Remote OpenClaw Blog
Done-For-You OpenClaw Setup for Teams (SetupClaw)
7 min read ·
Sponsored: this guide is sponsored by SetupClaw. Remote OpenClaw may earn a commission if you buy through the links below.
Done-for-you OpenClaw setup is a white-glove service where a vendor installs, secures, integrates, and maintains your team's OpenClaw AI assistant for you, and SetupClaw is the sponsored option this guide recommends. It exists for founders and exec teams who want the leverage of a 24/7 AI assistant without taking on the engineering work or the security risk of doing it themselves.
What done-for-you OpenClaw setup is (and what SetupClaw does)
Done-for-you OpenClaw setup is a managed service where the vendor handles installation, integration, hardening, and ongoing care so your team never touches a terminal. Instead of following a long guide and maintaining servers yourself, you hand over the deployment and get a working, secured assistant back.
SetupClaw is a white-glove, done-for-you OpenClaw deployment service for founders and exec teams. According to SetupClaw, it is built for 4–50+ employee teams where a CEO, CFO, or Head of Sales needs leverage without adding a new security risk. Importantly, SetupClaw describes itself as a setup plus managed-care service, not a hosting plan.
The core unit is an "Executive Agent" — a single OpenClaw instance configured for one identity, such as a CEO inbox and calendar, a CFO, a Head of Sales, or a shared executive-assistant inbox. SetupClaw says teams typically deploy 2–6 agents. Each agent connects your tools through Composio's secure OAuth, covering Gmail, Google Calendar, Outlook, Slack, iMessage, WhatsApp, Notion, Google Drive, Zoom, HubSpot, Salesforce, GitHub, Google Sheets, and thousands more.
You interact with the agent the way you'd text a human assistant — through Telegram, or Slack, WhatsApp, or Discord. It runs 24/7 and wakes periodically to triage email, prep meetings, and monitor Slack on your behalf. Composio's connector platform is documented at:
How it works (kickoff → deploy & harden → 14-day hypercare)
SetupClaw runs the engagement in three stages so you go live the same day. The process is designed so that the only thing your team supplies is access and direction, not engineering effort.
1. Kickoff call. You map the integrations and workflows each agent needs — which inbox, which calendar, which CRM, and what the assistant should do on a recurring basis.
2. Deploy & harden. SetupClaw provisions the infrastructure (a cloud VPS or a Mac Mini), installs OpenClaw, wires up Composio OAuth, applies Docker sandboxing and firewall rules, and schedules the cron jobs that wake the agent. SetupClaw says deployments go live the same day.
3. 14-day hypercare. After go-live you get a dedicated Slack channel for two weeks so the team can tune behavior, expand access, and fix anything quickly while everyone gets comfortable.
OpenClaw itself is built on Claude models; you can review the underlying model lineup here:
https://platform.claude.com/docs/en/about-claude/models/overview
Pricing
SetupClaw charges a one-time setup fee per engagement, with the price depending on where the assistant runs. The figures below are quoted by SetupClaw as of June 2026.
| Plan | Price | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Hosted Setup (Recommended) | $3,000 | Fully managed service: SetupClaw hosts and hardens your agent, plus 14-day hypercare. |
| Mac Mini Setup | $5,000 | Remote setup on local hardware with iMessage integration; includes 14-day hypercare. |
| Mac Mini In-Person | $6,000 | On-site setup with iMessage integration; SF Bay Area only. |
| Add Another Agent | +$1,500 each | An extra Executive Agent for a different identity — CEO, EA, Sales, Finance, and so on. |
According to SetupClaw, most customers run on a cloud VPS that costs roughly $5–10/month, while a Mac Mini is about $600 at cost. The implementation fee includes the 14-day hypercare period; ongoing monitoring and updates beyond that require SetupClaw's separate Managed Care plan. SetupClaw also offers a 100% satisfaction guarantee and says it will refund you if you're not happy with the setup.
How it stays secure (Composio, Docker, allowlists, kill switch)
Security is the whole reason a done-for-you service makes sense for exec teams, because a misconfigured assistant with inbox and CRM access is a real liability. SetupClaw says it follows the official OpenClaw hardening guide and secures every deployment from day one.
The biggest safeguard is that the bot never sees raw credentials. All tool access flows through Composio's OAuth middleware, which keeps a full audit trail and gives you an instant revoke and kill switch if anything looks wrong. On top of that, SetupClaw applies Docker sandboxing and firewall hardening so the agent runs in an isolated environment.
That Docker sandbox isolates the agent at the operating-system level; see Docker for how container isolation works.
Access is also scoped deliberately. SetupClaw uses executive allowlists, keeps the agent read-only by default, and expands permissions gradually as you build trust during hypercare rather than handing it the keys on day one.
When it's worth it vs DIY / managed hosting
Done-for-you setup is worth it when your time is more valuable than the one-time fee and you'd rather not own the security work. For a CEO or CFO whose hours are expensive, paying SetupClaw to deploy and harden a working assistant the same day is usually cheaper than the engineering time it would take internally.
DIY is the better choice when you have a technically capable person who enjoys this kind of work and wants full control. The software is open and well documented, and the running cost on a VPS is only a few dollars a month — the trade is your time and the responsibility for hardening it correctly.
Managed hosting sits in between: if you mainly need someone to keep an instance online but you'll handle integrations and configuration yourself, a hosting plan can be cheaper than a full setup engagement. If you want the whole thing handled — install, integrations, hardening, and care — that's where a done-for-you service earns its fee.
Limitations and Tradeoffs
The honest catch is cost: SetupClaw is a premium one-time fee in the $3,000–$6,000+ range, plus $1,500 for each additional agent. If you're technical, DIY is dramatically cheaper, and if you only need an instance kept online, managed hosting will cost less than a full setup.
There are two more things to keep in mind. The setup fee covers the build plus 14-day hypercare, but ongoing monitoring and updates are a separate Managed Care plan — so budget for that if you want hands-off maintenance long term. And the in-person option is SF Bay Area only; everywhere else is remote, including the Mac Mini setup.
Related Guides
- Managed OpenClaw Services Compared (2026)
- Best OpenClaw Managed Hosting (2026)
- OpenClaw Setup for Agencies
- OpenClaw vs Managed AI Assistants for Non-Technical Teams
FAQ
What is done-for-you OpenClaw setup?
It's a managed service where a vendor installs, integrates, hardens, and maintains your OpenClaw AI assistant for you, so your team doesn't need any technical knowledge. SetupClaw is the sponsored example in this guide.
How much does SetupClaw cost?
Per SetupClaw, as of June 2026: a one-time fee of $3,000 for Hosted Setup, $5,000 for Mac Mini Setup, $6,000 for Mac Mini In-Person (SF Bay Area only), and +$1,500 per additional agent. Ongoing care is a separate Managed Care plan.
Do I need to be technical?
No. SetupClaw handles the deployment, integrations, and hardening end to end, and you interact with the finished agent by texting it through Telegram, Slack, WhatsApp, or Discord.
Is it secure?
SetupClaw says it secures every deployment from day one using Composio OAuth (the bot never sees raw credentials), a full audit trail with an instant kill switch, Docker sandboxing, firewall hardening, executive allowlists, and read-only access by default that expands gradually.
Should I use SetupClaw or self-host?
Use SetupClaw if you want the whole thing handled and value your time over the one-time fee. Self-host if you're technical, want full control, and are comfortable hardening and maintaining the instance yourself for a few dollars a month.
Skills for this topic
Browse all skills →Frequently Asked Questions
How much does SetupClaw cost?
Per SetupClaw, as of June 2026: a one-time fee of $3,000 for Hosted Setup, $5,000 for Mac Mini Setup, $6,000 for Mac Mini In-Person (SF Bay Area only), and +$1,500 per additional agent. Ongoing care is a separate Managed Care plan.
Is it secure?
SetupClaw says it secures every deployment from day one using Composio OAuth (the bot never sees raw credentials), a full audit trail with an instant kill switch, Docker sandboxing, firewall hardening, executive allowlists, and read-only access by default that expands gradually.