Deliverables
- Routine workflow patrol and health checks
- Alert triage and incident handling support
- Monthly performance and risk summary
Managed Service Intake
This lane is for teams that want stable OpenClaw operations without building an internal reliability team first. Instead of reacting to outages ad hoc, you get routine patrol, alerting, incident handling, and a monthly report cadence. Use this page to submit a short intake and get a scoped managed-service plan.
Price Range
$300-$1,500 / month
Onboarding
2 business days
Core Output
Patrol + alert + monthly report
Ops managed service is a monthly support lane for teams running OpenClaw workflows that need predictable reliability. It covers routine operational checks, incident response coordination, and reporting discipline. The goal is to reduce downtime and remove operational noise from your product and growth teams.
This is not a pure monitoring package. It is an execution support lane that turns operations into a repeatable rhythm. Teams that adopt this model typically reduce ad hoc firefighting and gain clearer ownership when incidents occur.
$300-$1,500 / month
Pricing depends on number of active workflows and required response depth.
2-day onboarding
Day 1 baseline + Day 2 monitoring and incident playbook activation.
Monitor workflow health, signal drift, and queue bottlenecks before they become incidents.
Triage and coordinate first-response actions with explicit ownership and escalation rules.
Summarize reliability posture, recurring failures, and next-month hardening priorities.
Service outcomes are strongest when teams provide clear ownership and baseline goals during intake. If access boundaries and escalation rules are unclear, incident response quality declines even with strong tooling.
Start with current operational loss: downtime impact, response latency, and manual firefighting hours each month. Then estimate post-service reduction in incident frequency and recovery time. A practical formula is managed-service value = (incident cost avoided + time saved) - monthly service fee.
Keep assumptions conservative and track monthly deltas. If incident frequency and ad hoc coordination hours both decline, managed service usually pays back through more reliable output and better team focus.
Priority Submission
Fill only four fields and we will map your needs to the right service lane with pricing range and timeline.
Email Service TeamA launch flow depended on stable nightly automation. Managed patrol surfaced a failure pattern before launch day and resolved it within the response window. Result: no launch-blocking outage.
Multiple owners shared one workflow lane with unclear escalation. Managed operations introduced response contracts and reduced resolution loops. Result: faster recovery and clearer accountability.
A team had recurring small incidents that drained engineering time. Monthly reports highlighted root causes and hardening priorities. Result: fewer repeats and improved workflow confidence.
The service includes routine patrol, alert triage, incident support, and monthly reporting so teams can run OpenClaw workflows with more predictable reliability.
No. Managed operations is a monthly reliability lane. Setup and security audit are complementary one-time services and can be combined for stronger outcomes.
Compare your current incident and firefighting cost against monthly service fee. If operational interruptions are expensive or frequent, managed service usually pays back quickly.
Yes. Most teams start with one or two critical workflows and expand support scope after the first month of stabilized operations.
Provide clear ownership, baseline pain points, and expected timeline. Clean intake data lets us define sharper response playbooks and KPIs.
Yes. Teams often combine managed operations with security audit and private catalog setup to cover both one-time hardening and ongoing reliability.