Email in.
Work gets done.
Gofer is an autonomous agent that lives in your inbox. Email it a scheduling task and it handles the rest -- reaching out to participants, negotiating times, and putting the meeting on your calendar.
Coming soon. Currently in private beta.
How it works
Sign up, get an email address
You pick a handle. Gofer gives you [email protected]. That's your agent.
Email it a task
Forward a thread, CC your agent, or start fresh. "Set up a 30-min call with Sarah next week."
It does the rest
Gofer reaches out to each participant over email and negotiates times. Participants can reply naturally or use a booking page to pick from open slots. Once everyone agrees, Gofer books it and sends calendar invites.
Real moments
You meet someone at a conference. You fire off an email to your agent: "Schedule coffee with [email protected], 30 min, next week." Gofer emails them, they reply or grab a slot from a booking page, and it's on both calendars.
A client needs to reschedule. They reply to the original thread. Gofer picks it up, checks your calendar, proposes new times, and handles the back-and-forth. You never see it.
Quarterly review with four people across three time zones. You email Gofer the details. It coordinates with all four -- over email or via individual booking pages. Once everyone's availability lines up, Gofer books it. No group thread. No reply-all.
You're heads-down on a project and a prospect emails asking to chat. You forward it to Gofer with a one-liner: "45 min call, this week or next." Done.
You manage a team of six. You email Gofer once: "Monthly 1:1 with each direct report, 30 min, prefer mornings." Gofer schedules all six every month -- negotiates times, handles reschedules, books the calendar. You never touch it again.
Your calendar, defragmented
Other tools shuffle your blocks around.
Gofer negotiates with real people.
Gofer watches your calendar during working hours. When it spots that moving a meeting 30 minutes earlier would open a 2-hour focus block, it emails the participant and asks. No other scheduling tool can do this -- they can only rearrange your own calendar entries. Gofer talks to the humans on the other side.
Finds wasted gaps
That 40-minute gap between meetings? Too short for deep work, too long to ignore. Gofer consolidates your meetings into blocks so you get contiguous time back.
Asks, doesn't force
Gofer proposes changes and waits for your approval. Or, if you trust it, let it act autonomously. Participants can always decline -- their time matters too.
Confirms upcoming meetings
A day or two before each meeting, Gofer sends a quick confirmation to participants. Reduces no-shows. No extra setup.
The bigger picture
Scheduling is just the start.
Gofer is a platform for autonomous work. Scheduling is the first capability because it's high-frequency, well-defined, and annoying. But the architecture is built for more: managing receivables, sending follow-ups, handling intake. One inbox, one agent, many skills. Added over time.
Built to be trusted
If the Meta alignment director had been using Gofer instead of OpenClaw, she'd still have her inbox. This is why architecture matters.
Calendar: busy/free only
Gofer connects to your calendar to see when you're busy, not what you're doing. No event titles, no attendees, no details. Participants just get a booking page with open slots.
Deterministic, not probabilistic
The AI reads text and writes text. A deterministic state machine decides what happens next. The AI never chooses actions, never calls tools, never improvises.
Scoped and sandboxed
Each task has explicit participants and a bounded goal. The agent can't email people you didn't specify or book outside your working hours.
You stay in the loop
Every email sent, every decision made, every state change. visible in your dashboard. Cancel any time.
Get your agent
Gofer is currently in private beta. Sign up, pick a handle, connect your calendar. Your agent is ready to work in under a minute.