Reclaim defends your calendar; Fasrad works inside it — books the meeting, writes the prep brief from past email, and sends the follow-up.
An agent that books the meeting, writes the prep brief from past email, and sends the follow-up — instead of just auto-rescheduling a focus block.
Reclaim.ai is good at one thing: it looks at your Google Calendar, finds the gaps, and slots in habits, focus time, and buffers so your week defends itself. If your problem is that meetings eat the hours you meant to spend heads-down, it solves that.
But the calendar is where the work shows up, not where it gets done. Someone emails asking for 30 minutes next week. Reclaim can hold a slot open for it — it can't read the thread, propose three real times, send the invite, and pull together what you said last time you spoke. That part still lands on you.
Fasrad is an agent, not a time-blocking layer. It has the calendar, but it also has your inbox, a CRM, web browse, and the ability to run a task on a schedule or fire when a new email lands. So the same request — "can we meet next week?" — turns into a checked-availability reply, a sent invite, and a one-paragraph brief on who this person is, without you opening a tab.
Where Fasrad pulls ahead:
If you want smart auto-scheduling of recurring habits and nothing else, Reclaim is leaner and built for exactly that. If you want the thing that handles the email, the booking, and the prep around the meeting, that's a different tool — and that's this one.
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Not in the same automatic, defragment-your-week way. Reclaim's core trick is continuously reshuffling habits, focus blocks, and buffers around new meetings — that's its purpose and it does it well. Fasrad will create, move, and protect events on request and on a schedule, but it doesn't run a constant rebalancing engine on your free time. If habit auto-blocking is your only need, Reclaim is the tighter fit.
It sends it. The agent checks availability on your Google Calendar, proposes real openings, and on your confirmation creates the event and sends the invite to the other party. It then logs the meeting in the CRM so the next interaction has context.
On a schedule you set — say 7am daily — the agent looks at the day's external meetings, finds the recent email threads and CRM notes for each attendee, and writes a short brief: open items, what was promised, what they last asked. It can deliver it by email or Telegram.
If Reclaim is purely keeping your focus time intact, switching for that alone isn't worth it — keep it. The case for Fasrad is when the work around the calendar is the bottleneck: the booking emails, the prep, the follow-ups, the leads from your site. Many people run Reclaim for habit-blocking and add Fasrad for the inbox-and-booking side; they don't conflict.
Yes. Embed it as a chatbot with a script tag and visitors can ask for a call. It checks your calendar, offers times, books the slot, and captures the lead's details — with rate limiting and automatic redaction of anything sensitive in the chat.
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime Setup takes about four minutes — connect your calendar and inbox, describe how you want meetings handled, and it starts working. It's in public beta right now.