Modern AI tools can solve complex business problems requiring coordination across distinct computer systems like Stripe, Ghost, and Postmark. By programmatically using various APIs, the AI can coalesce different data views to execute an integrated solution without explicit instruction for each step.
The evolution of 'agentic AI' extends beyond content generation to automating the connective tissue of business operations. Its future value is in initiating workflows that span departments, such as kickstarting creative briefs for marketing, creating product backlogs from feedback, and generating service tickets, streamlining operational handoffs.
Platforms like Nebula allow founders to move beyond simple automation. By providing a high-level directive and connecting services, AI agents can run entire business functions, like a content blog that researches, writes, and publishes daily with minimal human intervention.
Block is re-architecting its entire business by treating all functions—from payments to HR—as a collection of capabilities. These are unified and accessed through a central AI agent middleware layer (Goose), orchestrating workflows across previously siloed product and corporate functions.
Customers now expect DaaS vendors to provide "agentic AI" that automates and orchestrates the entire workflow—from data integration to delivering actionable intelligence. The vendor's responsibility has shifted from merely delivering raw data to owning the execution of a business outcome, where swift integration is synonymous with retention.
Unlike tools like Zapier where users manually construct logic, advanced AI agent platforms allow users to simply state their goal in natural language. The agent then autonomously determines the steps, writes necessary code, and executes the task, abstracting away the workflow.
A major hurdle for enterprise AI is messy, siloed data. A synergistic solution is emerging where AI software agents are used for the data engineering tasks of cleansing, normalization, and linking. This creates a powerful feedback loop where AI helps prepare the very data it needs to function effectively.
Instead of pre-engineering tool integrations, Block lets its AI agent Goose learn by doing. Successful user-driven workflows can be saved as shareable "recipes," allowing emergent capabilities to be captured and scaled. They found the agent is more capable this way than if they tried to make tools "Goose-friendly."
Agentic AI will evolve into a 'multi-agent ecosystem.' This means AI agents from different companies—like an airline and a hotel—will interact directly with each other to autonomously solve a customer's complex problem, freeing humans from multi-party coordination tasks.
The next major leap for AI is its ability to connect disparate apps and data sources (email, calendar, location) to take autonomous actions. This will move AI from a Q&A tool to a proactive agent that seamlessly manages complex workflows.
The company leveraged its deep expertise in application integration (its "pre-AI era" business) to build a foundational layer for AI agents, providing the necessary hooks and data pipelines for them to function effectively.