Pattern Automation

Autonomous company operating system — Neuro OS

Build an AI-native company with a team of AI agents

Specialized roles—strategy, product, finance, marketing, engineering, and support—on Neuro OS, the operating system for your company, run in one loop: plan, execute, review, and report—without manual micromanagement.

About agents on Neuro OS · integrations and SLAs on request

agent-activity cycle-log metrics
LIVE

09:14:02 Marketer

09:14:08 Analyst

09:14:15 Writer

09:14:21 CFO

09:14:28 COO

09:14:35 Support

09:14:41 CEO

09:14:48 CTO

Powered by Neuro OS

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Full context. Shared memory. Agents act under company policy.

In Neuro OS every agent is a role with a clear remit: it gets the right context, remembers outcomes from past cycles, and calls tools—APIs, email, browsers, document generation, databases, and internal policies (within granted permissions). Skills attach to a role as ready-made modules: sales, finance, support, engineering, legal, and more.

The platform includes organizational memory, triggers, and orchestration across roles—so work reaches a verifiable outcome instead of stopping at a chat reply. Below: what building blocks exist, then what that means in practice for operators and leadership.

Agent building blocks

What agents are made of

The list below covers how roles and autonomous cycles are composed in a single runtime. Which OS Neuro OS runs on and how the full system fits together—see the link under the disclosure.

Agent & role

An agent has a role (e.g., CEO, support, developer): a task brief, access to systems, and adherence to policy. It can assign subtasks to other roles and join shared cycles.

Skills

Reusable playbooks: code & deploy, browser & data capture, docs & spreadsheets, CRM & tickets, research & summaries. A skill is a module for “how to work” on top of base tools.

Virtual computer

An isolated cloud machine for the role: browser, terminal, files, and the right software—execution without installing apps on employee devices, with access policy limits.

Autonomous cycle

Four Neuro OS phases—plan, execute, review, report: work to an outcome with self-checks and artifacts (reports, code, documents, deploys).

Triggers

Schedules and webhooks so cycles start without manual nudges: recurring work, sync with external systems, reactions to events.

Memory

Persisted context across sessions and agents: decisions, statuses, links to artifacts and access policies—each cycle builds on the last.

Orchestration

A lead agent or coordinator role can delegate work across roles and fold results into one execution chain.

Integrations

Connections via REST, MCP, OAuth, and more—email, chat, CRM, 1C, and your internal services under an agreed rollout design.

Neuro OS is the OS, stack, and architecture. The disclosure above only lists agent composition and their cycles.

What you get in practice

Above: how agents are built; here: value by step. Open a tab or use arrows—each has three short points.

1/4
Cycle mechanics

What a closed autonomous run needs: time- and event-based starts, shared memory, and a verifiable outcome—artifacts, not just a chat reply.

Triggers & schedules

Cron, webhooks, and events—cycles without manual starts.

Unified memory

Context across agents and sessions doesn’t get lost in chats.

Deploy & artifacts

Sites, reports, and integrations as cycle outputs.

Next step

Discuss deployment

Briefly describe your goal—we will reply with pilot guidance. Below on this page: a section on the commercial proposal and stages.

Process

Four phases. Minimum manual busywork.

Each cycle runs autonomously—then repeats with fresh context and priorities.

CE CEO

Planning

The CEO gathers context, sets priorities, and shapes a strategic backlog for the full agent team.

Phase 1 of 4

Not a chatbot. Not a lone agent. An AI company

Real tools. Real outcomes. Real margin.

Industry solutions

Flexible solutions for operators

SelectedBanking

Cross-industry outcomes

Team

24 roles today—plus functional copilots across business lines.

Each agent has its own tools, memory, and decision rules within organizational policy. Below you’ll see core leadership roles and applied copilots for HR, sales, production, finance, procurement, customer service, and management.

Role catalog

Agent cards

Full list of descriptions and tags. Works with the org chart: pick a node above—the matching card highlights.

CE

CEO

Strategy

● leads

Sets direction, strategy, and coordination across every team.

  • strategy
  • backlog
  • coordination
CT

CTO

Technology

● active

Architecture, technical decisions, and delivery oversight.

  • architecture
  • code review
  • deploy
CF

CFO

Finance

● active

Budgets, forecasts, and capital allocation.

  • budget
  • forecast
  • analytics
CM

CMO

Marketing

● active

Brand strategy, channels, and growth loops.

  • brand
  • campaigns
  • channels
DE

Developer

Engineering

● active

Code, features, and shipping to production environments.

  • code
  • CI/CD
  • build
DS

Designer

Design

● active

UI/UX, the visual system, and product consistency.

  • UI/UX
  • brand
  • mockups
MA

Marketer

Growth

● active

Campaigns, social, and funnel content.

  • social
  • ads
  • SEO
AN

Analyst

Data

● active

Metrics, reporting, and quality checks across cycles.

  • data
  • reports
  • metrics
WR

Writer

Content

● active

Documentation, posts, and internal and external comms.

  • blog
  • docs
  • copy
SU

Support

Support

● active

User tickets and the knowledge base.

  • tickets
  • chat
  • FAQ
HR

HR

People

● active

Onboarding, policies, and org design in Neuro OS.

  • onboarding
  • policy
  • roles
HR+

HR Copilot

HR operations

● active

Automates hiring and team development: reqs, resume screening, KPI reports, payroll forecasts, and individual growth plans.

  • reqs
  • resumes
  • KPI
PRD

Production Copilot

Manufacturing ops

● active

Sharper costing, downtime and repair analysis, production KPI monitoring, and supply-chain visibility.

  • COGS
  • downtime
  • supply
SAL

Sales Copilot

Sales

● active

On-demand sales analysis 24/7, outbound emails, CRM lookups, and generated proposals and call scripts.

  • CRM
  • proposals
  • scripts
MGT

Management Assistant

Leadership ops

● active

Answers “how are we doing?”—department effectiveness, initiative status, and profit outlook by unit and resource.

  • efficiency
  • initiatives
  • forecast
PRC

Procurement Copilot

Procurement

● active

Covers suppliers, stock, requisition status, and spend; compares quotes and flags risks.

  • vendors
  • inventory
  • risk
FIN

Finance Copilot

Finance

● active

Financial analytics, budgeting and audit support, document risk checks, and management reporting.

  • budget
  • audit
  • reports
CS

Customer Service Copilot

Customer service

● active

Monitors support performance, handles text and voice queues, and suggests replies to agents. In a typical rollout, handle time drops 2–3× and teams reclaim 40+ hours per month on routine work.

  • channels
  • bots
  • 2–3× faster
SEC

AI Secretary

Documentation

● active

Meeting notes: recording, transcript, and structured minutes for the team and executives—often 80–90% less time than manual notes, with humans only doing final edits.

  • meetings
  • 80–90%
  • minutes
L1

First-line Support Bot

Tier 1

● active

Absorbs large inbound volume (500+ tickets/day), easing load on leads and agents.

  • 500+ tickets
  • SLA
  • escalations
LEG

Legal Assistant

Legal

● active

Reviews agreements for risk, aligns with policy, and prepares notes for legal and finance. A first-pass review lands in about 5 minutes instead of 1–2 days, and approval cycles often drop from 5–7 days to 1–2 business days.

  • contracts
  • 5 min
  • 1–2 days
TAX

FNS Response Copilot

Tax inquiries

● active

Drafts responses to tax-authority requests (FNS-style): parses demands, pulls the right documents, and produces a full official draft—often from ~40 minutes to a few minutes per task.

  • tax
  • fewer errors
  • penalties ↓
ACC

Accounting Ops Copilot

Accounting

● active

Triage inbound requests, gathers documents from multiple systems, drafts replies, and speeds 1C/ERP document prep—often up to ~95% time saved per response.

  • ERP
  • up to ~95%
  • documents

Ready for a commercial pilot?

If Neuro OS roles and scenarios already map to your job, the next meaningful step is a proposal or a call slot—so scope, acceptance metrics, and kickoff land in writing.

Request a commercial proposal →

Jump to the Enterprise section →

Next: deployment

Below: purchase and deployment—what goes into the proposal and contract, how the Neuro OS pilot runs in your environment, and what metrics we sign acceptance against.

✧ Commercial pilot & contract deployment

From proposal to production

Proposal & scope before kickoffPilot with acceptance against metricsScale after pilot success

Three stages to launch

Proposal → pilot → acceptance. What happens at each step.

1

Proposal Before contract

A professional review of your processes and systems: if you already have BPMN and models—we build on them; if not—we map processes and bottlenecks together. You get a pilot hypothesis, acceptance criteria, and a commercial proposal with scope, timeline, and pricing—no binding commitment before the contract is signed.

2

Pilot After kickoff

Neuro OS agents, integrations, security, and observability—configured like production, not a demo.

3

Acceptance After the pilot

Validate against the metrics in the proposal, then hand over runbooks and training. Broader rollout is a separate agreement if the pilot proves value.

What deployment includes

Typical line items for the quote and contract appendix; finalized for your environment.

✓ Architect & tech lead for the pilot
✓ Agents on Neuro OS built for load
✓ Integrations and access policies
✓ Training and handover of artifacts
✓ Status reviews until acceptance against metrics
✓ Post-acceptance support—separate agreement

What’s next

Email us for a proposal or book a short call—we’ll reply with an estimate and pilot draft.

ProposalScope & price in writingBefore contract
Pilot scopeAcceptance against metricsUp front
Scale-upAfter successSeparate deal

Cancellation, refund, and pilot terms—in writing in the contract and proposal, without hidden long renewals.

We put the terms in writing:

  • Term & termination — in contract and proposal; no silent renewals without your consent.
  • Pilot scope — duration, workstreams, acceptance, and payment/refund spelled out up front or in an appendix.
  • Enterprise — estimates and SLAs for your organization—not copied from a generic web page.

Contract template: info@patternautomation.com