Clawther

Clawther

Turn your OpenClaw agent's chat chaos into a Notion-powered, trackable task board in under 10 minutes

OpenClaw task boardNotion agent workflowAI task automationagent kanban managementparallel agent tasksagent operations dashboardAI workflow orchestrationVA and agent collaborationcontext-preserving task logtask-based agent delegation
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LinkStart Verdict

Clawther is the disciplined choice for founders and AI ops teams who need to turn OpenClaw agents into trackable, parallelizable workflows instead of noisy chatbots. It shines once you cross the line from experiments to day‑to‑day execution. The tradeoff is OpenClaw lock‑in and the overhead of living inside Notion.

Why we love it

  • Turns OpenClaw into a task-based workflow instead of chat-only interaction
  • Parallel task tracking fits automated outreach and multi-client operations
  • Kanban board and logs make agent behaviour auditable for non-technical stakeholders
  • Self-review loops reduce manual QA in recurring automation workflows
  • Fast setup in under 10 minutes with prebuilt Notion templates
  • Fits nicely into existing Notion-centric operating systems for small teams

Things to know

  • Only useful if you already run or plan to adopt OpenClaw
  • Hard dependence on Notion may not suit strict-regulated environments
  • Best value appears at 10+ concurrent tasks; lighter users may not see ROI
  • Lacks native integrations beyond OpenClaw and Notion at this stage

About

Executive Summary: Clawther is a Notion-integrated workflow layer for OpenClaw agents that replaces chat chaos with a structured task board. It is built for founders, operators, and AI automation engineers who want agents to run repeatable workflows, not just answer questions, and to give teams full visibility into what the agent is doing at any moment.

What Clawther is

Clawther is a task-board layer on top of your OpenClaw agent that syncs every task, status, timestamp, and note into a Notion database instead of leaving work buried in chat logs. You get a Kanban-style 'To Do / In Progress / Review / Done' board, prebuilt templates, and opinionated prompts so the agent behaves more like a reliable teammate than a noisy chatbot.

How it automates real work

Instead of hand-issuing prompts and scrolling back through conversations, you create or auto-generate tasks on the board and let the OpenClaw agent execute, update status, and self-review. The agent can run multiple tasks in parallel, re-queue work if validation criteria fail, and keep an auditable history of browser actions and compute runs, which turns ad-hoc AI usage into a lightweight, automated operating system for your business.

Technical specifics and limits

Clawther runs on top of the OpenClaw automation framework and uses Notion's database API to store task entities, metadata, and activity logs. Setup typically takes under 10 minutes with the bundled Notion template and step-by-step installer, and the same workspace can be shared across solo founders, VA teams, and small ops squads. Today it is optimized specifically for OpenClaw agents, so teams using other agent frameworks will need to keep those environments separate.

Pricing and value

Clawther offers a Paid Only plan, with paid tiers starting at $29 per month for a single OpenClaw agent and one Notion workspace. It is less expensive than average for this category if you compare it to buying a separate project management tool, a generic AI agent dashboard, and then gluing them together with custom automation. The 7‑day money‑back guarantee reduces adoption risk for teams validating whether a board-based agent workflow actually sticks.

Best-fit teams and use cases

Clawther is strongest for AI power users who already run OpenClaw in production-like environments: startup founders delegating recurring growth and ops tasks, operators coordinating VAs, and automation engineers wiring complex multi-step workflows. If you still treat AI as an occasional assistant, it may feel like overkill—but once you track 10+ concurrent agent tasks, the switch from chat to task board becomes hard to give up.

Key Features

  • Connect OpenClaw to a Notion task board to centralize every agent task and status
  • Use a prebuilt Kanban template to visualize To Do, In Progress, Review, and Done
  • Generate tasks from chat so agents work from cards instead of ad-hoc prompts
  • Run multiple OpenClaw tasks in parallel with clear ownership and timestamps
  • Automate self-review loops using validation criteria before marking tasks done
  • Share a single board across founders, VAs, and operators for aligned execution
  • Reduce context loss by storing outputs, notes, and links in persistent Notion records
  • Follow a step-by-step installer to get from zero to live board in under 10 minutes
  • Use safety controls to scope which Notion pages and accounts the agent can touch
  • Leverage community examples and prompt templates to launch production workflows faster

Product Comparison

Comparison: Clawther vs Generic Notion + Raw OpenClaw
DimensionClawtherNotion Template + OpenClaw
Core use caseTask-board-driven automation for OpenClaw agents with parallel tasks and auditsManual tracking of agent work with ad-hoc pages and checklists
Differentiated killer featureIntegrated self-review and status updates wired directly into the OpenClaw agentNo native automation layer; users must update status and QA by hand
Performance and limitsUnder-10-minute setup, opinionated prompts, and Kanban tuned for automationUnlimited flexibility, but every workflow and field must be designed from scratch
Ecosystem and onboardingBuilt specifically for OpenClaw + Notion, with docs and community use casesGeneric stack; guidance comes from templates, not a focused agent workflow product
ROI and total costHigher ROI once you run 10+ concurrent agent tasks and share boards across a teamLower upfront cost, but you pay in custom setup, maintenance, and training time
Main limitationOpenClaw-only and Notion-dependent, less fit for heterogeneous tool stacksNo vendor support for agent workflows; scaling quality depends on in-house process design

Frequently Asked Questions

The core difference is automation depth. While a generic Notion template only tracks tasks manually, Clawther wires your OpenClaw agent into a live board with parallel tasks, self-review loops, and opinionated prompts, so the board drives automation instead of passively recording it.

The main complaints are chat chaos and lost context. Teams report that once an OpenClaw agent handles more than a handful of tasks, chat threads hide what is queued, in progress, or done, and multiple people cannot share a reliable view of the agent's workload or history.

No, it is paid-only. Prices start around $29 per month for one OpenClaw agent and a single Notion workspace, and higher tiers focus on more agents, more workspaces, and team collaboration, so the main limit is how many agents and boards you need to run in parallel.

Clawther sits between your OpenClaw agent and Notion. You connect the agent, install the prebuilt Notion database, and then treat task cards as the system of record, using OpenClaw for execution and the board for orchestration, collaboration, and long-term storage of outcomes.

Yes, within the limits of Notion and OpenClaw. You scope which Notion pages and external accounts the agent can access, keep high-risk credentials outside the agent's reach, and use the task board as an explicit audit trail for what the agent touched and when.

Yes, that is where it shines. While plain OpenClaw can run tasks, Clawther lets you segment boards by client, track parallel campaigns, and give human VAs and account managers a shared view of what the agent is doing for each account at any time.

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