Automate weekly reporting
Every team has a version of the Friday report, and every team quietly hates assembling it. The numbers live in four places, last week’s figures are in an old doc you have to dig up to compute the change, and once you finally have the deltas you still have to write the part that matters — the sentence explaining why signups dipped or why churn ticked up. It’s an hour or two of low-judgment assembly, it lands on the same person every week, and the week it gets skipped is the week leadership asks where it is.
This is exactly the shape of work a scheduled agent is for. You set it once, and every Friday at 9am Skynet pulls the latest numbers from your connected sources, compares them to last week, and writes the update — not a chart dump, but a short narrative that names what moved, by how much, and the likely reason. Then it posts to the channel your team already reads. No one assembles anything. It just shows up.
How the scheduled report works
Connect the sources
Point the agent at the places your numbers live — your analytics, sheets, CRM, billing. Skynet builds unified memory across them, so the report draws from one grounded picture instead of four tabs you reconcile by hand.
Set the schedule and forget it
Tell it when: every Friday at 9am, the first of the month, whatever your cadence is. From then on it runs on a schedule, unattended — no one has to remember to kick it off.
Compute the deltas, write the narrative
The agent calculates the week-over-week change for each metric and turns the movement into plain English: what’s up, what’s down, what crossed a threshold, and the most likely reason given the context it holds. The reader gets the story, not homework.
Post where the team reads
Because Skynet takes action in your tools, the finished update lands in Slack or hits inboxes by email automatically — in the channel people already check, framed and ready, before the first standup.
You describe the report once in plain language. No code, no spreadsheet macros — just the brief and the cadence.
Where this lands
The report stops being a Friday tax. It arrives on time whether or not anyone remembered it, it reads like a person wrote it, and the hours that went into assembling it go back to the work the report is supposed to inform. The streak of “we forgot the update this week” ends.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. You set the cadence — say Friday 9am — and the scheduled agent pulls the data, writes the narrative, and posts it without anyone starting it. Unattended is the default; you can switch it to draft-for-approval if you would rather review first.
No — that is the point. It computes the deltas and then writes the story: what moved, by how much, and the likely reason, grounded in the context it holds. The chart dump is the thing it replaces.
From the sources you connect — analytics, sheets, CRM, billing — held in unified memory so the report works from one reconciled picture instead of several tabs you stitch together by hand.
Anytime. You edit the plain-language brief — add a metric, change the threshold, swap the channel — without touching code. The same pattern works for monthly board updates or a daily standup digest.