Resources.
Documentation, architecture references, integration guides, and deployment notes for OneOrg.
The OneOrg tour
A guided walkthrough of OneOrg. Workspace, context hub, AI-native surfaces, communications, governance. About six minutes.
Project time and team time analytics
OneOrg gives managers and team leads visibility into how time is spent across a project, while keeping personal entries specific and review-ready.
Project dashboards and AI widgets
Project dashboards give you a centralized view of your project's metrics, tasks, and activity. You can add and arrange widgets like charts, tables, and AI-generated insights, and use the AI widget designer to create new widgets from a simple description.
Notification preferences and alert management
OneOrg lets each user control which updates reach them and through which channels, while admins configure the underlying provider and basic policies.
Marketing campaigns and audiences
OneOrg provides an integrated system for sending email campaigns to defined audiences, managing your contact list, reusing content through templates, and keeping send behavior clean with a suppression list.
Global agents for organization-wide AI
Global agents let you create AI agents once at the organization level and make them available across all projects. They are ideal for shared roles like code review, security auditing, or onboarding guidance where you want consistent behavior everywhere.
Extensions and plugins for OneOrg
OneOrg uses extensions to add new capabilities to a workspace, such as extra settings panels, widgets, or specialized workflows, without changing core product behavior.
Calendar events and project scheduling
OneOrg includes a built-in calendar for organizing meetings, milestones, and deadlines across your workspace. You can create events, invite teammates, and see task due dates alongside your scheduled time in month, week, and day views.
AI cost intelligence and analytics
OneOrg helps you see where AI spending is going, who is driving it, and whether your usage is moving in a healthy direction, so you can steer behavior instead of reacting to surprise bills.
Activity logs for project and organization
OneOrg keeps a searchable record of what happened in your organization and in each project, so you can review actions, spot unusual patterns, and understand usage across tools and people.
Slide decks and AI-assisted presentations
OneOrg slide decks work best when teams use templates or AI to start faster, then treat the editor as the review boundary before saving, exporting, or presenting.
Project workspaces in OneOrg
OneOrg projects work best when each project has a clear operating boundary: the right members, channels, dashboard, instructions, skills, agents, labels, and time views for one body of work.
Project skills and global skills
OneOrg skills work best when teams use them for repeatable procedures, keep project-specific rules local, and reserve global skills for organization-wide practices.
Project labels for task organization
OneOrg labels are most useful when teams keep them small, named after shared vocabulary, and reviewed as part of project cleanup.
Project instructions for AI context
OneOrg project instructions are most valuable when they capture durable operating context: how the project works, what standards matter, and what AI assistants should not forget.
Project channels and team messaging
OneOrg channels work best when teams use them as durable decision spaces: name them by topic, choose the right audience, and keep project discussion searchable.
Personal time tracking in OneOrg
OneOrg time tracking works best when users log specific project or task context as the work happens, then use exports and project views for review.
Invite and manage organization members
OneOrg member management works best when admins treat every invite as an access decision: add the person, assign the right role, then review whether that access still matches their responsibility.
Connected accounts for personal integrations
OneOrg connected accounts work best when users treat them as personal authorization: connect only what they need, reconnect expired access, and keep organization settings separate.
Coding agent design workflows
OneOrg helps users turn rough ideas into configured agents and dashboard widgets through guided AI design flows, then asks them to review and save the result before it becomes part of a project or dashboard.
Webhook delivery and event triggers
OneOrg lets admins create outbound webhooks that send selected workspace events to external systems, with signing, test delivery, retries, and delivery history built into the configuration flow.
Organization roles and permissions
OneOrg uses system roles and custom roles to control what members can manage, which tools they can access, and which organization settings they can change.
Configure MCP servers in OneOrg
OneOrg lets admins add MCP servers as governed tool sources, then control which roles and users can connect to those servers and use their tools.
External provider integrations
OneOrg lets admins connect external tools so users can bring provider data into dashboards, agents, widgets, and workflows without configuring each feature separately.
Huddles for voice and video collaboration
OneOrg huddles give teams a fast voice or video room inside the workspace, so live discussion can stay connected to the project, channel, and follow-up work around it.
Email notifications in OneOrg
OneOrg lets users receive relevant workspace updates through in-app and email notifications, while admins configure the provider and users control their notification preferences.
Budgets and model policies
OneOrg lets admins choose which AI providers and models power each system capability, then use budget and usage views to keep model behavior governed at the organization level.
Automations and workflow triggers
OneOrg lets admins create rules that listen for workspace events or schedules, check optional conditions, and run configured actions such as notifications, channel messages, or webhook calls.
API keys for provider access
OneOrg lets admins add and manage provider API keys in organization settings while showing only safe key hints back to users.