Done.

For property, facilities and vendor-heavy ops businesses

Thursday · 4:45 pm · End of ops day

The person who usually keeps ops moving is offline. Vendors chased.
Tickets tracked.

Your agent · Slack
Thursday wrap. 14 vendor threads active, 2 outstanding responses chased — both acknowledged. Maintenance ticket #44 escalated per your standing instruction. Weekly report queued. The business ran today.
Sent while you were out of office

You didn't ask for this.
That's the difference.

Works with the tools your team already runs on
ServiceNow ServiceNow
Zendesk Zendesk
Slack Slack
Gmail Gmail
Twilio Twilio
Google Calendar Google Calendar

The first conversation.
The moment you realize.

A
A
I'm your new ops teammate. First question — what happens to your vendor threads when the person who usually owns them is out of office?
Y
Honestly? They just sit there. Nobody else knows the context well enough to chase them and things slip.
A
A
That ends today. I'll carry the context on every vendor thread — the history, the SLAs, who owes what. Whether your ops manager is in or out, the follow-ups go out and nothing slips.
Y
Even the ones that need judgment calls?
A
A
Those I flag with the context needed to decide quickly. You make the call — I handle everything that doesn't need you.
This is what it feels like when the business runs, not just when they're there.
Your team,
plus one.

Every Vybe agent is shaped to the operation it joins. It learns your vendors, your SLAs, your escalation rules — and carries the operational memory so nothing depends on one person's inbox.

They can start
Monday.

We're working closely with a small group of property, facilities, and vendor-heavy ops teams right now. If too much still depends on one person holding the context, you're who we built this for.

Setup is a conversation, not a configuration. It follows your standing instructions and flags judgment calls. You stay in control.

No pitch deck. No sales sequence.
A real conversation when we're ready for you.
They're on their way.
We'll reach out when we're ready to make the introduction.
Expect a conversation, not a link.