Repetitive tasks are exhausting — I struggle to stay consistent with them, especially those that require my attention every day. Things like posting a reel at a fixed time or sending the same reminder message repeatedly. They’re simple, but also the easiest to forget and the hardest to stay motivated for.
After missing one too many of these, I started wondering why I was still doing them manually. If an AI can take work off my plate, this felt like the most obvious place to start. So I handed it over to Claude Cowork, and honestly, I’ve been really impressed with how well it’s handled the job.
6 Reasons I Use Claude Instead of ChatGPT
ChatGPT is great; don’t get me wrong. But Claude is so much better.
I finally took matters into my own hands
By handing it over to an AI
Claude Cowork from Anthropic is like a digital employee, sitting on your system that gets the work done without constant supervision. The idea behind this AI agent is quite different — it’s built to take ownership of tasks and carry them from end to end. The moment I understood what it was capable of, I realized this was exactly the kind of tool I needed. So I set it up with a very simple intent: to remove all those repetitive, mind-numbing tasks that drain my time every day.
With Claude Cowork, I can schedule tasks that send messages or reminders across apps like Gmail, Google Chat, and more. I started by creating a new task inside Claude Cowork. One thing that quickly became clear to me is that the prompt has to be very precise, almost like briefing an actual teammate. In my case, I set up a task to send reminder messages on Google Chat twice a day. The goal was deliberately kept clear, and what stood out immediately was that Claude didn’t just execute blindly. It kept asking questions until everything was unambiguous, whether it was the exact timing of the reminders or the specific Google Chat space they should go to.
Since there’s no direct native integration with Google Chat, Claude suggested a workaround using a webhook. That meant I had to go into my Google Chat space. For this, I had to open the group chat, go to Apps & Integrations in the drop-down menu, and create a new incoming webhook. I named it Claude reminders, copied the webhook URL, and then pasted it back into Claude Cowork to complete the setup.
What stood out most in this entire process is how conversational the experience felt. It behaved almost like a cautious colleague, refusing to take chances with ambiguity. If something wasn’t clear, it constantly kept asking. Even during my setup, it repeatedly confirmed timings and message details before finalizing anything. Once everything is in place, you simply hit Run now, and the task executes from your laptop or PC on schedule.
There are a few real-world constraints to keep in mind. Since I set this up through the desktop app, my machine needed to stay on, and the relevant apps need to be running when the task triggers. If the PC is off, asleep, or hibernating, the automation won’t run, and it also won’t catch up with the missed tasks later.
There is an alternative approach using webhooks for more persistent execution, which helps bypass this limitation. But I chose not to go that route for now. I really wanted to experience how the system behaves in its most direct, local-machine form before moving on to something even more automated.
The limits behind the promise of a digital employee
Between perfect intent and imperfect execution
The limitations become fairly clear the moment you start using an AI agent like this, and what I actually liked about Claude Cowork is that it didn’t hide them. It surfaced the constraints upfront, without me having to dig for them. It essentially told me, “Here’s how far I can go, and here’s where things might break,” and then left the decision entirely in my hands. You choose whether to proceed or not.
I Connected Claude to My Work Apps—Now I Get So Much More Done
It’s not just a chatbot. This AI can automate my workflow.
That said, it doesn’t always behave perfectly. Just like a human employee, Claude Cowork isn’t flawless. While I was using it to schedule tasks, I ran into situations where it failed to send reminders twice, even though my PC was on and Chrome was running in the background. This wasn’t a one-off experiment either; I’ve been using the tool for over 20 days now, so I’ve had enough time to see its patterns.
What’s interesting is the way it responds when things go wrong. If I point out that it missed a scheduled reminder, it reacts almost as if it were a person. It apologizes, acknowledges the mistake, and then tries to correct it. If the delay isn’t too much, it still sends the message later, just not at the exact intended time. But if it’s too late, it doesn’t really catch up with the way you’d expect a fully reliable automation system to do; it simply moves on.
There’s also a privacy angle worth knowing about. When you set up workflows like this, especially with something like Google Chat, you’re essentially allowing the AI agent to operate inside your workspace environment. That means it can access and act within your chat spaces, which is fine for general reminders or low-risk use cases, but you should be aware of this if your workspace contains sensitive or confidential information.
Personally, that wasn’t a concern because I don’t really use Google Chat for anything sensitive or data-heavy. So, in my case, it felt like a safe and practical way to experiment with what Claude Cowork could actually do in a real-world setup.
- Developer
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Anthropic PBC
- Price model
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Free, subscription available
Claude is an advanced artificial intelligence assistant developed by Anthropic. Built on Constitutional AI principles, it excels at complex reasoning, sophisticated writing, and professional-grade coding assistance.
The end of repetitive chaos
I won’t lie, setting up automation on Claude Cowork was fun. It feels almost effortless once you get past the initial setup. You plan it once, define what you want clearly, and from there it just runs on its own in the background. That part alone feels a bit unreal, but in a weirdly good way.
However, it’s still an AI agent, not a flawless system. So a bit of patience and flexibility is part of the deal. Overall, it has been time well spent for me. More than anything, it’s changed how I think about repetitive tasks. I can already see myself building more of these small automations for day-to-day work, because this feels like the kind of AI I actually want in my workflow.