Every time you interact with an agent, they have context about you—your name, your company, your timezone, and other relevant information. This context helps agents understand who they're working for and tailor their work accordingly.
User Information
Your agents know basic things about you:
- Your name
- Your email (your O-mega account)
- Your timezone
If you've connected your LinkedIn profile, they also have access to information from there—your headline, current company, job title, location, and summary.
This context means you don't have to introduce yourself or explain your professional background each time you work with an agent.
Company Context
If you've set up company information in your account settings, your agents know about your business:
- Company name and mission
- Industry
- Website
- Description and value proposition
This helps agents understand the context they're working in. For example, an agent creating content will naturally align with your company's voice and focus.
If an agent belongs to an Agent Company (a team of agents with its own identity), that company's context takes precedence—the agent sees itself as representing that organization.
Company Guidelines
If you've set company-wide guidelines in your settings, all your agents follow these. This is useful for things like brand voice consistency, compliance requirements, or standard procedures that should apply across your entire agent workforce.
Learnings
Beyond the standard context, each agent accumulates learnings from your interactions. When you:
- Correct how an agent did something
- Share a preference
- Explain how you like things done
These become learnings that persist across conversations. Your agent remembers and adapts to your working style over time.
Each agent's learnings are specific to that agent—they don't automatically share with other agents.
Conversation History
Your agents remember previous conversations with you. When you return after days or weeks, they can recall past tasks, decisions, and context from ongoing projects. You don't need to re-explain everything—your agent picks up where you left off.
What Agents Don't Know
Your agents don't automatically have access to:
- Files on your computer (unless you share them)
- Your calendar or email (unless connected via integration)
- Other conversations you've had with different agents
- Your browsing history
If you need an agent to know something specific, just tell them, add it to their learnings, or add it to your company information.
Related: What Makes Up an Agent | Agent Personality and Rules