Reference guides for the productivity apps an AI agent can work with: every endpoint, the permission each one needs, and how to give agents safe, governed access.
The Aha API is how an app or AI agent works with an Aha account: listing and creating features, capturing ideas from customer feedback, organizing initiatives and releases, and updating goals and to-dos.
The Airtable API is how an app or AI agent works with an Airtable base: listing and creating records, updating cell values, reading or editing a base's tables and fields, and leaving comments on a record.
The Asana API is how an app or AI agent works with an Asana workspace: creating and searching tasks, organizing them into projects and sections, posting comments as stories, and reading the people and teams in a workspace.
The Basecamp API is how an app or AI agent works with a Basecamp account: listing and creating projects, adding and completing to-dos, posting messages and documents, and sending lines into Campfire chats.
The Canny API is how an app or AI agent works with a Canny feedback portal: listing and creating posts, changing a post's status, casting and removing votes, and reading or leaving comments.
The ClickUp API is how an app or AI agent works with a ClickUp workspace: reading and creating tasks, organizing them into lists, folders, and spaces, posting comments, tracking time, and updating goals.
The Coda API is how an app or AI agent works with a Coda doc: listing tables and reading rows, inserting and updating rows, creating and editing pages, and triggering an automation.
The Confluence API is how an app or AI agent works with a Confluence workspace: reading and creating pages, organizing them into spaces, posting blog posts, and adding comments.
The Figma API is how an app or AI agent works with a Figma workspace: reading a file's design and nodes, rendering nodes as images, posting and reading comments, and listing the projects, components, and styles a team has published.
The Fireflies API is how an app or AI agent works with a Fireflies workspace: reading a meeting transcript with its sentences and summary, listing the people on a team, uploading audio to transcribe, or clipping a moment into a soundbite.
The Google Sheets API is how an app or AI agent works with a Google spreadsheet: reading cell values, appending rows, updating a range, or changing formatting and structure.
The Guru API is how an app or AI agent works with a Guru workspace: searching cards of verified knowledge, creating and updating a card, verifying a card so the team can trust it, and organizing cards into folders and collections.
The Jira API is how an app or AI agent works with a Jira site: reading and creating issues, moving them through their workflow with transitions, searching with the Jira Query Language, and posting comments.
The Miro API is how an app or AI agent works with a Miro account: reading boards, adding sticky notes and shapes to a board, connecting two items with a line, and sharing a board with people.
The monday.com API is how an app or AI agent works with a monday account: reading boards and items, creating items, changing column values, posting updates, and managing groups and workspaces.
The Notion API is how an app or AI agent works with a Notion workspace: reading and writing pages, querying database rows, editing the content blocks on a page, adding comments, and uploading files.
The Productboard API is how an app or AI agent works with a Productboard workspace: capturing customer feedback as notes, creating and updating features in the product hierarchy, reading products and components, and tracking objectives.
The Shortcut API is how an app or AI agent works with a Shortcut workspace: reading and searching stories, moving them through a workflow, filing and updating epics, planning iterations, and posting comments.
The Smartsheet API is how an app or AI agent works with a Smartsheet account: reading and updating sheets, adding and changing rows, building reports and dashboards, and organizing work into workspaces.
The Teamwork API is how an app or AI agent works with a Teamwork account: creating and completing tasks, organizing them into task lists and projects, setting milestones, and logging time.
The Todoist API is how an app or AI agent works with a Todoist account: adding a task, completing one, organizing tasks into projects and sections, and tagging them with labels.
The Trello API is how an app or AI agent works with a Trello workspace: reading the boards, lists, and cards a user can see, creating and moving cards, commenting, and watching for changes.
The Wrike API is how an app or AI agent works with a Wrike account: searching and creating tasks, building folders and projects, posting comments, logging time, and reading the people and workflows behind the work.
Bollard AI sits between a team's AI agents and the apps it runs on. Grant each agent exactly the access it needs, read or write, app by app, and every call is checked and logged.