LoopSuite + Airtable

Airtable AI assistant for small business operations

Airtable is one of the most powerful no-code databases for small businesses. But a database that nobody reviews consistently is just organised chaos. LoopSuite reads your Airtable bases, surfaces what's overdue or needs follow-up, and prepares the actions — so your data actually drives decisions.

The problem

Where it creates friction without help.

01

Your Airtable base has everything — but no automated review

You built the perfect system but reviewing it is a manual task that gets deprioritised when the day gets busy.

02

Follow-up tasks in Airtable become visible too late

A contact marked 'follow up in 7 days' passes without notice because nobody checked the view that day.

03

Airtable tracks your business data but doesn't act on it

The data is there. The actions it should trigger — emails, reminders, updates — aren't happening consistently.

How it works

What LoopSuite does with your data.

Step 1

Connect your Airtable bases to LoopSuite

Tell LoopSuite which bases and views matter. It reads records, dates and linked data across your workspace.

Step 2

Get daily briefings from your data

Overdue follow-ups, records needing attention and upcoming deadlines — surfaced every morning in plain English.

Step 3

Approve actions before they fire

Emails, reminders and status updates are drafted from your Airtable data. You approve before anything goes.

Questions

Common questions.

Which Airtable bases can LoopSuite read?

You control which bases and views LoopSuite accesses. Start with your most important operational base.

Can it write back to Airtable?

Yes — LoopSuite can update record fields, mark items complete and add notes back to your Airtable base.

Does it work with linked records and formulas?

LoopSuite reads the values in your Airtable records, including formula outputs and linked record data.

Get started

Your tools already have the signal. LoopSuite turns it into action.

Tell LoopSuite which tools you use and what feels messy. It shows where it can help — before you connect anything.