling habit that actually sticks
Every evening at 9pm, your agent sends a single journal prompt. It rotates through five questions: what went well, what you learned, what you would do differently, gratitude, and what is on your mind. Responses get saved to dated markdown files.
Why it works: Most journaling habits fail because the blank page is intimidating. A rotating prompt lowers the activation energy enough to make it consistent.
Track habits with streaks, without the app
At 8pm, your agent asks how the habits went. It tracks streaks for each one without guilt-tripping you when a streak breaks. Sunday gives you a completion rate summary. Monthly gives you a pattern analysis.
Why it works: Habit tracking apps add friction. Your agent is already where you are. The check-in takes 30 seconds.
Know if it is going to rain before you leave the house
Every weekday at 7am, your agent checks the weather for your commute location and sends a 3-line brief: conditions, advice, one useful detail. No weather app required.
Why it works: Weather apps are fine. But your agent already messages you in the morning. Adding weather to that channel means one less app to open.
See where your personal money actually goes
Your agent scans for bank and credit card notification emails daily. It extracts each transaction, auto-categorizes it (SaaS, food, travel, shopping, utilities), and logs it to a Google Sheet. Unusual charges get flagged. First of the month brings a summary.
Why it works: Most people do not know their actual spending breakdown until they look at a credit card statement and feel bad about it. Real-time logging means no surprises.
Keep an honest reading list
Tell your agent to add a book or article and it tracks it: status (to-read, reading, finished), rating after you finish, key takeaways you share. Sunday morning it reminds you what you are reading and suggests something new based on your history.
Why it works: Reading lists live in bookmarks folders and note apps and never get touched. An agent that nudges you weekly is a nudge that actually happens.
What does this cost?
Most of these workflows run on Claude Haiku or Sonnet. The cheaper ones (journaling, habit tracking, uptime monitoring) run on Haiku and cost under $0.10/day. The more complex ones (PR reviewer, lead qualifier) use Sonnet and run closer to $0.30-$0.50/day.
Running five or six workflows simultaneously typically costs $0.50-$1.50/day, depending on which ones you pick and how frequently they run. That is under $45/month for a full automation setup that would otherwise take hours of your time each week.
If you want to calculate costs before committing, use Clawback. It lets you model token usage by model and frequency so you know exactly what each workflow will cost before you enable it.
Want a curated bundle?
If you are not sure where to start, the Starter Packs page has four curated bundles. Each one groups 4 templates that work well together for a specific type of user. Pick your stack and you get all the SOUL.md and HEARTBEAT.md files in one copy.
Browse Starter Packs →