How to integrate Amcards MCP with Hermes

Amcards logo
Hermes logo
divider

Introduction

Hermes is a 24/7 autonomous agent that lives on your computer or server — it remembers what it learns and evolves as your usage grows.

This guide explains the easiest and most robust way to connect your Amcards account to Hermes. You can do this through either Composio Connect CLI or Composio Connect MCP. For personal use we recommend the CLI, but you won't go wrong with MCP either.

Also integrate Amcards with

What is Composio Connect?

Composio Connect is a consumer offering that lets anyone plug 1,000+ applications directly into their agent harness — including Hermes. It can:

  • Search and load tools from relevant toolkits on-demand, reducing context usage.
  • Chain multiple tools to accomplish complex workflows via a remote workbench, without excessive back-and-forth with the LLM.
  • Manage app authentication end-to-end with zero manual overhead.

Integrating Amcards with Hermes

Using Composio Connect CLI

1. Install the Composio CLI

Run the install script directly, or paste https://composio.dev/hermes into your Hermes chat box to have it installed for you.

bash
curl -fsSL https://composio.dev/install | bash
Hermes authenticating with Composio

2. Authenticate

Once the CLI is installed, ask Hermes to authenticate with Composio.

3. Connect to Amcards

Ask your agent to connect to Amcards, or simply request any Amcards-related task. Hermes will prompt you to authenticate and authorize access.

4. Done. You're all set with a new Amcards connection.


Using Composio Connect MCP

1. Get your MCP URL and API Key

Go to dashboard.composio.dev and copy your Connect MCP URL and API key.

Copy MCP URL and API key from Composio dashboard

2. Open the Hermes config file

bash
nano ~/.hermes/config.yaml

3. Add the Composio Connect MCP server

bash
mcp_servers:
  composio:
    url: "https://connect.composio.dev/mcp"
    headers:
      x-consumer-api-key: "YOUR_COMPOSIO_API_KEY"
    connect_timeout: 60
    timeout: 180

Save with Ctrl + O, Enter, then exit with Ctrl + X.

4. Restart your Hermes agent

Once restarted, ask your agent to connect to Amcards or request any Amcards-related task. It will prompt you to authenticate and authorize access.

5. Done!

What is the Amcards MCP server, and what's possible with it?

The Amcards MCP server is an implementation of the Model Context Protocol that connects your AI agent and assistants like Claude, Cursor, etc directly to your Amcards account. It provides structured and secure access to your card library and contact list, so your agent can retrieve cards, manage contacts, monitor campaigns, and streamline customer engagement on your behalf.

  • Card library management: Instantly retrieve a list of all greeting cards in your Amcards account so you can review, organize, or select cards for campaigns.
  • Comprehensive contact retrieval: Ask your agent to fetch your contact list—including names, emails, and details—making it easy to personalize outreach or update records.
  • Filtered contact lookup: Find specific contacts by searching with filters like last name, first name, or email, allowing you to target the right recipients quickly.
  • Campaign preparation and monitoring: Let your agent pull card and contact data to support mailing campaigns, track card activity, and optimize your customer connection strategy.

Supported Tools & Triggers

Tools
Get CardsThis tool retrieves a list of all cards associated with the authenticated account.
Get ContactsThis tool retrieves a list of contacts from amcards.

Way Forward

With Amcards connected, Hermes can now act on your behalf whenever it detects a relevant task or you ask it to.

From here, you can extend Hermes further:

  • Connect more apps: Calendar, Slack, Notion, Linear, and hundreds of others are available through the same Composio Connect setup. Each new integration compounds what Hermes can do for you.
  • Build workflows across tools: Once multiple apps are connected, Hermes can chain actions together — turn an email into a calendar invite, a Slack message into a Linear ticket, or a meeting note into a follow-up draft.
  • Let it learn your patterns: The more you use Hermes, the better it gets at anticipating how you'd handle recurring tasks. Give it feedback on drafts and decisions, and it will adapt.

If you run into trouble or want to share what you've built, join the community or check out the Docs for deeper configuration options.

How to build Amcards MCP Agent with another framework

FAQ

What are the differences in Tool Router MCP and Amcards MCP?

With a standalone Amcards MCP server, the agents and LLMs can only access a fixed set of Amcards tools tied to that server. However, with the Composio Tool Router, agents can dynamically load tools from Amcards and many other apps based on the task at hand, all through a single MCP endpoint.

Can I use Tool Router MCP with Hermes?

Yes, you can. Hermes fully supports MCP integration. You get structured tool calling, message history handling, and model orchestration while Tool Router takes care of discovering and serving the right Amcards tools.

Can I manage the permissions and scopes for Amcards while using Tool Router?

Yes, absolutely. You can configure which Amcards scopes and actions are allowed when connecting your account to Composio. You can also bring your own OAuth credentials or API configuration so you keep full control over what the agent can do.

How safe is my data with Composio Tool Router?

All sensitive data such as tokens, keys, and configuration is fully encrypted at rest and in transit. Composio is SOC 2 Type 2 compliant and follows strict security practices so your Amcards data and credentials are handled as safely as possible.

Used by agents from

Context
Letta
glean
HubSpot
Agent.ai
Altera
DataStax
Entelligence
Rolai
Context
Letta
glean
HubSpot
Agent.ai
Altera
DataStax
Entelligence
Rolai
Context
Letta
glean
HubSpot
Agent.ai
Altera
DataStax
Entelligence
Rolai

Never worry about agent reliability

We handle tool reliability, observability, and security so you never have to second-guess an agent action.