Lindy as a smart executive assistant that takes actions rather than answers questions is the right frame for evaluating it
The everyday work tasks being automated including email management, calendar scheduling, research and document handling are the categories where the distinction between answering and acting matters most. A tool that summarises an email for you to then respond to is less useful than one that drafts the response, flags it for your review and sends it after approval.
The multi-channel connectivity across email, Slack and Zoom being the workflow coverage that determines whether a Lindy handles a complete communication workflow or only part of it is the practical test. A single agent that monitors incoming email, drafts responses, updates the CRM and schedules follow-up meetings is a materially different capability from tools that handle each of those steps in isolation.
The 3,000-plus integrations being the ecosystem breadth that determines whether Lindy can connect to the specific tools in your existing stack is the evaluation starting point rather than the feature list. If the tools you rely on are not in the integration list the capability does not matter.
For knowledge workers who have deployed Lindy in a real workflow: what specific action chain does your most useful Lindy handle and how much manual oversight does it still require?