A real personal assistant for busy executives — not another chatbot

Super is a personal AI agent that actually operates your computer. It schedules meetings, updates systems, moves data between apps, and reuses a computer-use cache so the work you repeat as an executive gets faster over time.

Why executives are moving beyond chatbots

Executives don’t need more suggestions

Coverage of executive productivity trends shows growing interest in AI that can act — not just advise. Busy leaders increasingly delegate scheduling, research, and follow‑ups to autonomous assistants instead of juggling apps themselves ([nytimes.com]).

Agentic AI can finally take action

Modern “Super Agents” can navigate real software environments, clicking buttons and adapting when interfaces change — a major shift from brittle scripts and RPA ([theaicronicle.com]).

Computer use is now table stakes

Google, Anthropic, and others now ship computer‑use capabilities in Gemini and Claude, signaling that real desktop and browser control is essential for personal AI assistants ([blog.google], [cnbc.com]).

Security and intent matter

Recent reporting highlights serious security flaws in many open‑source agents, reinforcing the need for deliberate design, scoped execution, and human‑in‑the‑loop controls ([scmedia.com]).

What Super does for a busy executive

Acts like a real assistant

Super logs into tools, navigates UIs, copies information, fills forms, and completes multi‑step tasks — the same way a human assistant would.

Remembers repeated work

With a reusable computer-use cache, Super learns how you handle recurring workflows — board prep, expense reviews, reporting — instead of starting from scratch every time.

Reduces app switching

Instead of bouncing between calendars, CRMs, email, and dashboards, you delegate the objective and let the agent orchestrate across tools.

Designed for oversight

Super fits naturally into a human‑in‑the‑loop model, aligning with how enterprises and executives supervise high‑impact actions.

How Super fits into the assistant landscape

ChatGPT

Best‑in‑class conversational AI for thinking and drafting. Super focuses on durable computer‑use workflows rather than chat‑first interaction.

Gemini

Google is pushing browser‑native computer use. Super emphasizes cache reuse and repeated executive workflows.

Siri

Voice‑first and device‑embedded. Super is built for complex cross‑app work executives actually delegate.

Grok

Real‑time and opinionated. Super is execution‑oriented and workflow‑focused.

Folk

A niche player in the broader automation landscape. Super targets general personal assistant workflows.

Orchids

Experimental approaches to agents. Super prioritizes reliable computer use and reuse over demos.

Sources & further reading

Updated market field guide

Reliable delegation

Quarterly planning.

Planning board.

Executives don’t suffer from a lack of tools; they suffer from fragmentation. Calendars, inboxes, CRMs, task managers, travel apps, and analytics dashboards all compete for attention. What busy executives actually want is not another chatbot, but a real personal assistant—one that can observe work across systems, make decisions, and take action with minimal supervision. In 2026, that expectation is finally realistic because agentic AI systems now combine reasoning, tool use, and computer interaction in a single workflow.

Super is designed for this moment. It blends large language models, secure tool access, and emerging computer-use capabilities to function like an executive assistant who understands priorities, context, and constraints. Instead of asking you what to do next, it proactively handles the work—while keeping you in control.

Market context

Recent research from MIT News describes agentic AI as systems that can plan, act, observe outcomes, and adapt goals over time—moving beyond prompt-and-response assistants into autonomous collaborators. At the same time, Google’s introduction of computer use in Gemini 3.5 Flash demonstrates that AI agents can now operate real interfaces: clicking buttons, navigating browsers, and completing workflows end-to-end.

For executives, this matters because many critical tasks still live in legacy or human-centric interfaces: airline sites, expense portals, internal dashboards, and partner tools. APIs don’t cover everything. Computer-use agents bridge that gap. To make this scalable and safe, modern assistants rely on a computer-use cache—a controlled memory of interface states and actions that lets the agent act consistently without re-learning every screen from scratch. Super uses a computer-use cache to reduce errors, speed up execution, and maintain predictability across repeated workflows.

Meanwhile, publications like Fortune have highlighted leadership concerns around tools like Copilot: executives want leverage, not distraction. The winning assistants in 2026 are specialized, opinionated, and aligned with how executives actually work—prioritizing time savings, risk reduction, and decision clarity.

How to deploy a real personal assistant for executive work

Implementing Super is not about automation for its own sake. It’s about delegating outcomes. The process starts with identifying executive-grade tasks: calendar triage, inbox filtering, briefing preparation, travel planning, follow-ups, and light research. These tasks share two traits: they are repetitive, and mistakes are costly.

Super’s agent architecture combines planning modules (to decide what to do), tool skills (to act via APIs or browsers), and memory systems like the computer-use cache (to remember how actions were performed before). This mirrors best practices outlined by Anthropic’s engineering guidance on building effective AI agents.

Executives typically begin with a “shadow mode,” where the assistant drafts actions or recommendations without executing them. Once trust is established, permissions expand. Crucially, Super is designed to escalate uncertainty back to the human—rather than guessing.

Implementation checklist

  • Define success metrics in hours saved per week, not task counts.
  • Start with one high-friction workflow (e.g., meeting prep or travel).
  • Enable read-only access before write or execute permissions.
  • Review the agent’s computer-use cache periodically to confirm interface assumptions still hold.
  • Set escalation rules for ambiguity, exceptions, or sensitive data.

Risks and limits

Agentic assistants are powerful, but not magical. Search Engine Journal has already warned that computer-use agents are attractive targets for attackers if permissions are sloppy. That’s why Super emphasizes scoped access, audit logs, and confirmation checkpoints.

Another limit is organizational change. An assistant that works well for one executive may need retraining for another because priorities differ. Finally, no agent should operate without oversight in legal, HR, or high-stakes financial decisions. The goal is leverage, not abdication.

FAQ

Is this just another chatbot?
No. Chatbots respond; Super acts. It plans, executes, observes results, and adapts.

Can it really use my existing tools?
Yes. Through APIs where available and computer-use where not, supported by a persistent computer-use cache.

How much setup does this require?
Most executives are productive within days, starting with one delegated workflow.

Sources

Reporting and research from MIT News, Google DeepMind, Anthropic Engineering, Fortune, Search Engine Journal, and NVIDIA Developer informed this analysis.

Ready for a real personal assistant?

Delegate the computer work and keep control where it matters.