An employee uses Asana on a laptop computer in a home office.
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Asana Rolling Out AI Studio

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How can the tool help teams manage work?

The work management platform Asana introducing a tool for users to add AI agents to their workflows. 

Asana is rolling out AI Studio, a no-code builder to allow teams to design and deploy AI agents, according to the company this week.

Asana’s AI agents are intended to "work directly with the team, like a teammate."

The AI agents are designed to take on busywork, project coordination and orchestrate work across workflows, including intake, planning, execution and reporting.

The AI-powered workflows, or "smart" workflows, rely on Asana’s Work Graph, which captures context and historical relationships between work inside an organization.

See more: Will Agentforce Be the Most Significant Innovation in Salesforce's History?

During the tool's beta period, teams used AI Studio for uses cases in marketing, operations, IT and HR. The financial services firm Morningstar is one the early users of AI Studio.

Employees spend 53% of their time on "low-value busywork," and 21% of employees believe teams across their organization collaborate effectively, according to Asana's 2024 "State of Work Innovation" report.

"This level of ease and accessibility to building agents is a big step forward for any company wanting to improve the quality of their work while empowering teams to move faster,” said Dustin Moskovitz, co-founder and CEO, Asana.
 
Asana opened early access to AI Studio for Enterprise and Enterprise+ tiers, and access under Advanced annual tiers is "coming soon."

See more: Can Agentic AI Revolutionize CX and EX?

About the Author
Chris Ehrlich

Chris Ehrlich is the former editor in chief and a co-founder of VKTR. He's an award-winning journalist with over 20 years in content, covering AI, business and B2B technologies. His versatile reporting has appeared in over 20 media outlets. He's an author and holds a B.A. in English and political science from Denison University. Connect with Chris Ehrlich:

Main image: By Asana.
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