Connect Airtable to Relato and keep your content calendar in step across both tools.
What you can do
With Airtable connected, an agent can:
Mirror your content calendar between Relato and an Airtable base.
Write structured metadata such as status, owner, and publish date into records.
Read planning data back from Airtable into Relato when you work calendar-first.
Connect Airtable
In Relato open Settings > Integrations > MCP > Add account, paste the Airtable MCP URL, approve the OAuth prompt, and name the account. The name you give it prefixes Airtable's tools in the agent tool picker. Then attach the Airtable tools plus the Relato query and project tools to an agent and set a trigger, which can be a project stage change, a schedule, or a manual run. For the full walkthrough see Connect any MCP to Relato.
A good first agent
Try a calendar mirror. Create an agent, attach the Airtable tools and the Relato query and project tools, and set the trigger to a daily schedule. Instruct it to read your active projects from Relato and upsert a matching row in your Airtable calendar base for each one, with title, stage, owner, and target date. Match on the project link so it updates rows rather than duplicating them. Run it once by hand, check the base, then leave the schedule on.
A note on OAuth
Relato's MCP integration is OAuth-based. You can connect Airtable if it runs an OAuth-capable MCP server that Relato can reach. If a public OAuth MCP for Airtable does not exist yet, tell us at [email protected] and we will help you find a path.
FAQ
Which base and table does it use? You name the base and table in the agent instructions, so the agent writes only where you point it.
Can it sync both ways? Yes. One agent can write Relato data into Airtable, and another can read Airtable planning data back into Relato.
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Connect any MCP to Relato
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If you need help, message us in the Relato Slack community or email [email protected].