Key Takeaways
- A single Hermes instance can serve multiple users with different needs through WhatsApp's familiar interface.
- Proactive agent behaviour unlocks workflows users wouldn't think to initiate themselves.
- Deploying inside an app the family already uses removes the adoption barrier entirely.
The Problem: Three Subscriptions, One Household
The family was spending $200 a month on ChatGPT accounts across three members — each with different needs, each maintaining separate conversations with no shared context or continuity.
The solution wasn't to find a cheaper subscription. It was to run a single Hermes instance accessible to all three via the messaging app they already use every day: WhatsApp.
WhatsApp as the Interface
The key insight is that non-technical family members don't want to open a new app or visit a website. They want to message. Hermes's WhatsApp gateway meant the agent appeared in their existing chat list like any other contact.
Conversations are isolated per user within the same gateway process, so each family member gets their own context without seeing each other's history.
Proactive Behaviours Changed Everything
The biggest surprise was what happened when proactive agent behaviours kicked in. The agent began surfacing relevant information, suggesting follow-ups, and initiating check-ins — workflows the family hadn't asked for but immediately found valuable.
“unlocked a whole new world for them, just because it lives inside WhatsApp”
What This Shows About Agent Design
This story illustrates a principle that matters for any agent deployment: distribution through a familiar interface multiplies adoption. A capable agent that lives somewhere users already are will get used. One that requires opening a new app often won't.
For teams building agents with Hermes, the messaging gateway is often the highest-leverage deployment target — not the terminal.
Story sourced from the official Nous Research Hermes user-stories page. Original author: @EXM7777.