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Autonomous agents.

Autonomous agents work alongside your marketing and content teams, building and refining your site around the clock. You decide when they ship on their own and when they stop to ask.

What they deliver

Your website improves while you sleep.

Set the goals once and your agents handle the rest, day and night. High-performing websites, on autopilot.

Pages that ship themselves

New entries, fresh copy, and updated assets land on your site without a single ticket.

Always improving

Your site stays self-updating: agents watch performance and refine your pages so results climb week over week.

Work that happens overnight

Wake up to finished runs. Your agents do their best work while you are offline.

More hands, same headcount

Every agent adds capacity to your marketing and content teams instantly.

Defined schedules

They run on a clock.
They never stop.

Daily, weekly, or the moment you publish. Set a cadence per agent and they start on time, every time, with no one to remind them.

SEO agentDaily, 6:00

Last run 2 hours ago

Content agentWeekly, Monday

Running now

Translation agentOn publish

Waiting for the next post

You stay in control

Fully autonomous, or ask first. You choose.

Decide what your agents can ship on their own, and what has to stop for your approval.

Ship on their own

Low-risk updates merge automatically the moment they are ready. No waiting on you.

Content updatesAuto-merge
Asset optimizationAuto-merge
Copy fixesAuto-merge

Stop and ask

Bigger calls pause for a human. The agent reaches out before it acts.

New collectionsAsks you
Schema changesAsks you
DeletionsAsks you

Change the rules any time, per agent. Loosen the reins as you build trust.

The Inbox

Where your agents come to you.

One place for every update and every question your agents have. Answer in a click, or type your own reply.

No reply within the deadline you set, say 72 hours? The agent proceeds with its best guess. You are never the bottleneck.

Your studiomainInvitePublish
Content agentOwned by Sarah Chen4m agoArchive

Which collection should the new entry belong to?

I drafted "How autonomous agents fit a content calendar" and need to know where it belongs before it ships.

Choose a collection

No reply within 72 hours? The agent proceeds with its best guess. You are never the bottleneck.

One place for everything

Updates, questions, and finished runs from every agent, side by side.

Answer in one click

Proposed choices let you keep work moving without writing a word.

Never blocked

Set a deadline. If you are away, the agent moves forward on its own.

Content agentin Slackjust now

I drafted 3 changelog entries. Approve in the Inbox?

SEO agentin GitHubjust now

@sarah I opened #482 with the meta description fixes.

Fimoin Microsoft Teamsjust now

SEO agent finished its weekly run. 12 fixes ready for review.

Translation agentin Linearjust now

Moved FIM-204 to In Review. 6 locales translated.

Where you work

They ping you where you already are.

No extra tab to babysit. When an agent needs you, it sends a DM or drops a comment like a teammate would, right inside the tools your team lives in.

Every agent has an owner, so each question lands with the right person, never a shared queue.

More on the way
FAQ

Questions about autonomous agents.

A website that improves itself on a schedule. AI agents refresh content, fix SEO issues, translate pages, and ship the changes without waiting for a sprint. On Fimo every change lands as real code in your repo, so the site updates itself and your team keeps full control.
Yes, within limits you set. Each agent runs on its own schedule, does the job you briefed, and ships the result. Per agent, you choose between full autonomy and ask-first mode, so routine work merges on its own while big changes wait for a human.
They come to you, in the tools you already use. Agents send their proposals to Slack, Teams, GitHub, or Linear, and you approve, edit, or reject from there. Anything you gated never ships without your sign-off.
Content refreshes, SEO upkeep, translations, image alt text, link checks, and seasonal updates are the usual ones. Any recurring job you can describe in a brief can run as an agent, and you can run as many agents as you need.
No. They take the recurring maintenance off your team so the humans can focus on strategy, campaigns, and the calls that matter. Your team sets the goals and reviews what ships; the agents do the upkeep.
Keep exploring

Where to next.

Start building.

Join 2,000+ teams shipping autonomous websites with Fimo.