Project management.
Track work on a project’s board — and, because Clearly is agent-native, let a connected agent run it for you: open cards for the plan, then move them as work lands. In Clearly a card is a ticket — one board model, so the fullscreen board, the conversation Tasks tab, and your agent all see the same cards. On by default.
Run it from an agent
A card is a ticket, so the agent manages tickets over MCP — the same cards you see on the board.
clearly_ticket_create— Open a card (ticket) on the project board — title, status, priority, assignee, due date, tags. Priority sets a response-due SLA; the assignee is notified.clearly_ticket_update— Move a card (set its status) or edit it — priority, assignee, due date, tags.clearly_tickets_list— List a project’s cards, optionally filtered by status.
clearly_board_item_create, clearly_board_item_move and clearly_boards_list still work as board-friendly aliases — they target the same tickets, so board words like “backlog”/“done” are accepted and mapped to ticket statuses.
Typical loop: ask your agent to “plan the launch and open a card for each task,” then “move the design card to In progress” as you go. Because these tools sit next to the company brain, the agent can plan from what it already knows. Connect an agent first: Quickstart.
The board UI
One board, two places to open it — both render the same tickets. On by default.
Open the board
From a project, open its Board — the fullscreen kanban of the project’s cards, in columns for the status workflow (Open → In progress → Waiting → Resolved → Closed). Add a card with + Add item; drag it between columns to change its status. Filter by type, priority, tag or assignee, group into swimlanes, or switch to the backlog. The columns are the ticket workflow, so they’re fixed — not a per-board editable set.
Also in the conversation
Inside a composition, the Tasks tab shows the same project board — the same tickets — so a card you open with the agent shows up in both places. A card is a ticket: a durable work item with a status, priority, assignee, due date, and labels.
Schedule work
Pair the board with the calendar so a task can wake the agent.
Work can be scheduled — put it on the calendar and the agent wakes when it’s due, so a task triggers work rather than just sitting in a column. This pairs with the agent’s self-prompting (see scheduled wakes in the MCP docs).