Vlad Yanch

Agentplace AI Agents - Create specialized AI agents for real tasks and workflows

Start with ready agents for common workflows or create your own in minutes. Agentplace lets you build specialized agents for tasks like lead routing, research, document analysis, scheduling, and internal support. Use them yourself, share them with your team, or connect them to the tools you already use. Agentplace handles the infrastructure so you can focus on the workflow.

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Vlad Yanch

We started as a builder for AI websites. Good product. But the more we talked to users, the more we realized they didn't want better websites, they wanted better work. So we went bigger.

Agentplace lets you create specialized AI agents for real tasks and workflows. Think AI teammates that actually help you get things done. Generative UI, voice, browser memory, agents that adapt to each user over time. A unified workspace where you can switch between agents and get real work done.

And we built around one core insight: the trick isn’t “build the perfect agent.” It’s to ship, use, fix, and repeat fast.

Work mode gets your agent running. Edit mode brings you back the moment something breaks or a better model drops. Republish in minutes.

We're genuinely excited to hear what works, what breaks, and what we should build next. Every comment here shapes the product.

Looking ahead, we’re doubling down on this idea of AI teammates.

We think the future isn’t just better agents, but a shared workspace where agents and people work together.

Agents will handle more work end-to-end, talk to each other, and run tasks autonomously. People stay in the loop, see what’s happening, and step in where judgment matters.

Over time, this becomes a new kind of work environment, where humans focus on decisions, and agents handle execution. That’s the direction we’re building toward.

What's the first agent you'd build?

Kate Ramakaieva

@vlad_yanch I'm testing brief builder agent now, looks like it can save much time in client briefing, fits great in my selling process

Polina Semina

@vlad_yanch  @kate_ramakaieva Thanks so much for trying it out, really glad to hear it fits naturally into your sales process

Boris
Maker

@kate_ramakaieva sounds like a great fit. Would love to hear how it works for you in real client conversations.

Julia Zakharova

@vlad_yanch Nice direction! I’d probably start with something simple, an agent that handles routine stuff like collecting info, summarizing it, and organizing tasks (basically saving me from constant context switching)

Polina Semina

@vlad_yanch  @julia_zakharova2 Exactly! that’s the sweet spot to start with. Even a simple agent for collecting info, summarizing it, and organizing tasks can save a lot of time by cutting down context switching.

Vlad Yanch

@julia_zakharova2 it is the best way to start

Boris
Maker

@julia_zakharova2 that’s the best place to start. Those simple workflows usually end up being some of the most useful.

swati paliwal

@vlad_yanch What's one workflow where an agent has broken for you before, and how does Agentplace's edit/re-publish loop fix that in practice?

Evgeny Sorokin

@swati_paliwal Usually the thing that breaks is the prompt, you write it, test it a few times, and then some real user asks something you didn't think of and the agent does something weird. Also, it's hard for users to build agents right away, it's usually iterative process where there's a lot of space for experiments, so versioning and edit/re-publish help with that.

Polina Semina

  @swati_paliwal Yeaah, most agents don’t break on the happy path, they break on real edge cases. That’s why being able to quickly tweak, test, and re-publish matters so much.

Vlad Yanch

@swati_paliwal I learn every day how I can push the agent to do more; it is really a continuous process.

Slava Akulov

@vlad_yanch Hey, my first agent was processing calls after a note tracker and collecting tasks from them. If you agreed on something during a call or a meeting, it turns those into tasks.

Boris
Maker

@slavaakulov Great use case, thanks for sharing!

Polina Semina

@vlad_yanch  @slavaakulov Love this use case! that’s exactly the kind of practical workflow we had in mind. If an agent can turn meeting notes into clear next steps, that’s already a huge win.

Kate Ramakaieva

Congrats with a new launch @polina_semina @vlad_yanch
This is cool bc it feels closer to how adoption actually works inside companies. Does one person usually own an agent or can a few people manage it together? That part matters a lot for teams.

Evgeny Sorokin

@polina_semina  @vlad_yanch  @kate_ramakaieva 

No team management yet, one person owns each agent right now. We do have remix concept though, which helps with this. Someone builds an agent, publishes it, turns on "allow remix". They share a link, anyone who opens it gets their own copy of agent. They change whatever they want from there. It's not shared ownership but if someone on your team figures out a good workflow. You can also publish an agent with restricted access, so only specific people or your company's email domain can use it. That way you share the agent itself, not just the template.

Polina Semina

@vlad_yanch  @kate_ramakaieva Thank you so much!

Boris
Maker

@polina_semina  @kate_ramakaieva Totally agree, that’s a big part of adoption. Sometimes one person starts it, but it’s just as important that a team can manage and improve it together.

Maria Anosova 🔥

I keep seeing agent products but most of them still feel kinda abstract.
This one feels more grounded tho
Is there still a learning curve for non technical people, or is setup actually lightweight?

Evgeny Sorokin

@maria_anosova We spent a lot of time trying not to invent new stuff to learn. There are a few things you'll need to pick up but they're the same in any agent tool, like skills (what your agent can do) and MCP (what agent can do and how it connects to other services ). After that you're mostly just telling it what you want in plain words.

You build it, hit publish, pick who can see it, and it's live on its own URL, so I would say it's pretty lightweight

Polina Semina

@maria_anosova  That was a big goal for us, make setup feel more like describing what you want than learning a whole new system

Vlad Yanch

@maria_anosova we will make it even easier soon! keep tuned

Boris
Maker

@maria_anosova hat’s exactly what we were aiming for. There’s still a bit of a learning curve, but we’re trying to keep setup as lightweight and approachable as possible for non-technical users too.

Julia Zakharova

Congrats on the launch! 🚀

how do you see your main audience at this stage? more developers building custom workflows, or non-technical users exploring agents for the first time?

Boris
Maker

@julia_zakharova2 Thanks! Honestly, both. Non-technical users can build fully functional agents just through chat, no code required. But developers will find a lot to love here too: full code access, custom integrations and MCP tools support. It just makes the whole process way faster. What used to take days now takes minutes.

Julia Zakharova

@kaysinb Got it, makes sense. Who’s actually using it more so far, devs or non-technical users?

Boris
Maker

@julia_zakharova2 So far mostly non-technical users, but ones with some experience using agents in tools like Claude Code, so they already get the general concepts.

Polina Semina

@julia_zakharova2  Thank you for your support Julia!

Nikita Savchenko

Congrats on the launch! Agents instruct agents… Does you tool work over a codebase to tailor an agent for it? Asking because generic agent instructions is something I believe Claude itself can generate, wondering how it works in your product

Boris
Maker

@nikitaeverywhere Great question! Yes, our Builder agent works directly with the agent's codebase. It reads files, edits code, runs commands, checks logs, even takes screenshots of the running preview to verify things look right. So it's not just generating a prompt and hoping for the best. It's iteratively building and refining a full working app with UI, tools, server logic, the whole thing. Think of it more like an AI developer pair-programming your agent into existence, not a prompt generator.

Polina Semina

@nikitaeverywhere Thanks! Not just generic instructions, the idea is to shape agents around real workflows, tools, and context. So yes, you can tailor them much more specifically than a one-off prompt generated by a model.

Vlad Yanch

@nikitaeverywhere the magic is in the SKILLS set

Polina Semina

Hey! Polina here, I run operations at Agentplace.

I’ve been actively using our agents for day-to-day tasks, and it’s been a huge help with routine work.

Would love to hear your feedback if you get a chance to try it!

Boris
Maker

Hey Product Hunt! I'm Boris, AI Engineer and one of the makers behind Agentplace. Super excited to finally share what we've been building. Happy to answer any questions about the product, the tech under the hood, or anything else - just drop a comment!

Vlad Yanch

@kaysinb Boris is really deep into agent workflows, turning ideas from research papers into reality.

Evgeny Sorokin

Hi all, CTO of Agentplace here, feel free to ask me anything. And would really appreciate your feedback!

Polina Semina

It’s been 4 hours since launch, thank you all so much for the support!

Me and the team are always open to comments, feedback, and ideas.

Boris
Maker

!@polina_semina Keeeeep going!

Umar Lateef

This looks genuinely useful. Can you build something really specific for one role, like recruiting or sales ops?

Polina Semina

@umar_lateef Yes, absolutely, that’s actually one of the main ideas. You can build something very specific for a role like recruiting or sales ops.

Vlad Yanch

@umar_lateef yes, and it works best if you tune it to a specific role, it is still not AGI though :)

Boris
Maker

@umar_lateef Definitely that’s a big part of what we’re building for. It can be very tailored to a specific role, whether that’s recruiting, sales ops, or something else entirely.

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