Tools and Integrations
An agent is only useful if it can act — read a calendar, update a CRM, send an email, search the web, query a database. In MeetLoyd, those abilities come from tools and integrations: the connections between your agents and the systems where your work actually happens.
"Connect our HubSpot and let the sales team use it" or "What can this agent actually do right now?" — Loyd can wire up integrations and tell you exactly which tools an agent has. Meet Loyd →
Where capabilities come from
| Source | What it gives your agents |
|---|---|
| Native integrations | First-class connections to Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, HubSpot, and more |
| Built-in tools | Web search, document and deck generation, scheduling, memory, and other platform abilities |
| Custom tools (MCP) | Any internal or third-party system you expose through the open Model Context Protocol |
Because MeetLoyd speaks MCP — the open standard for connecting AI to tools — you're never limited to a fixed list. If it has an API, an agent can use it.
Connected to your data, securely
Integrations connect through standard, revocable authentication (OAuth), so agents work where your data already lives — no copying it somewhere new. You stay in control:
- Agents only get what they're granted. A tool an agent hasn't been authorized to use simply isn't available to it.
- Connectors are screened. New connections are checked before they're trusted.
- Every tool call is governed and logged. The same policies and audit trail that cover everything else cover tool use too.
The right tool at the right time
Agents don't need every tool loaded at once. MeetLoyd surfaces the tools an agent needs for the task in front of it, and can suggest the right tools based on the integrations you've connected — so a sales agent on a connected CRM is offered CRM abilities without you wiring each one by hand.
What you get
- Agents that do real work, not just chat about it.
- No lock-in — connect anything that speaks MCP; import and export freely.
- Least privilege by default — capabilities are granted, governed, and auditable.