For
Every client, in parallel.
Loom Conductor runs six real Claude Code CLI sessions at once, so one client's sprint never queues behind another's. Brief a mission, watch the fleet work, review the diffs, deliver.
Agency work
Built for billable hours.
An agency's bottleneck is rarely ideas. It is the queue. Loom turns the queue into a fleet: a Conductor model plans each goal into tasks, dispatches them across six terminals, and verifies the work before it counts.
One workspace per client
The workspace authorization registry scopes every file, git, and shell operation to the repo you picked. Switch workspaces and the explorer, source control, and all six sessions switch with you.
Repeatable missions
The brief that shipped one client's accessibility pass ships the next one too. Reuse patterns for audits, refactors, test sweeps, and doc passes across engagements.
Review-first delivery
Nothing reaches a client until you have read it. The full git graph and hunk-by-hunk diffs make final review a real step, not a formality.
Repeatable missions
Write the brief once.
A goal becomes a mission DAG: tasks with dependencies, live activity strips per terminal, and verification before anything is marked done. Save the briefs that work and run them again on the next engagement. See mission recipes for patterns worth keeping.
# the same brief, a new client repo
Audit every screen for accessibility issues.
Fix them screen by screen, add tests,
and write a per-page summary for the client.Delivery
What handoff looks like.
Watch or step in
Every pane is a real Claude Code TUI. Open one and type when a task needs your judgment, and press shift+tab to cycle that terminal's permission mode.
Stalls handled
Auto-accept presses only the safe affirmative on permission prompts, the watchdog nudges drifting sessions, and usage limits rotate to the next pooled Claude account.
Verified before billed
The Conductor re-checks work before a task counts as done. Review the result in the git graph, then push and invoice.
Hand it the work.
Walk away.
macOS, Linux, and Windows. Around 13 MB. Free and open source.