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17 de maio de 2026
Intercom, now called Fin, launches an AI agent whose only job is managing another AI agent

Intercom, now called Fin, launches an AI agent whose only job is managing another AI agent

The company formerly known as Intercom just did something that no major customer service platform has attempted at scale: it built an AI agent whose sole job is to manage another AI agent. Fin Operator, announced Thursday at a live event in San Francisco, is a new AI-powered system designed specifically for the back-office teams that configure, monitor, and improve Fin, the company's customer-facing AI agent. Rather than replacing human support agents — which is what Fin itself does on the front lines — Operator targets the growing army of support operations professionals who spend their days updating knowledge bases, debugging conversation failures, and combing through performance dashboards. "Fin is an agent for your customers," Brian Donohue, the company's VP of Product, told VentureBeat in an exclusive interview ahead of the launch. "Operator is an agent for your support ops team. This is an agent for the back office team who manages Fin and then manages their human agents." The announcement arrives at a pivotal moment for the company. Just two days ago, CEO Eoghan McCabe formally renamed the 15-year-old company from Intercom to Fin — an aggressive signal that the AI agent is now the business, not merely a feature of it. Fin recently crossed $100 million in annual recurring revenue and is growing at 3.5x. The broader company generates $400 million in ARR, meaning the AI agent now accounts for roughly a quarter of total revenue and virtually all of its growth. Fin Operator enters early access for Pro-tier users starting today, with general availability planned for summer 2026. The invisible crisis behind every AI customer service deployment As companies push their AI agents to handle more conversations — Fin alone now resolves more than two million customer issues each week across 8,000 customers globally, including Anthropic, DoorDash, and Mercury — the operational complexity behind those systems has exploded. Someone has to keep the knowledge base current. Someone has to figure out why the bot entered an infinite loop with a frustrated customer last Tuesday. Someone has to analyze whether the automation rate dropped after a product update. That "someone" is the support operations team, and according to Donohue, they are drowning. "Almost every support ops team is already doing data analysis and knowledge management — that's table stakes today," Donohue said. "Where teams struggle is the agent builder work. It's a new skill set, and most don't have enough time for it. They get their first iteration up and running, and then they get stuck." The problem is structural. AI customer agents are not static software. They require constant tuning — a process that looks more like training a new employee than configuring a SaaS tool. Each customer conversation is a potential source of failure, and each failure requires diagnosis, root-cause analysis, a configuration fix, testing, and monitoring. It is tedious, technical, and relentless. Fin Operator aims to collapse that entire loop into a conversational interface. How one AI system plays data analyst, knowledge manager, and debugger all at once Donohue described Operator as filling three distinct roles that typically consume the bandwidth of support ops teams: expert data analyst, expert knowledge manager, and expert agent builder. As a data analyst, Operator can field high-level questions like, "How did my team perform last week?" and generate on-the-fly charts, trend reports, and drill-down analyses across all of the data already stored in Intercom's platform. The company has loaded Operator with contextual knowledge about customer-specific data attributes to help it interpret workspace-specific metrics accurately. As a knowledge manager, Operator can ingest a product update — say, a three-page PDF describing a new feature — and autonomously search the company's entire content library to identify what needs to change. It finds gaps, drafts new articles, suggests edits to existing ones, and presents everything in a diff-style review interface. The underlying search engine is the same semantic search system that Intercom has built and optimized for Fin over more than two years. "On that knowledge management front, you just have such a time compression of something that would take, certainly hours, sometimes days, into the space of about 10 minutes," Donohue said. As an agent builder, Operator introduces what the company calls a "debugger skill." Support ops teams can paste in a link to a conversation where Fin misbehaved, and Operator will trace every step of Fin's internal reasoning, identify the root cause — often a piece of guidance that unintentionally creates a loop — propose a rewrite, back-test the change against the original conversation, and then suggest creating a production monitor to catch similar issues going forward. "This is literally what our professional services team does," Donohue explained. "You've written guidance that is unintentionally causing Fin to repeat itself — this happens a lot. You didn't realize it, but you never gave it an escape hatch." The 'pull request' safety net that keeps humans in control of AI changes One of the most consequential design decisions in Fin Operator is what the company calls its "proposal system" — a mechanism that functions like a pull request in software engineering. Every change that Operator recommends — whether it is an edit to a help article, a rewrite of an AI guidance rule, or the creation of a new QA monitor — appears as a proposal with a full diff view. Users can inspect, edit, and approve each change before it takes effect. Nothing goes live without a human clicking "Apply." "Right now, we're taking zero risk on this — Fin cannot make any changes to the system without human approval," Donohue emphasized. "Nothing goes live until a human clicks apply." This is a notable architectural choice. In a market increasingly enamored with fully autonomous AI systems, the company is deliberately keeping a human approval gate in place — at least for now. Donohue acknowledged this will evolve, but said the current moment demands caution: "It's too big a leap to just let Operator make changes automatically and then tell the

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