What is Calendly?
Calendly is a email & calendar tool. With OSP.net, your AI agent connects to it directly so it can act on your behalf instead of just answering questions about it.
What your OSP agent can do with Calendly
- List your upcoming scheduled events
- Look up an invitee's details and booking link
- Read your event types (your bookable meeting links)
How to connect Calendly
- In Calendly, open Integrations & apps → API & webhooks → Personal access tokens, and click Generate new token. Give it a name and copy the token (shown once). calendly.com → Integrations → API & webhooks
- Paste the token here and Connect. Your agent reads your scheduled events and booking links with it. Calendly Docs: API
Security: The token acts as your Calendly account — it can read your events and invitees. Revoke it any time from the same API & webhooks page.
Who uses Calendly with OSP
These roles commonly connect Calendly to their OSP agent:
For startup foundersFor solopreneursFor real-estate agentsFor consultantsFor coachsFor recruitersFor lawyersFor freelancersFor financial advisorsFor executive assistants
Related email & calendar integrations
Frequently asked questions
- Can OSP.net connect to Calendly?
- Yes. Calendly is a native OSP.net integration — you bring your own Calendly key or token, paste it in your dashboard, and your agent restarts live.
- What can my OSP agent do with Calendly?
- Your agent checks your Calendly booking links and scheduled events, and looks up who booked. Specifically: List your upcoming scheduled events; Look up an invitee's details and booking link; Read your event types (your bookable meeting links).
- Is Calendly a native integration or via the gateway?
- Calendly is a native, baked-in integration. You connect it with your own credentials, which are stored in an encrypted vault and injected only at runtime.
- Is my Calendly data secure with OSP.net?
- Yes. Your Calendly credentials live in an encrypted secrets vault, are injected only at container runtime, and are never written to disk in plaintext or used to train any model. Each customer runs in a fully isolated instance.