Modules overview
Everything you have seen so far, the board, strategy, team, Mission Control, and the Office, is core functionality. Modules are everything else: optional add-ons you install into your workspace to gain new capabilities.
Core features versus modules
Core features are always there. Modules are like plugins you switch on when you need them. But they are more than a plugin in the usual software sense, because they do two things at once.
What a module does
A module adds functionality to your workspace and upskills the AI employees who get it. The CRM module, for example, gives you the CRM interface and also makes the employees who use it better at sales: how to qualify a lead, how to progress a deal, what good practice looks like. The Content Planning module turns the employees who use it into capable social planners, and the Reporting module turns them into capable analysts. Modules are not loaded by default, because loading every skill into every employee would bloat their memory with knowledge they may never use.
Per-employee access
When you install a module, you choose which AI employees receive it. That keeps a sales skill with your sales people and a coding skill with your developers, rather than polluting everyone. Installing a module transfers the matching skill into that employee's agent runtime and keeps it in sync.
The module library
The library grows as we work with customers and identify the tools and skills teams need. Browse what is available on the Modules page and install the ones that fit how you work.