Builtery.com
Summary
You've described your ops workflow to three different consultants and gotten three different Miro diagrams — none of them named a single agent or told you where a human had to stay in the loop. Builtery skips the whiteboard and turns a plain-English process description into a visual agent chain with specific tool recommendations and honest risk notes.
Paste one real process — customer support triage, order-to-refund, anything with inputs and handoffs — and Builtery splits it into mapped steps, identifies automation candidates at each stage, and surfaces named agents from the Solved.Earth database with a rationale and pricing note per selection. The output includes three stack options (cautious, balanced, and agent-native), plus PDF and JSON export, so you can share the blueprint with an ops lead or investor without translating anything. The tool does not execute anything; it maps and recommends. Teams expecting runnable automation leave empty-handed. Teams using it to scope a build before committing engineering time get a concrete, shareable deliverable in minutes.
Bottom line: Use this to cut the first scoping conversation from two weeks to twenty minutes — but the moment your blueprint is approved and you need agents that actually run, Builtery's job is done and the engineering work starts.
Pricing Plans
Subscription- Price
- $20 one-off or $20/month
One Blueprint
$20 one-off purchase
- Single workflow map
- Agent recommendations
- PDF and JSON export
Unlimited Blueprints
$20 per month, cancel anytime
- Unlimited blueprints
- All features of one-off tier
View full pricing on builtery.com →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Plain-English process input — no diagram tools or structured data required — so a founder can describe a workflow in a Slack message and get a blueprint back, without needing a solutions architect to translate it first.
- Named agent recommendations with rationale and pricing notes at each step, which means you arrive at vendor evaluation with a shortlist and a reason, instead of spending a sprint researching the category from scratch.
- Explicit human approval points mapped into the blueprint, so compliance and ops reviewers can see exactly where sign-off is required before anything ships — catching that conversation before engineering starts, not after.
- Three stack configurations (cautious, balanced, agent-native) in a single blueprint, which means you can show risk-averse stakeholders a conservative path and a full-automation path side by side without commissioning a second analysis.
- PDF and JSON export included, so the blueprint is a shareable artifact — a founder can hand it to a co-founder, an ops lead can send it to a vendor, an investor can read it — without the recipient needing access to the tool.
Cons
Sign in to edit- Builtery produces a blueprint and stops: it generates no running agents, no API calls, no workflow execution. A team that needs automation live by end of sprint gets a document, not a system — and still has to select, configure, and deploy every agent the blueprint recommends.
- Single-process input per blueprint means a business with interconnected workflows — say, support triage that branches into billing, logistics, and escalation — has to run and reconcile multiple blueprints manually. There is no multi-process view, so cross-workflow dependencies are invisible until you're in implementation.
- Recommendations draw from the Solved.Earth agent database, which is a fixed corpus. Teams in specialized verticals — legal, clinical, financial compliance — report that the named agents returned are general-purpose tools that don't map cleanly to their regulatory constraints, at which point the named-recommendation layer loses its value and teams fall back to manual vendor research, defeating the core time-saving proposition.
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About
- Platforms
- Web
- API Available
- No
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-21T18:23:50.025Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Founders documenting processes for automation
- Ops teams evaluating agent adoption
- Teams needing named agent recommendations with risk notes
What it does well
- Mapping customer support workflows to agent stacks
- Identifying automation points in order-to-refund processes
- Generating shareable visual agent chains for ops or investor review
Discussion Community
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Builtery.com free?
- Builtery.com is a paid tool ($20 one-off or $20/month). No permanent free tier is offered.
- Is Builtery.com open source?
- No — Builtery.com is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
- What platforms does Builtery.com support?
- Builtery.com is available on: Web.
Hours Saved & ROI Stories Community
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Most automation projects stall at the diagram stage: the process is half-documented, nobody agrees which steps are automatable, and the agent tooling decision gets deferred because nobody has a clear picture of what the workflow actually contains. Builtery addresses that specific jam. You paste a plain-English description of one business process, add context on tools, data sensitivity, and your preferred automation style, and the system produces a structured workflow map — steps, inputs, outputs, handoffs — alongside ranked agent candidates for each stage drawn from the Solved.Earth agent database.
The differentiating feature is specificity at the recommendation layer. Rather than returning generic categories (‘you need a summarization agent here’), the blueprint names a specific agent, explains why it was chosen, flags pricing, and attaches honest caution notes about evidence quality. Human approval points are called out explicitly — the blueprint marks exactly where a person must review before output leaves a step. Three stack configurations let you compare a conservative implementation against a fully agent-native one before you’ve written a line of code.
Builtery fits founders and ops teams at the process-mapping stage of agent adoption: before a vendor is selected, before a sprint is committed, before anyone has agreed on what ‘automation’ means for a given workflow. It does not fit teams that need agents to run. The tool generates blueprints — a visual chain, a PDF, a JSON export — and stops there. Teams moving from blueprint to deployment will need a separate execution platform; Builtery produces the spec, not the system.
Blueprints are a paid-only output. The vendor page describes a one-off single-blueprint purchase and a monthly subscription for unlimited blueprints; no free tier or trial is listed. A demo is accessible before purchase, and example blueprints built from real workflows are available to browse.
