You Next Assistant: A Cyborg
Forbes|April 25, 2017

About a dozen times over the past two years, grateful business associates of Maran Nelson have sent flowers or chocolates to her executive assistant, Clara, to thank her for her excellent work.

Clare O'Connor
You Next Assistant: A Cyborg

Clara always replies to emails within 15 minutes, even in the middle of the night. She knows just which Palo Alto sushi spot to recommend for a lunch meeting, sending along a calendar invitation complete with travel times. She doesn’t make spelling mistakes. She never forgets to follow up.

Clara can’t enjoy the floral spoils of her tireless admin work, though: She’s a cyborg—part algorithm, part human. She’s the result of two years of heads-down testing and $5 million in funding at San Francisco startup Clara Labs. CEO Nelson, cofounder and CTO Michael Akilian, who are both 25 ( Nelson is a 2016 Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree), and a handful of big-name investors like Salesforce CEO Marc Benioffare convinced she’s going to change the way we work, starting with saving us from the time-sucking horrors of our in-boxes.

For all the machine-learning technology at play behind the scenes, working with Clara Labs’ robot assistants is simple. For $99 to $399 a month, depending on workload and requirements, an executive is assigned a “Clara” with a dedicated email address. You can rename her: Nelson’s first-ever customer, Danielle Morrill of data analytics startup Mattermark, chose Claudia Robertson; Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian, a Clara Labs investor, opted for Max Power after Homer Simpson’s alter ego in a favorite episode of the cartoon.

This story is from the April 25, 2017 edition of Forbes.

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This story is from the April 25, 2017 edition of Forbes.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.