5 ways Kimi Work helps knowledge workers
5 ways Kimi Work Beta helps knowledge workers research, analyze files, browse the web, and draft long deliverables.

Kimi Work Beta helps knowledge workers research, analyze files, browse the web, and draft long deliverables.
Kimi Work Beta is built for people who spend their days moving between notes, files, browser tabs, and reports. The beta already supports up to 300 sub-agents in one task, which hints at how far it can go on complex work.
| Item | What it does | Notable detail |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Research and strategy | Turns open-ended questions into structured investigations | Can build a custom Skill from the findings |
| 2. Data cleaning and charts | Processes local datasets and makes visuals | Useful for research and paper prep |
| 3. Browser-based work | Uses the web through Kimi WebBridge | Can log in and inspect subscribed dashboards |
| 4. Long-form deliverables | Drafts reports, decks, and client materials | Example output reaches 128 pages |
| 5. Multi-agent execution | Splits work across many sub-agents | Supports up to 300 sub-agents |
1. Research and strategy
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Kimi Work starts with the kind of task that usually eats a morning: gathering sources, comparing claims, and turning scattered notes into a plan. In the beta example, it can research Buffett’s last 10 years of holdings, summarize the strategy, then package that research into a reusable Skill.

This makes it useful for people who need a repeatable research loop, not just a one-off answer. Instead of stopping at a summary, it can move into action and set up the next round of work.
- Research a topic from scratch
- Summarize patterns and decision rules
- Create a Skill from the findings
- Reuse that Skill on new data
2. Data cleaning and charts
For researchers and analysts, Kimi Work can take local datasets, clean them, surface the key patterns, and turn them into charts. The source example points to a city computing workflow, but the same flow fits lab data, survey exports, and simulation results.
The value here is less about flashy output and more about removing the tedious middle steps. You give it raw files, and it can help shape them into something ready for a paper, slide, or internal review.
- Clean local CSV or spreadsheet data
- Summarize feature patterns
- Generate academic-style charts
- Support paper drafting with processed evidence
3. Browser-based work
Kimi Work includes Kimi WebBridge, which lets it use a browser in a way that looks closer to how a person would work than a script would. That means it can visit sites, inspect logged-in dashboards, and gather information from web tools that are not exposed through a simple API.

This matters for office work because much of the real world still lives behind tabs and subscriptions. If your job depends on web research, admin portals, or market data sites, browser control can save a lot of copy-paste time.
Example flow: open browser -> sign in -> inspect dashboard -> collect notes -> fold findings into report4. Long-form deliverables
One of the clearest uses for Kimi Work is document production. The beta can combine local files, web research, and specialized Skills to produce long deliverables such as reports and presentation decks. In the source, a cross-border commerce workflow ends in a 128-page market analysis report and a PPT generated from it.
That makes it a fit for teams that need polished output, not just bullet points. If your work ends in a memo, proposal, client deck, or internal brief, Kimi Work is aimed at that handoff step.
- Market research reports
- Client-facing presentations
- Proposal drafts
- Document-to-deck conversion
5. Multi-agent execution
The most distinctive part of Kimi Work is its multi-agent setup. The beta can create a team of up to 300 sub-agents for harder jobs, which means it can split work across many parallel tracks instead of doing everything in one pass.
That design is useful when a task has many branches: one agent gathers sources, another checks data, another formats the output, and another assembles the final package. It is also the reason the product can handle longer jobs without feeling like a single-threaded assistant.
- Task decomposition
- Parallel execution
- Tool calls across many steps
- Long-running work sessions
How to decide
If your work is mostly research, file wrangling, web lookup, and document assembly, Kimi Work is the best fit. It is especially appealing if you want one tool that can move from raw inputs to a finished report or deck without forcing you to stitch together many apps.
If you mainly need coding help, Kimi Code is the closer match. If you need a general desktop agent for knowledge work, especially with browser use and multi-step delivery, Kimi Work Beta is the one to try first.
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