VibeyDocs

Agent Collaboration

Your agents can ask each other questions, delegate tasks, and brainstorm together, all inside your conversation. You see the entire exchange happen in real time.

Your agents do not just wait for you to tell them what to do one by one. During a conversation, an agent can reach out to another agent on your team. Ask them a question, hand them a task, or pull them into a brainstorm. You see the whole exchange happen live in your chat as a collapsible thread.

Three Ways Agents Collaborate

Ask

One agent asks another a question and gets a single answer back. The target agent thinks, responds, and the conversation continues.

When it happens: You're talking to Vibey and say "ask the copywriter to review this headline." Vibey sends the question to your copywriter, the copywriter responds with feedback, and Vibey picks up from there.

Example prompts:

  • "Ask the analyst what our competitors are doing in this space"
  • "Check with the designer if this color palette works for our brand"
  • "Have the CFO review these pricing numbers"

Delegate

One agent hands a full task to another agent. The target agent uses their tools to do the work (build a funnel, write an email, generate an image) and returns the result.

When it happens: You're talking to Vibey and say "have the developer build a landing page for Q2." Vibey delegates the task, the developer uses their tools to build it, and the deliverable appears in your conversation.

Example prompts:

  • "Have the designer create a logo for this campaign"
  • "Delegate the competitor research to the analyst"
  • "Get the copywriter to write 5 LinkedIn posts from this article"

Brainstorm

Multiple agents discuss a topic together in rounds. Each agent sees what the others said and adds their perspective. Ideas build on each other across rounds.

When it happens: You say "brainstorm Q3 positioning strategy with the copywriter, analyst, and brand manager." Each agent contributes in turn, building on what the others said. After the rounds complete, you have a multi-perspective discussion to work from.

Example prompts:

  • "Brainstorm our go-to-market approach with the analyst, copywriter, and ads manager"
  • "Have the whole marketing team brainstorm content ideas for next month"
  • "Run a 3-round brainstorm on pricing strategy with the CFO and brand manager"

What You See in the Chat

When agents collaborate, you see a conversation thread appear inline in your chat. It shows:

  • Who started the exchange and what they asked
  • The target agent thinking (if reasoning is visible)
  • Any tools the agent runs during the work
  • The agent's response
  • For brainstorms: each participant's contribution, round by round

The thread is collapsible. Click to expand the full exchange or collapse it to keep your chat clean.

What Happens When the Agent Isn't on Your Team

If the target agent hasn't been hired yet, you'll see a suggestion to hire them. Approve the hire, and the agent is added to your team and assigned to the campaign automatically. The original request runs after the hire completes.

If the agent is hired but not assigned to the current campaign, you'll see a message asking you to assign them first.

How It Works with Campaigns

Agent collaboration uses the campaign context from your current conversation. When a copywriter is asked to review a headline, they pull from that campaign's knowledge (the offer, the audience, the brand theme). The same copywriter asked the same question in a different campaign would give a different answer because the context is different.

Agents also remember past exchanges. If you've already asked the analyst a question earlier in the same conversation, the next time they're consulted they see what they said before and can build on it.

Limits

  • Agents cannot delegate to each other in a chain. If you delegate to an agent, that agent cannot then delegate to a third agent. One level deep only.
  • Brainstorms support 2 or more agents and up to 5 rounds.

Agent collaboration is most powerful when your agents have good brain content and skills. A brainstorm between well-trained agents produces dramatically better ideas than one between agents working from generic knowledge.