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Project management software giantĀ AsanaĀ is rolling out what it calls ā€œAI teammatesā€ā€”bots that canĀ participateĀ inĀ handlingĀ andĀ discussing work via Asana’s platformĀ in similar ways to actual humans.Ā 

Unlike some AI assistant and copilot products that take direction only from one human user, Asana’s AI teammates are designed to work with multiple humans,Ā similar toĀ how an actual new hire might receive assignments, feedback, and comments from a range of coworkers.Ā Ā 

The aim is to offer a set of AI tools that integrate not only with software companies already use, but with the Asana-based workflows they rely on to divvy up and discuss work. So while the bots won’t necessarily replace human employees or potential hires outright, interacting with them through Asana will feel fairly similar to working with a flesh-and-blood colleague.

ā€œIt is a shared experience, which means you can bring it into a project, and it’ll behave and look like a team member, and it can pick up tasks,ā€ says Asana chief product officer Arnab Bose. ā€œAnd when it picks up tasks, everybody on the team who is a human being, who’s on the project, can give that AI agent feedback.ā€Ā 

Arnab Bose [Photo: Asana]

The feature is launching with 21 prebuilt virtual teammates that can handle tasks like planning product launches, drafting marketing campaign briefs, managing IT service queues, and coding web content. Users can also create their own AI teammates with custom prompts. The bots can be added to conversations on Asana and draw on the company’s existing Asana Work Graph, a data structure that maps relationships among projects, people, and tasks.

That context helps them understand their assignments and suggest relevant collaborators or files to reference. AI teammates can also be scheduled to perform routine tasks, such as scanning an Asana board daily or weekly to flag potential issues that could affect deadlines.

Critically, Asana’s virtual teammates can also read andĀ write toĀ files in cloud systems like Google Drive and Microsoft SharePoint, which means they can directly access and contribute to projects in the environments where companies already work. For instance, aĀ marketingĀ campaign brief creator can pull in existing notes and high-level strategy documents toĀ guide its drafts.Ā AdditionalĀ integrations with tools like customer-relationship management (CRM) software areĀ likelyĀ onĀ the way, as are features to let users craft custom integrations.Ā 

Already, the bots can even be directed to feedback given through comments inĀ word processingĀ documents, meaning usersĀ don’tĀ have to radically change their workflows to accommodate their new digital teammates.Ā 

ā€œYou don’t have to go ahead and learn a new way of working,ā€ says Bose. ā€œIt’s not like you’d end up with some special format inside Asana, and now people have to stop using Google Docs or Office 365 and start usingĀ this.ā€Ā 

Humans can still control at a fine-grained level what the AI teammates have access to. Teams can also configure who has what level of control over the bots. For instance, advanced users mayĀ be authorized toĀ edit AIĀ teammates’ stored memory data, which can help clear outĀ erroneousĀ instructions they may have picked up from lessĀ experiencedĀ colleagues, Bose says. And the agentsĀ generally won’tĀ respond to users whoĀ aren’tĀ paying forĀ AI teammate access, which currently costs $15 per month per user, thoughĀ other Asana users willĀ still be able to see the botĀ discussionsĀ and any other output they generate.Ā 

That $15 monthly fee includes the cost of calls to underlying AI models, so customersĀ don’tĀ have to pay separately for AI use or budget AI access tokens. Asana routes calls to theĀ appropriate AIĀ models for each task, and Bose says heĀ anticipatesĀ many users will see that and other aspects of AI management being handledĀ behind the scenesĀ by Asana as a benefit rather than a limitation.Ā Ā 

The release of teammates, which Bose says will be available immediately to customers with enterprise-style sales relationships with Asana and self-service customers over the summer, comes as the software industry rolls out ever more ways to work with AI agents. ThoseĀ includeĀ integrations withĀ office software suitesĀ andĀ creativity platforms,Ā specializedĀ desktop and command-line apps letting AI manipulate local files, and the familiar web chat interfaces that made large language models mainstream.Ā Ā 

In essence, AsanaĀ is betting that integration with existing work graph data, along with its collaborative approach to working with AI, will make the project management platform the preferred hub for managing AI.Ā 

ā€œAsana is designed for this moment, frankly,ā€ says Bose. ā€œIt’s designed for this moment where every individual contributor is becoming a manager of multiple AI agents, and you need to coordinateĀ them,Ā and you need to align with other human beings.ā€Ā 

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