9 tickets in 14 days (3x their baseline), two breached SLAs, and a 2-star CSAT on the last reply, on an account that renews next month. Flagging it before the QBR, not after.
An agent watches one thing and acts on it. Not a workflow, just a standing watch that usually does nothing and acts the moment it should.
An agent does what you'd do, and only what you've authorized.
It acts on the same governed metrics as your dashboards, and every action is logged and traceable.
It alerts and recommends on its own; anything that changes data is yours to approve.
Point a new agent at a throwaway channel and watch its judgment before it touches anything real.
It remembers what it already flagged and waits before acting again, so it won't alert you about the same thing twice.
It joins your Zendesk ticket history and CSAT to the account's plan, ARR, and renewal date, so a spike in tickets on a big account that renews next month rises to the top of your call list. You get a ranked outreach list every week instead of finding out at the QBR that the relationship was already cold.
When a ticket breaches its SLA or is about to, it tells you which account it belongs to and what's at stake, and lines up the escalation the way you would. The breaches that matter most surface first, instead of getting buried in a queue nobody reviews until Friday.
When CSAT drops on a specific account or support group, it surfaces the tickets and agents behind the dip and routes it to you before the trend hardens. You're acting on the account that's souring, not waiting for a quarterly number to confirm what you could have caught weeks earlier.
Beyond alerts and write-backs, an agent can run arbitrary Python, so it can do whatever the task actually requires: call an API, draft the outreach, update the account in your CRM, or wire into your own tooling. The action space is yours to define.
You could rig one of these with a cron job and a Slack webhook in an afternoon. The watching is the easy part. Here's what you'd own forever, and don't, here:
Every Zendesk object, modeled and query-ready the moment you connect.
It runs on your real Zendesk instance (reopened tickets, merged duplicates, half-filled custom fields and all), not a tidy demo.
A message in the channel you choose, with the context and a button to act on it.
A summary in the inbox of the people who need to see it.
A payload to your own systems, to wire the agent into whatever you already run.
A flag written back to your warehouse for everything downstream to pick up.
Kick the question to Fi to investigate the why and propose the fix.
Expose it to your own agents and tools over MCP, and drive it from your stack.
Run it in your own VPC or fully self-hosted. Everything it does is pure SQL and Python you can inspect.
Fi is your AI analyst. It helps you build and customize everything in Definite, including the agents that watch and act.
Your AI analyst. Ask questions in plain English, and let it help you build and customize everything in Definite, including your agents.
Meet Fi →The watchers and actors. Once you've built one, it runs on its own, keeping an eye on what matters and acting the way you would.
Autonomous agents →