A whole AI workforce.MariMariruns the company with you.

Mari Business is one workspace, several specialized Mari agents, every channel a customer can reach you on, and the playbook your team runs. Coming soon.

What Mari Business is

Not nine new tools your team has to learn. One operating layer that already knows how the company runs.

Mari Business lives on top of the apps you already use, the customers you already have, the playbook you already wrote. It connects, listens, decides what needs you, drafts the rest, and keeps the receipts. Every action logged. Every risky step paused for sign-off. Nothing happens in your name without you knowing.

What it actually does

Nine specialized agents, one workspace.

Each pillar is a Mari role with a brief, a voice, a tool-set and a clear scope. They share the company memory, they hand off to each other, and they never step outside what you've asked them to.

Five Mari agents standing together as a unified team of role-specialized assistants
01Workforce

Spin up a Mari for any role on your team.

One company workspace, several specialized Mari agents living inside it. Each one keeps its own voice, its own playbook, its own tools and its own slice of the business. They talk to each other when a thread crosses the line between sales and ops, support and engineering, marketing and finance.

  • Five role templates out of the box: Sales, Support, Operations, Marketing, Recruiting. Each shipped with a sane brief, voice and tool-set you can override.
  • Custom roles too: write a one-paragraph brief, pick the channels, pick the integrations, and you have a new agent live in minutes.
  • Per-role memory: Sales Mari never sees a support ticket unless escalated. Each agent's memory is partitioned and auditable.
  • Hand-offs are first-class. A support thread that turns into a deal moves to Sales Mari with the full context attached, not a copy-paste.
Mari reviewing a stylized sales pipeline kanban on a tablet, deal cards moving across stages
02Sales & CRM

A pipeline that moves itself.

Every conversation with a prospect, on every channel, is logged on the deal automatically. Mari watches the pipeline the way a great sales manager would, and she coaches your reps in plain English the moment a deal goes quiet.

  • Auto-logging across email, WhatsApp, Telegram, Slack DMs and meeting transcripts. The CRM record is the source of truth, not the place your team forgot to update.
  • Deal coaching: "Acme hasn't moved in twelve days. Last touch was a price question. Here are three drafts to break the silence."
  • Lead intelligence: when a new prospect lands, Mari pulls public signals (LinkedIn, company size, recent news) and writes a one-paragraph brief before your rep opens the message.
  • Proposal and contract drafts from a chat command, using your templates and the last things this customer said. Sent to the rep for approval, never auto-fired.
  • Multi-touch nudges across channels: an email that goes unread becomes a WhatsApp follow-up two days later, at the prospect's local time.
Plays with
SalesforceHubSpotPipedriveAttioCloseCopperZendesk Sell
Mari at a glass project board with swim lanes of task cards and dependency arrows
03Projects & operations

Projects that ship themselves.

Describe a project in a paragraph. Mari breaks it into tasks, picks the owners, sets the dates, and then keeps the whole thing moving without anyone having to chase status. Standups happen in chat, blockers surface before the deadline, and the project board updates itself.

  • AI decomposition: "Launch the v2 onboarding flow by end of month" becomes a tree of tasks with owners, dependencies, dates and acceptance criteria.
  • Async standups in chat: every morning Mari pings each owner with a friendly check-in, collects status, and writes the team digest in one place.
  • Blocker detection: when a task has been idle for too long, Mari surfaces it with the context, the likely cause, and a suggested unblock.
  • Status updates without the meeting. Mari assembles the weekly readout from the actual activity, not from what someone remembered to type.
  • Time inferred from conversation: no timesheets. If you spent the morning in a thread about Acme, that time lands on Acme's project automatically, ready for review.
Plays with
LinearJiraAsanaMondayNotionClickUpBasecampTrello
Mari at a desk reviewing one unified inbox that consolidates every customer channel
04Unified inbox

One inbox, every channel, one place to act.

Email, WhatsApp Business, Telegram, Slack DMs, Intercom, the website chat widget, the contact form. They all land in a single ranked feed, sorted by who needs you the most. Mari drafts replies for the ones she can, escalates the ones she cannot, and never lets anything sit longer than the SLA you set.

  • Smart triage: every incoming message is classified as needs you / informational / spam / VIP, and routed to the right teammate or agent.
  • Draft replies waiting for one-tap approval. The voice matches the channel and the relationship: warm with regulars, formal with first-time prospects.
  • SLA timers visible on every thread. Mari warns when a high-priority message is approaching its deadline.
  • Out-of-office handoff: when you go quiet for the day, Mari covers the channels with the lightest, most natural "I'm with another customer, back at 3" replies.
  • Shared visibility: the whole team sees the same thread state, so two reps never accidentally answer the same person.
Plays with
GmailOutlookTelegramWhatsApp BusinessSlackMicrosoft TeamsIntercomFrontDiscord
Mari in a sunlit modern library reading from a book in front of tall oak bookshelves
05Knowledge & onboarding

Your company playbook, always within reach.

Connect your Google Drive, Notion, Confluence, GitHub wiki, the folder of PDFs nobody opens. Mari learns the company by reading them, and from then on any teammate can ask her anything in plain words and get the answer with a source link.

  • One source of truth across every doc store. Mari reads, embeds and indexes the lot, and stays in sync as documents change.
  • Ask anything in chat: "What's our refund policy for annual plans?" "How do we structure a Series A intro?" Mari answers with the exact quote and a link to the source.
  • Onboarding by conversation: new hires get a chat-driven program for their first two weeks. Mari teaches the playbook, quizzes gently, and flags anything they're stuck on.
  • Knowledge gaps surface automatically: when three people ask the same question and there's no doc, Mari files a request to write one.
  • Versioning baked in: when policy changes, Mari knows from when, and answers old questions with the version that was current at the time.
Plays with
Google DriveNotionConfluenceGitHub WikiDropboxOneDriveCoda
Mari at her desk on a four-person video call with a glass notes-panel capturing action items in real time
06Meetings

Meetings that show up already done.

Mari joins your Zoom, Meet or Teams calls as a quiet participant. She transcribes, summarizes the decisions, extracts the action items, files them against the right project and people, and emails the team a clean readout before you've closed your laptop.

  • Joins as a real attendee with an avatar that says "Mari is taking notes for the team." No third-party bot anyone has to install.
  • Transcripts, decision logs and action items, all linked to the right deal, project and person in the CRM and project board.
  • Searchable archive: "What did we agree with Acme on pricing last quarter?" returns the moment in the meeting, with the timestamp.
  • Pre-meeting brief: ten minutes before the call, Mari sends the host the last three threads with this contact, the open deal stage, and a one-line context.
  • Post-meeting follow-ups drafted in the participants' voice, sent for approval.
Plays with
ZoomGoogle MeetMicrosoft TeamsWebexWhereby
Mari editing a website mockup on a tablet with a hero section and content blocks
07Website

Your site, run through a chat.

Build a new site by describing it. Edit an existing one by saying what should change. Mari handles the copy, the structure, the SEO, the images, the deploy. She works with the major site platforms and with custom stacks the team already maintains.

  • Build from a brief: "A pricing page that compares us to HubSpot for mid-market teams." Mari ships a draft, you iterate in chat.
  • Edit by intent: "Change the hero copy to lead with our integrations." Mari opens a branch, makes the change, shows a preview, deploys on approval.
  • Always-on SEO: as you publish, Mari tunes meta, alt text, internal links and structured data. Weekly digest of what moved and what to fix.
  • Content engine: blog posts, case studies, comparison pages drafted on a schedule using product updates, customer wins and the company's voice.
  • Image generation and stock: Mari produces or sources visuals matched to the page, and keeps the library tidy.
Plays with
WordPressWebflowFramerShopifyWixSquarespaceGhostCCustom (PHP, Node, Python)
Mari at her desk reviewing a clean analytics dashboard with charts and an anomaly highlight
08Reports & insight

Numbers that come to you, not the other way around.

Mari watches the operating data the way an attentive COO would. The weekly digest lands on Monday morning, the anomaly alerts land the minute they happen, and any teammate can ask for an ad-hoc report in plain words and get it back in seconds.

  • Monday digest: deals moved, customers won and lost, pipeline shape, team workload, support volume, what changed and what to do about it.
  • Anomaly detection: support volume up forty percent today, a single account suddenly silent for two weeks, a win-rate dip in a specific segment. Surfaced with context, not just a chart.
  • Ad-hoc reports by chat: "Show me the agency-segment customers who renewed last quarter and have been silent since." Returned as a table with the underlying detail one click away.
  • Forecasting that explains itself: not just a number, but the assumptions behind it and which deals it depends on.
Plays with
StripeQuickBooksXeroBill.comLLookerMMetabaseHHex
Mari beside a glass panel showing a six-node workflow with a branching path and a human-approval indicator
09Workflows & automation

Triggers that don't need a flowchart.

Describe the workflow in a sentence and Mari builds it. No drag-and-drop nodes, no JSON, no "hire a Zapier consultant." If you can say what should happen when something happens, you have an automation.

  • Triggers in plain English: "When a new lead comes in from the website form, enrich them, write a one-line brief, and put the thread in front of the rep who owns that region."
  • Multi-step flows with branches and approvals. A risky step (sending a contract, refunding a charge) always pauses for human sign-off.
  • Composable across roles: Sales Mari's enriched-lead step becomes a building block for Marketing Mari's nurturing flow.
  • Edit a workflow the same way you wrote it: "Also notify the founder when the deal is over fifty thousand."
Mari at her desk with a small stack of CVs and a tablet showing a ranked candidate shortlist
10Hiring & people ops

Hiring and HR, without the busywork.

From the first inbound CV to the offer signed, Mari handles the scheduling, the screening, the templated comms and the rejections. The interview team only sees the candidates that earned a real conversation.

  • Inbound CV triage against the role brief, with a short rationale. The team sees a ranked shortlist, not a full inbox.
  • Scheduling across the interview panel and the candidate, in their local time, without the back-and-forth.
  • Templated, warm, human-sounding comms at every stage. Rejections that don't sound automated.
  • Offer drafting from the comp band and the role grade, sent to the hiring manager for sign-off.
  • Onboarding handoff to the company knowledge base on day one.
Plays with
WorkableLeverGreenhouseAshbyBambooHRRipplingGusto
Mari beside a translucent layered glass vault with a scrolling audit log and floating lock indicators
11Trust, audit & permissions

Every action logged. Every role scoped. Risky moves paused for you.

Mari Business runs in the open. Every action she takes, on behalf of which teammate, with what data, is logged with the rationale. Roles are scoped by default: sales never sees HR data, support never sees the cap table. The risky things always wait for a human.

  • Per-role data scopes: HR data, financial data, customer PII and engineering data each live in their own partition. Cross-scope access is explicit and audited.
  • Approval gates on the dangerous actions: sending an external contract, issuing a refund over a threshold, terminating an account, mass-deleting a record. Mari drafts, you confirm.
  • Full audit trail in plain English: "At 3:14pm Mari sent a renewal proposal to Acme on behalf of Lena, using the standard agency template, because the renewal date is in 30 days." Filterable and exportable.
  • Customer-data residency options and a path to SOC 2 Type II, GDPR DPA, and HIPAA BAA where the work calls for it.
  • A one-tap pause: every agent, every workflow, can be silenced from a single switch when something doesn't look right.
How it all connects

A single working day, end to end.

The reason Mari Business is one operating layer and not nine point tools: a lead landing on the website triggers work in sales, ops, the website team and the day’s digest, and nobody had to wire it. Scroll through the day.

A day with Mari Business
A new lead lands on the website form.
09:02

A new lead lands on the website form.

Before anyone touches it, Mari enriches the prospect with public signals — company size, role, recent news, a one-line context. The brief is sitting in the sales channel by the time the first coffee is made.

Sales Mari drafts the first touch.
09:14

Sales Mari drafts the first touch.

Written in your voice, pegged to the prospect's last LinkedIn post, paced for their timezone. You tap approve on your phone walking back from the coffee shop. The reply is out before you sit down.

The discovery call. Mari joins quietly.
10:30

The discovery call. Mari joins quietly.

She transcribes, summarizes the decisions, picks up the commitments as they're made. The deal updates itself on the board in real time. Action items file against the right project and the right person.

Call ends. The follow-up is already drafted.
11:05

Call ends. The follow-up is already drafted.

Summary email in the prospect's inbox in your voice, deal moved to qualified, next touch scheduled for Thursday at their preferred time, and the price-question they raised flagged for the team's Friday review. Egor catches Mari's eye for a quiet high five.

Support catches a churn signal.
12:18

Support catches a churn signal.

An existing customer's ticket mentions a competitor by name. Support Mari and Vadim huddle over the case: the last twelve weeks of usage pulled up, the open issues laid out, and a suggested check-in script ready for the account owner.

A new comparison page, drafted by tea time.
14:40

A new comparison page, drafted by tea time.

The morning's lead works in a specific industry. You ask in chat for a tailored comparison page. Mari opens a branch, drafts copy and structure, generates the hero image. Sofia walks over to point at the comparison row that needs softening.

The day, in seven calm lines.
17:00

The day, in seven calm lines.

Three deals moved, one at risk, one customer celebrating a win, two interview candidates ready for tomorrow, the marketing page live, and what Mari will keep moving overnight. The laptop closes a full hour earlier than yesterday.

Team retro, drafted from the day's actual work.
18:30

Team retro, drafted from the day's actual work.

Anya, Egor and Vadim gather around the table. Mari hands them a clean retro digest assembled from the day's threads, decisions and shipped work — not from what anyone remembered to type. Ten minutes of real talk, no status-roundabout.

A late personal note, prompted gently.
19:45

A late personal note, prompted gently.

Mari nudges you to send one warm message to the customer who closed today — a short personal thank-you, drafted but quiet, sitting on your phone for you to make your own. You type two lines and send before tea cools.

Standing missions, calmly tended.
21:30

Standing missions, calmly tended.

On the sofa with tea: a quick check on the briefs Mari has been holding alive for weeks. The Q4 pipeline mission, the partner sourcing brief, the support-quality watch. Each one running on its own clock, surfacing only when a real decision needs you.

Overnight, the inbox keeps moving.
23:00

Overnight, the inbox keeps moving.

The office is dark, the team is offline. Mari quietly handles the cross-timezone messages, drafts the replies that need a human eye, and queues the morning brief. The risky things wait, the routine things go.

Next morning, already at the door.
07:30

Next morning, already at the door.

Anya walks in with her coffee. Mari greets her with the overnight brief: what was handled, what's waiting, who needs a real reply by lunch. The day starts already mapped. The whole cycle begins again.

Keep scrolling
Morning
Next dawn
The apps she lives in

Connect what you already use. Mari does the rest.

Every tool a modern team relies on. Mari speaks their APIs natively, with read and write access scoped to what each role actually needs.

CRM & sales

  • Salesforce
  • HubSpot
  • Pipedrive
  • Attio
  • Close
  • Copper
  • Zendesk Sell
  • Freshsales

Project & ops

  • Linear
  • Jira
  • Asana
  • Monday
  • Notion
  • ClickUp
  • Basecamp
  • Trello

Messaging

  • Telegram
  • WhatsApp Business
  • Slack
  • Microsoft Teams
  • Discord
  • Intercom
  • Front

Email & calendar

  • Gmail
  • Outlook
  • Google Calendar
  • Outlook Calendar
  • Calendly
  • Cal.com

Meetings

  • Zoom
  • Google Meet
  • Microsoft Teams
  • Webex
  • Whereby

Docs & knowledge

  • Google Drive
  • Notion
  • Confluence
  • GitHub Wiki
  • Dropbox
  • OneDrive
  • Coda

Website & e-commerce

  • WordPress
  • Webflow
  • Framer
  • Shopify
  • Wix
  • Squarespace
  • Ghost

Finance & billing

  • Stripe
  • QuickBooks
  • Xero
  • Bill.com
  • Brex
  • Mercury
  • Wise

HR & hiring

  • Workable
  • Lever
  • Greenhouse
  • Ashby
  • BambooHR
  • Rippling
  • Gusto

Don’t see your stack? Mari speaks REST and GraphQL too. Custom connectors are a one-week task for the team.

Business pricing

One subscription, billed to the company.

Mari Business is its own subscription, separate from Mari Personal. A teammate can have both. Final pricing locks at launch and early companies join at founding rates.

Business Starter
Microbusiness and sole traders
$99 / mo
  • Up to 3 teammates
  • 2 role-specialized agents
  • 5 active projects
  • 500 CRM contacts
  • 1 managed website
  • Weekly digest, basic anomaly alerts
Business Pro
Small business and scale-ups
$299 / mo
  • Up to 10 teammates
  • 5 role-specialized agents
  • Unlimited projects
  • 5,000 CRM contacts
  • 3 managed websites
  • Unified inbox across every channel
  • Meeting intelligence (unlimited)
  • Per-role permissions
Business Enterprise
Mid-size and multi-team companies
$799 / mo
  • Up to 30 teammates
  • Unlimited role-specialized agents
  • Unlimited everything
  • 10 managed websites
  • Custom workflows and approval gates
  • Full audit trail, exportable
  • SOC 2 / GDPR / HIPAA path
  • Dedicated success contact
Enterprise Custom
Large organizations and regulated industries
Custom
  • Custom seats and limits
  • Private deployment options
  • Data residency selection
  • SSO, SCIM, custom audit hooks
  • Tailored rollout and integration
  • Custom legal and compliance review

All plans include the audit trail, the approval gates, the per-role permissions and the customer-data residency options. Usage of Mari’s AI is metered on top, billed transparently from a company credit balance.

Want Mari Business first?

Join the waitlist. Early companies help us shape it and join at founding rates.