Send One Message to Telegram, Discord, Slack, and WhatsApp at Once
Cross-platform messaging from a single command, plus AI-powered PDF analysis. Build the multi-channel workflow you've been duct-taping together.
How many tabs do you have open right now to send the same message to different platforms? Telegram, Discord, Slack, WhatsApp, maybe Zalo if you’re in Southeast Asia.
Copy. Paste. Switch tab. Paste. Format differently because Discord uses markdown but WhatsApp doesn’t. Forget one platform. Get a “why wasn’t this posted in Slack?” message 20 minutes later.
OpenClaw now sends messages across all your platforms from a single command. And while we were at it, we added AI-powered PDF analysis. Because why not.
The cross-platform play
Here’s what actually happens when you set this up:
You write your message once. OpenClaw sends it to Telegram, Discord, Slack, WhatsApp, and Zalo — formatted correctly for each platform. One command. Five platforms. Zero copy-paste.
This is the kind of thing that sounds trivial until you realize you’ve been wasting 15 minutes every time you post an announcement.
What I’d build with this tomorrow
A product launch sequence. You’ve got a new feature dropping. You need to tell your Discord community, your Telegram channel, your Slack workspace for beta testers, and your WhatsApp group for VIP customers.
Before: write the announcement → post in Discord → reformat for Telegram → copy to Slack → summarize for WhatsApp → inevitably forget one platform.
After: write it once, send everywhere. Then spend the time you saved actually talking to the people who reply.
A daily standup bot. Your team is split across Slack and Telegram (because of course they are). The bot collects standups in both places and cross-posts a summary. No one has to switch apps. No one misses context.
An incident alert system. Something goes down. OpenClaw blasts the alert to every channel your team uses. No single point of failure. No “I didn’t see it because I was in Telegram, not Slack.”
The PDF thing is quietly powerful
This release also added AI-powered PDF analysis. Upload a document, and OpenClaw extracts text, tables, and key information using AI.
Why does this matter? Because PDFs are where business information goes to hide.
Contract review. Upload a vendor contract, get a plain-English summary of the key terms. “Payment net-30, auto-renews annually, 90-day cancellation notice.” Your lawyer still reviews it, but you know what you’re looking at before you schedule the call.
Invoice processing. Build an assistant that reads uploaded invoices and answers questions about them. “What’s the total? When is it due? Is this the same amount as last month?” Useful for freelancers, useful for accounting teams, useful for anyone who’s ever squinted at a PDF trying to find a number.
Data extraction pipelines. Got a stack of PDF reports from a vendor? Extract the data and feed it into your workflows automatically. Turn static documents into structured data without manual entry.
The security upgrade you won’t notice
All credentials in OpenClaw are now encrypted and validated before your app starts. This isn’t a flashy feature — it’s the kind of thing that means you’ll never have a “the Slack webhook URL was malformed and we didn’t notice for three days” incident.
The bottom line
This release is for anyone who’s tired of being a human message router. If you’re copy-pasting the same content across platforms, or manually extracting data from PDFs, or managing credentials in a spreadsheet — there’s a better way now.
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