#MyBotDoesThat: 7 Tasks the Kilo Team Retired From Forever
Plus, win $750 in prizes by retiring from something yourself
A lot of people are still waiting for AI to deliver on the futurist promise of freeing us from the boring, tedious, repetitive tasks that nobody wants to do. Scheduling, monitoring, status updates. The kind of low-stakes stuff that somehow still eats 30 minutes of your day because you have to context-switch into it, do the thing, and context-switch back out.
The thing is, that future is already here. Most people just haven’t noticed yet. KiloClaw is an always-on personal AI agent that connects to your other platforms, runs in the background, and handles the tasks you keep telling yourself you’ll “get to later.”
People are using Claws for everything from meal prep to cattle farming, and we wanted to share what that actually looks like in practice before we tell you about the challenge we’re running (and the prizes attached to it).
Challenge TL;DR: Retire from a mundane task by automating it with KiloClaw, film a 30-second video of it, post it on social media with #MyBotDoesThat, and nominate 3 people to do the same. You need to mention KiloClaw by name and show part of your dashboard workflow. First place gets $500 in Kilo credits, a $250 Amazon gift card, and 2 free months of hosting.
7 Automations from the Kilo Team
Evgeny: Weekly Meal Prep
Evgeny, Engineer at Kilo, has been running a meal prep workflow through his Claw for the past couple weeks. Every Friday evening it sends him a reminder and they plan the next week’s meals together, after which it pushes all the groceries into a single Todoist list and creates a separate list for each day’s dishes with step-by-step prep instructions.
He batch cooks on the weekend, freezes everything, and each evening the Claw tells him what to pull out of the freezer for the next day. The loop of plan, shop, prep, freeze, defrost, eat is all coordinated through a single bot that he set up once.
Ligia: Running a Cattle Farm from 10,700 km Away
Ligia, Kilo Support Engineer, manages a cattle operation in Brazil while living in The Netherlands. She uses a health monitoring tool that tracks whether each cow is healthy, lactating, or dry. The tool throws off a constant stream of live updates, most of which are just noise, so she pipes all of them into her Claw. If a health issue persists for more than 24 hours, the Claw adds it to her to-do list and drafts a message to her vet over email or Telegram.
The Claw also has access to the system that monitors milk production and collection, which means she can check output volumes and cash flow without logging into anything. She’s doing all of this from over 10,000 kilometers away from the actual farm, using her Claw as the single interface for everything that’s happening on the ground.
Scott: Meeting Prep He Never Has to Think About
Scott, Co-Founder and CEO of Kilo, gave his Claw access to its own Google account and connected it to his calendar. Thirty minutes before any meeting, the Claw reviews the attendee list and any attached documents, cross-references everything with his CRM, and sends him a briefing of exactly what he needs to know about 10 minutes before the meeting starts. He doesn’t scramble to remember who someone is or what the last conversation was about anymore, because the bot already did that work for him.
Emilie: Checking the Weather
Emilie, Co-Founder and VP of Engineering at Kilo, took about 15 minutes to set up a daily weather briefing as part of her morning update. Instead of opening a weather app, making sure it’s pulling the right location, and scrolling past hourly forecasts she doesn’t care about, she just gets the relevant info sent to her each morning. It’s one of those automations that sounds almost too simple to bother with, but once it’s running you realize how many small steps you were doing manually every single day.
Brian: Flight Info Without the Email Dig
Brian, DevRel at Kilo, forwarded his personal Gmail and Google Calendar to his Claw’s own Google account, so it could scan for flight information whenever it comes in. Now, whenever he has a flight coming up, the Claw pulls together a briefing with the gate number, flight number, departure time, and seat number. The whole routine of opening your email at the airport, searching “confirmation,” scrolling past three marketing emails from the airline, and finally finding the actual itinerary is just gone. The bot already read it and told him what he needs.
Brendan: Spinning Up Benchmarks
Brendan, DevRel at Kilo, retired from dialing into servers to spin up new benchmarks for PinchBench, the benchmark that tests how models perform in OpenClaw . That was it for him. He set up the Claw, pointed it at the workflow, and stopped thinking about it. Not every retirement needs to be elaborate; sometimes the best automation is the one where you just never do the thing again and forget it was ever manual.
Ari: Getting around NYC
Ari retired from using multiple transit apps to get around NYC. He was tired of apps that don’t sync correctly with his calendar, suggest routes that aren’t actually great, and ignore some of the best options for getting around the city like ferries. So he deleted all of them and replaced the whole stack with his Kilo Claw bot. One interface that knows his schedule, knows his options, and doesn’t try to upsell him on a premium subscription to see the fastest route.
The #MyBotDoesThat Challenge
We’re running a challenge where you do the same thing these folks did: retire from a task by offloading it to KiloClaw, film it, and post it. The best videos win prizes.
🥇 1st Place: $500 in Kilo credits + $250 Amazon gift card + 2 free months of hosting
🥈 2nd Place: $250 in Kilo credits + 2 free months of hosting
🥉 3rd Place: $150 in Kilo credits + 2 free months of hosting
How to Enter
Do the task one last time and make it dramatic.
Say the line: “I’m [name], and I’m retiring from [task] permanently. My KiloClaw bot handles that now.”
Show your workflow. Flash your KiloClaw dashboard on screen, screenshare it, or walk through the prompt you gave your bot. We need to see some part of your KiloClaw setup.
Nominate 3 people by name. “I nominate [name], [name], and [name]. What are YOU retiring from?”
Keep it around 30 seconds and post it on any social media platform, with #MyBotDoesThat. Tag your nominees in the caption and call them out in the video.
Drop your link here:
To be eligible, you need to mention KiloClaw by name and show some part of your workflow in the KiloClaw dashboard. Post it on TikTok, X, LinkedIn, Instagram, YouTube Shorts, wherever you want!
The contest closes next Friday, April 24th, at 11:59 pm PDT.
Need Inspiration?
We have a massive recipe book of KiloClaw use cases here:
The best entries won’t be about impressive automations. They’ll be about relatable ones, the kind where everyone watching thinks “wait, I could automate that too.” The nomination chain handles distribution and the relatability handles the rest.
What are you retiring from?








