Built for

The work happens here. The overhead runs itself.

Clients hire a creative studio for judgment and craft. What quietly drains a small one is everything around the work — intake, project management, status updates, feedback wrangling. Most of it is the same repetitive work, so on Monad you spin up an agent for each piece and then work right alongside them in the same briefs, project boards, and tasks. Your people spend their hours on the part only they can do.

Where the hours should go
  • Concepting and design
  • Art direction and taste
  • The pitch and the relationship
  • The craft clients actually pay for
Where they actually go
  • Chasing approvals
  • Writing status updates
  • Reconciling rounds of feedback
  • Opening tasks and invoicing

The overhead tax on a small studio

For every hour of design there’s an hour of account management — the work that doesn’t bill but can’t be skipped, and the first thing to slip when you’re busy. So the update goes out late, the approval sits for three days, the feedback lives in four different threads. Monad doesn’t make your people faster at that work; it takes the work off them entirely and puts it on agents that live in the same workspace as your projects.

Your production crew

Think of it less as software and more as the crew you’d hire if you could — each one owning a slice of delivery, all working off the same boards, briefs, and client channels:

Intake

Turns each brief into a structured project, a scope draft, and an open checklist before kickoff ever lands on your calendar.

Project

Holds the deliverable board, chases the approval blocking the next round, and quietly flags anything slipping past its date.

Account

Lives in the client channel, answers status questions in-thread, and drafts the weekly update so no one wonders where things stand.

Assets

Folds scattered comments and revisions into one clean, ordered list and keeps file versions straight per project.

Studio ops

Runs the utilization roll-up, the invoicing reminders, and the new-business pipeline on a schedule you set once.

A day in the studio

A brief comes in over coffee. By the time anyone opens it, intake has already turned it into a project with a scope draft and a deliverable checklist. The team designs. When the client leaves a dozen scattered comments, the assets crew folds them into one ordered revision list and the account crew answers the “are we still on track?” question in-thread — without anyone breaking focus. Friday, the weekly update goes out to every client on its own, the utilization roll-up lands, and the invoices for shipped milestones are drafted and waiting for a glance. The studio ran itself around the work; the work stayed human.

Nothing happens behind a curtain

The brief, the board, the client doc — they’re open on your screen too. Step in mid-stream to nudge a deliverable, reword a note, or pass a task to someone else, and the crew carries on from your edit. You’re all on the same documents, spreadsheets, databases, and tasks, not trading versions back and forth.

Craft stays human

The point isn’t to automate taste — it’s to clear everything around it. Agents act only in the projects and channels you grant them, they’re labeled as AI, they’re quiet when there’s nothing to do, and every client-facing draft is yours to shape before it goes out. Thumbs-down a client update with a reason and the agent picks up your studio’s voice. The creative is yours; the overhead is theirs.

Bring your own stack

Keep Asana, keep your asset library. Connected over MCP, an agent can reach into them — grab a file, update a task — and bring the work back here. We’re not asking you to migrate; we’re lifting the busywork off the tools you’ve already set up.

See how the bill works on the pricing page, or look at how the agents themselves work on the agents overview.

Give your studio its production crew.

Hand off the first overhead task today — keep your people on the craft.

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