0:01 I'm about to show you how to give your
0:04 open claw superpowers. You need to build
0:06 a mission control inside your Open Claw.
0:08 And in this video, I'll show you how to
0:10 do it in just a couple of prompts.
0:12 Mission control is a custom dashboard
0:13 for your OpenClaw that allows it to
0:16 build any tool it needs on the fly. In
0:18 this video, I'll take you through my
0:20 entire mission control setup, every tool
0:22 I use, and show you how to set up your
0:24 own in just a couple of prompts. Zero
0:26 programming experience needed, zero
0:28 technical experience needed. If you
0:30 stick with me until the end, I promise
0:32 your open claw is going to be a hundred
0:33 times more powerful no matter who you
0:35 are. Let's get into it. If you're
0:36 wondering about the different
0:38 background, I'm reporting in straight
0:39 from Shabuya. I'm going to take you
0:42 through every critical mission control
0:45 tool I have. This is my mission control.
0:48 I truly believe everyone, no matter who
0:51 you are, if you are using Open Claw, you
0:52 need to be using mission control. This
0:55 makes it so much better and also just a
0:58 lot more fun to use. This is completely
1:00 custom. This is a completely custom
1:02 dashboard. All the tools you see on the
1:05 lefth hand side were all built by my
1:07 open claw. Nothing is out of the box.
1:09 Nothing was downloaded from the web. All
1:10 custom built and I didn't write a single
1:12 line of code. The open claw made all of
1:14 it. So here's what I'm going to do. I'm
1:16 going to take you through every mission
1:18 control tool. You need to have your open
1:20 claw build. These will be relevant to
1:22 everyone. I'm not going to go through
1:23 every tool on the lefth hand side. Some
1:24 of them are still experimental that I'm
1:26 building out. We'll do follow-up videos
1:28 with those. But the ones that work that
1:30 are great and everyone should have them,
1:31 I'm about to show you. And these were
1:34 all built simply from me going to my
1:36 open claw and saying, "Hey, build me out
1:37 a tool in my mission control that does
1:39 this or build me out a tool in my
1:40 mission control that shows my calendar
1:42 or shows me what tasks I'm working on."
1:44 Just one simple prompt and it was all
1:46 built. If you'd like to build this out
1:48 side by side with me as I go through all
1:51 my tools, feel free to pause right now.
1:53 go to your OpenClaw and say, "Hey, I
1:55 want my own mission control where we can
1:57 build custom tools. Please build it in
1:59 Nex.js and host it on the local host."
2:00 Once you do that, it will build a
2:02 template. You can also say make it a
2:04 clean interface that looks like linear
2:06 and you'll get a mission control that's
2:08 as beautiful as this. So, let's go into
2:09 it. Let's go into all the critical tools
2:11 you need in your mission control. As you
2:13 go, feel free to pause and describe each
2:14 tool and your open claw will do it. So,
2:16 I want to start off on the task board. I
2:18 think this is a critical critical tool.
2:21 This taskboard makes it so easy for me
2:23 to track everything my Open Claw is
2:25 doing. I can see what Henry's working
2:27 on. I can see what Henry's sub agents
2:29 are working on. I'm always on top of
2:30 what they're doing. This solves a lot of
2:32 problems. This solves the biggest
2:33 problem where people go, "Oh, I don't
2:34 know what my open claw is doing. I don't
2:35 know what it completed. I don't know if
2:37 it's halfway done tasks." You don't have
2:39 visibility into what your open claw did.
2:41 Now, with this task board, you know
2:42 everything your open claw is doing and
2:44 what it's accomplished. So you can see
2:45 here it is a simple cananband board
2:48 where every task is on here is assigned
2:50 to either me or Henry. You can see the A
2:52 is for me, the H is for Henry. It shows
2:54 a description of the task and really
2:57 important is over on the left hand side
2:59 is a live activity feed which allows me
3:02 to see every single thing Henry is doing
3:04 in detail. So this just allows me to
3:06 confirm Henry is doing the work he's
3:08 saying he's doing. As Henry does the
3:10 work, he moves the tasks over on the
3:12 board towards the right until it's done.
3:14 Anything that needs to be reviewed by me
3:16 is right in review and I can go and just
3:18 approve it. Just a great way to manage
3:20 and track everything your open claw
3:22 does. If you need to add new tasks, you
3:24 can hit new task and if you assign it to
3:26 Henry or your openclaw, your open claw
3:29 will automatically find that and do the
3:31 task for you. What I did was I asked my
3:33 openclaw that in every heartbeat check
3:35 our task board, see if any tasks are
3:38 assigned to my openclaw in the backlog
3:39 and then do any tasks that are assigned
3:41 to them. So, every heartbeat is checking
3:43 this task board to see if any tasks are
3:44 assigned and getting it done
3:46 autonomously. This increased my
3:48 efficiency and also just keeps me on top
3:51 of whatever Henry is doing. Make sure to
3:52 build this task board. Just describe
3:54 what I showed to you and your agent will
3:56 build it for you. No coding at all. The
3:58 next screen I want to show you is one of
4:00 the most important ones I'll show you.
4:01 This is the calendar screen. And the
4:04 reason why this is so powerful is it
4:07 shows you what cron jobs and what tasks
4:09 you have scheduled for your open claw.
4:11 One of the biggest complaints I get
4:13 about OpenClaw is that it's not
4:14 proactive enough. That it's not doing
4:16 proactive tasks for the users. This
4:19 allows you to confirm that your OpenClaw
4:21 is being proactive. Whenever you say,
4:23 "Hey, do something for me at night. Do
4:24 something for me every morning. Do
4:26 something productive every afternoon."
4:28 You can come to your calendar screen and
4:31 see and confirm that your open claw
4:33 scheduled those cron jobs to do those
4:34 tasks. There's an issue I've been seeing
4:35 with people. Some open clauses, they
4:37 say, "Hey, I'll do that for you." and
4:38 then they never actually do those
4:40 things. This calendar is a great way to
4:42 confirm it. And this also puts you and
4:44 your open claw on the same page where
4:46 you can say after scheduling a task,
4:48 hey, you said you scheduled a task, but
4:49 I don't see it on the calendar. Now
4:51 you're open go confirm it's on the
4:53 calendar and make sure it's actually
4:56 scheduling its own tasks. The more you
4:58 use OpenClaw, the more scheduled tasks
4:59 you'll have. This helps you stay on top
5:01 of all of them and make sure your
5:03 OpenClaw is being proactive. ask for it
5:05 to build a calendar for you that shows
5:07 all the crown jobs and scheduled tasks
5:09 it have and you will have an amazing
5:12 screen like this. Next is the project
5:14 screen. So this is a really good one for
5:16 tracking every project you're working
5:19 on. It's very easy to get distracted
5:21 with Open Claw, play around, build
5:22 things you don't really need and not
5:24 stay on top of the tasks that actually
5:26 move the ball forward. This project
5:28 screen is good for that. You go in here,
5:30 have your open claw build a project for
5:32 every single major project you have
5:34 going on in your life. And now when you
5:36 get scatterbrained, you can come back
5:38 into this project screen. See how close
5:40 you are to completing those projects and
5:42 go and pay attention to the ones that
5:44 maybe you haven't worked on in a while.
5:45 Right? If I'm looking at this, I might
5:47 want to go, okay, I want to build out
5:49 the AI extension for my school. By the
5:52 way, Vibe Coding Academy live boot camps
5:54 every single Friday in that. Sign up for
5:55 that down below. I did an entire
5:56 two-hour boot camp on this mission
5:58 control. You get instant access to that.
6:00 Anyway, the project screen, which you
6:02 see here, is just a great way to make
6:03 sure every single day you're progressing
6:06 on the major high lever tasks you're
6:07 working on. And what's great is this
6:10 hooks into all my other screens. So, I'm
6:11 about to show you a lot of really cool
6:13 things in a second when it comes to
6:15 memories and documents, but this allows
6:17 you to hook in task, memories, documents
6:19 to every project you're working on. Just
6:22 an amazing way to stay organized.
6:24 And a little bonus tip here, this is a
6:26 great way to go and reverse prompt your
6:28 open claw and say something like, "Hey,
6:31 what's one task we can do right now that
6:32 will help us progress in one of our
6:34 major projects?" And it will come up
6:36 with tasks to do that help you advance
6:38 in these projects. So great reverse
6:40 prompting opportunity. I talk about
6:42 reverse prompting all the time, asking
6:44 your open claw questions. Great reverse
6:46 prompting opportunity on this screen,
6:48 too. Have to make a project screen. And
6:50 if you don't know which projects you're
6:51 working on, that's fine, too. Go to your
6:53 openclaw reverse prompt. If you were to
6:55 categorize five projects we're working
6:57 on right now, openclaw, what would you
6:59 say those five projects are? And it will
7:00 figure them out for you. You don't even
7:01 have to think. Whenever you get
7:04 confused, reverse prompt. Next is the
7:06 memory screen. This is a critical
7:08 critical tool to implement. One of the
7:10 best parts about OpenClaw is its memory
7:12 system. It has an amazing memory system
7:14 where it remembers basically all your
7:16 conversations from every single day. One
7:18 thing I like to do often is go back and
7:20 go through those memories almost like a
7:22 journal entry and see what we talked
7:24 about on certain days. Or if I'm working
7:26 on something and I forget details of
7:28 past conversations, I can come back and
7:31 look at past memories, too. That's all
7:33 done on this memory screen. Typically,
7:36 your memories are stuck in a unorganized
7:38 memories.mmarkdown file that's really
7:41 hard to find and read. This makes it
7:43 really easy to find any past memories,
7:44 organize them, and almost read them like
7:46 a journal. I can't wait 10 years from
7:49 now when I can go back, look at what I
7:51 was talking about with Henry from 10
7:52 years ago, see what we're working on,
7:53 see what we're talking about, and
7:56 basically just use these memories as a
7:58 tracker of my entire life. That's what
7:59 this memory screen allows you to do. So,
8:02 what you want to do is you want to go
8:04 into your open claw. I want a memory
8:05 screen in our mission control that
8:07 allows me to view every memory you have
8:10 organized by day. Build that out for me,
8:12 please. and also have a long-term memory
8:14 document that allows me to see all the
8:16 long-term memories we have as well. This
8:18 is just great for finding old thoughts
8:20 and old conversations you were having
8:21 and seeing what you were talking about
8:23 on specific days. It's basically a
8:25 record of your entire digital life. It's
8:27 amazing. Build the memory screen just
8:29 for pure organization sake. This next
8:30 screen I'm going to talk about is
8:32 extremely important. It's very similar
8:34 to memories, but equally, if not more
8:36 important, and that is the doc screen.
8:38 If you're anything like me, your open
8:40 claw is constantly building you docs,
8:42 planning docs, architecture docs,
8:44 product requirement docs. It's writing
8:45 you newsletters. It's writing you
8:46 content and just writing a whole bunch
8:48 of things for you. Unfortunately, that
8:50 usually lives in your chat. So, if you
8:52 want to find an old document, you have
8:54 to scroll back in your chat in your
8:56 Telegram or Discord for a while, but not
8:58 with this doc screen. This doc screen is
9:01 so so helpful. every doc your open claw
9:04 creates goes into this doc screen and
9:06 allows you to go back and see every
9:08 document it's created in a really nicely
9:10 formatted way. So for instance, every
9:13 Thursday I have my open claw write me my
9:15 newsletter I'm going to send out. I
9:16 don't just send out straight with
9:17 whatever my openclaw wrote, but I use it
9:19 as a first draft. So when I go back and
9:21 I want to send out my newsletter, I can
9:24 go in here. I can search for the draft
9:26 of the newsletter. I can copy and paste
9:28 this newsletter draft into Substack,
9:30 edit it myself, and then send it out
9:32 instead of having to scroll back for 10
9:34 minutes to find this draft. Everything
9:37 is just stored in this documents tool.
9:38 And what's great is it automatically
9:41 categorizes it, shows me what formats
9:43 each document is in. It's really
9:45 organizable. And I can even search. So,
9:47 if I want to see which files have Mac
9:49 Studio mentioned in it, because I do a
9:51 bunch of Mac Studio planning with all my
9:52 computers, I can just search for it and
9:54 find those documents really, really
9:56 easily. Go to your open claw and say, I
9:59 want a docs tool where I can go back and
10:01 view all the previous documents you
10:03 created for me in a nicely formatted
10:06 view. Make it searchable and categorize
10:07 the documents. If you put in that
10:09 prompt, you'll have an amazing documents
10:11 tool ready to go. I have two more tools
10:12 to show you that I'm going to show you
10:14 how to actually find which custom tools
10:16 you need to build for yourself that I
10:17 haven't shown here. If you learned
10:20 anything so far, make sure to leave a
10:22 like down below. Subscribe and turn on
10:24 notifications. Every person that turns
10:27 on notifications will be another piece
10:30 of sushi I eat here in Japan. This next
10:32 screen is my favorite. I think it is the
10:34 most important. It keeps your OpenClaw
10:37 agent on task with one mission in mind
10:39 and keeps it organized with all its sub
10:40 agents it's working with and that is the
10:43 team screen. This team screen shows me
10:46 every agent I have spun up, every sub
10:49 aent it uses, what their roles are and
10:51 our mission statement. This is like our
10:54 org structure for the digital company
10:56 we're running. So at the top you can see
10:58 the main open claw Henry what his role
11:00 is and then we can see all the other
11:03 open claws and sub aents we've spun up.
11:04 It shows what devices they're on. It
11:06 shows what roles they have. Right? I
11:08 have Charlie who's my engineer. This is
11:10 run by Quen locally on my Mac Studio. We
11:12 have Ralph. This is powered by Chad GBT.
11:14 We have all the different sub aents. And
11:16 then we have the lowest level worker
11:18 agents. This helps keep my agents
11:20 organized where they know who to spin up
11:23 and who to give work to. Again, another
11:26 place that's kind of the record of truth
11:27 where if an agent gets confused or
11:29 doesn't remember who should be working
11:30 on what, it can go to the team screen,
11:32 say, "Oh, okay. I got to give this to
11:33 Charlie for development. I got to give
11:35 this Violet for research." And it helps
11:37 keep all your agents organized. By the
11:38 way, if you want a follow-up video on
11:40 when you should use sub agents versus
11:42 open clause, let me know down below. I
11:43 could make that my next video if there's
11:45 enough demand for that. But a really
11:47 important part of the screen as well is
11:49 the mission statement, which I put at
11:51 the top here. You should have a mission
11:53 statement for your open claw. This is
11:56 the mission everyone is working towards
11:57 at the same time. This makes it so
11:59 whenever your open claws come up with
12:01 tasks to work on, they ensure that there
12:04 are tasks that bring you closer to your
12:06 goals and ambitions. So for me, my
12:08 mission statement is I want to build an
12:10 autonomous organization of AI agents
12:12 that do work for me and produce value
12:15 247. Everything we do, I want to get
12:17 closer to that. And the best part is is
12:19 I can use reverse prompting here. So
12:21 when my agents are idle, I can say,
12:24 "What task can we do right now that
12:26 brings us closer to our mission
12:27 statement?" You want a mission statement
12:29 as well. If you don't know what you're
12:31 working towards with your open clause,
12:33 reverse prompt based on everything you
12:35 know about me. What should be our
12:37 mission statement? That will give you a
12:38 mission statement you can work towards
12:40 and it makes it so all the proactive
12:42 tasks your open clause do brings you
12:45 closer to that goal. Lastly, I want to
12:47 talk about the office screen. And you
12:49 might see this and go, "What the hell is
12:50 this? Do I really need this? Is there
12:52 any point to this?" The answer to all
12:54 those questions is yes, you do need
12:56 this. And there is a point to this. This
12:59 is a visual that shows me what all my
13:02 agents are working on. So, as my agents
13:03 work, they'll go to their different
13:04 screens. They'll go to the desk.
13:05 Sometimes they'll even talk to each
13:07 other and meet around the water cooler.
13:09 This is a great place to track what your
13:11 agents are doing. If I need to confirm
13:13 my agent's actually doing something at
13:15 any given moment, I can come here and
13:16 see if they're working on their computer
13:18 and see what they're actually working
13:20 on, too. Here's an important point I
13:22 want to make here is when using
13:24 OpenClaw, it is critical, critical,
13:27 critical you have fun. There is nothing
13:28 wrong with having fun when you use
13:31 OpenClaw. Nothing at all. I like to have
13:33 fun. This is really fun for me. This
13:34 makes me want to come back to my open
13:36 claw more and do more work and get more
13:38 done just cuz it's a fun thing to do.
13:41 Not everything has to be a boring CLI.
13:43 It could be an actual fun 2D interface
13:45 where you watch agents walk around and
13:46 do work. What I would do is I'd go to
13:48 your OpenClaw, say, "Hey, I want a
13:50 screen that visualizes all the work
13:53 you're doing. I want a 2D pixel art
13:55 office that shows you and all the sub
13:57 agents. I want them to have desks and
13:58 when they are doing work, they go to
14:00 their desk and actually do the work." If
14:02 you put that prompt in, it will build
14:03 something similar to this. If you want,
14:05 you can even pause here and screenshot
14:07 this. any screen I showed you so far,
14:09 feel free to screenshot it and give it
14:11 to your open claw, and it will build it
14:13 to look like whatever I built. You can
14:15 also just take the link for this video,
14:17 too, and give it to your open claw.
14:19 It'll find the transcript and build out
14:20 everything I said. That's that's
14:21 probably the easiest way for you to use
14:23 this video. But here's a really
14:24 important note I want to make on
14:26 everything I showed you so far. I don't
14:28 want you to just straight up copy me.
14:30 It's not that I care if people copy me.
14:31 You can copy anything I do. I don't
14:34 care. But the reason why I think you
14:36 should avoid copying me is because this
14:38 is a hyperpersonalized
14:41 for you dashboard. The tools should all
14:43 be useful for you. You shouldn't just
14:45 take other people's tools, put them in,
14:47 and then use their workflows. No two
14:49 people's workflows are the same. So,
14:51 it's important you come up with your own
14:54 custom tools. How do you do that? Well,
14:55 the answer is probably not going to
14:58 surprise you. Reverse prompting. After
15:00 you build out the initial version of
15:02 your mission control, you should go in
15:05 and reverse prompt your open claw based
15:07 on what you know about me, what we've
15:09 done, our workflows, our mission
15:12 statement, our goals. What custom tools
15:14 should we build out in our mission
15:16 control? What that'll do is cause your
15:18 open claw to think for a while and come
15:20 up with the custom tools you need to
15:22 make your workflows easier. This will
15:24 build custom tools that are way more
15:26 relevant for whatever you're doing than
15:28 anything I show you. You can copy me. I
15:30 don't care. Go ahead, copy whatever you
15:32 want. But I think the most important
15:34 exercise you can do right now is reverse
15:36 prompt and find the tools that are
15:38 custom for you. And again, everything
15:40 I've talked about in this video, you can
15:42 just copy and paste the link for this
15:44 YouTube say, "Hey, OpenClaw, check this
15:47 out." And it will actually go and get
15:48 the transcript and really build all this
15:49 out for you and say, "Hey, is there
15:51 anything in this video we haven't done
15:52 yet?" and it will go and do it for you.
15:54 So, make sure to do that as well. If you
15:56 learned anything at all, please leave a
15:57 like down below, subscribe, turn
16:00 notifications. Also, I do live boot
16:02 camps every single week in the Vibe
16:04 Coding Academy. Feel free to join and
16:05 ask me questions. You can talk to me
16:08 live in there. Link for that down below.
16:10 Hope you enjoyed this. Way more videos
16:12 coming soon, especially when I get back.