5 Fun Projects Using OpenClaw
Turn OpenClaw into a powerful personal assistant with these 5 hands-on projects from beginner to advanced.

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# Introduction
Before we start the projects, let’s quickly understand what OpenClaw is and why it is useful to learn. OpenClaw is an open-source personal AI assistant that runs on your own device and connects to apps like WhatsApp and Telegram. It is built to handle real tasks like emails, scheduling, and automation, so you are not just trying prompts, but actually building something useful.
In this "5 Fun Projects" series, you will learn by doing. The projects start simple and slowly become more advanced so you can build your skills step by step. If you want to know more about OpenClaw, you can read my other article: OpenClaw Explained: The Free AI Agent Tool Going Viral Already in 2026.
# 1. Building a Chat-Based Assistant on Telegram and WhatsApp
This video, Connect OpenClaw to WhatsApp and Telegram, is one of the best places to start because it turns OpenClaw into something you can use from your phone right away. You learn how to connect messaging channels, test conversations, and make your assistant available in the apps you already check every day. It also introduces an important OpenClaw concept: channel security. OpenClaw supports direct message (DM) pairing, where unknown senders must be approved before their messages are processed, so this project teaches both usability and safe setup at the same time. The main skill you learn here is channel integration.
# 2. Running OpenClaw Locally with Ollama
This Local OpenClaw & Ollama in 27 minutes tutorial is a great project if you want to keep your setup private and low cost. Instead of relying entirely on hosted application programming interfaces (APIs), you run OpenClaw with a local model through Ollama, which helps you understand how model routing works in a self-hosted workflow. This project is especially useful because it teaches the local-first side of OpenClaw: how to make your assistant feel more private, more controllable, and more independent of external services. The main skill you learn here is working with local models and self-hosted AI infrastructure.
# 3. Automating Your Email and Calendar with Google Workspace
This project is where OpenClaw starts to feel more like a real assistant. In How to Make OpenClaw Read Emails and Book Meetings, you connect OpenClaw to your Google Workspace account so it can help with inbox management and scheduling. That lines up closely with OpenClaw’s own positioning around clearing inboxes, sending emails, and managing calendars. What makes this project valuable is that it teaches you how OpenClaw becomes useful through tools and skills rather than chat alone. The main skill you learn here is productivity integration, giving your assistant access to real work systems so it can act on information instead of only talking about it.
# 4. Automating Web Tasks with OpenClaw’s Browser Tools
This NEW OpenClaw AI Browser Agent: Automate ANYTHING? tutorial is a good next step because it shows OpenClaw moving beyond chat and into direct action on the web. You learn how to connect browser tools so your assistant can open pages, navigate websites, click through interfaces, and help with repetitive online tasks. This project is especially valuable because it introduces one of the most practical sides of OpenClaw: turning an assistant into something that can actually operate software for you. The main skill you learn here is browser automation and web task execution.
# 5. Deploying OpenClaw Securely on a Virtual Private Server for 24/7 Use
Once you have tested OpenClaw locally, the next fun challenge is making it always available. This How to Setup OpenClaw Securely That Runs 24/7 tutorial focuses on deploying OpenClaw on a virtual private server (VPS) so it can stay online even when your own machine is off. This project matters because deployment is where many beginner setups break down — you have to think about uptime, access control, and how to expose your assistant without making it reckless or unsafe. OpenClaw’s own documentation emphasizes security defaults like DM gating and pairing for inbound messages, so a secure VPS setup is a very practical final project. The main skill you learn here is deployment and operational security.
# Wrapping Up
These five projects build your OpenClaw skills one layer at a time. You start by connecting real chat channels, then move to local models, integrate productivity tools, automate workflows, and finally deploy your assistant for continuous use. Each project focuses on a practical skill that builds toward a more capable system. By the end, you are not just learning what OpenClaw is, but you are learning how to turn it into something genuinely useful. Now it is your turn to try these projects and start building your own AI assistant.
Kanwal Mehreen is a machine learning engineer and a technical writer with a profound passion for data science and the intersection of AI with medicine. She co-authored the ebook "Maximizing Productivity with ChatGPT". As a Google Generation Scholar 2022 for APAC, she champions diversity and academic excellence. She's also recognized as a Teradata Diversity in Tech Scholar, Mitacs Globalink Research Scholar, and Harvard WeCode Scholar. Kanwal is an ardent advocate for change, having founded FEMCodes to empower women in STEM fields.