Automating Autodesk doesn't need an API.
Seat assignment, access reviews, and project data live behind a console, not an endpoint. StitchOps logs in and operates Autodesk the way your admin does, using browser automation and computer vision so the work that stayed manual finally runs on its own.

What StitchOps actually is
It does the Autodesk clicking so your admins stop.
Point it at the Autodesk console, describe the job in plain language, and it logs in, navigates, reads the screen, and finishes the task. It works the same on the web console or a desktop CAD app.

Runs in a real browser
It logs into the Autodesk console and operates it on screen, so no API is ever required.

Sees the screen, not selectors
Computer vision finds each control, so workflows survive when Autodesk changes the console layout.

Connects your whole stack
Read from Autodesk, drive a no-API portal, and write results back to ERP or PLM in one run.

Every action is logged
It records the named control it touched in the Autodesk console, so a reviewer sees exactly what ran.
Runs alongside the systems beside Autodesk







Why teams trust it to run unattended
Reliable enough to leave alone.
Automation that only works in a demo isn't worth deploying on your Autodesk seats. StitchOps runs unattended and self-heals when the console shifts, with credentials that never leave your own infrastructure.
BYOKV credential custody
Your Autodesk credentials stay in your own key vault. StitchOps never holds them and never persists them.
Runs in your environment
The agent executes inside your network with an outbound-only connection. No inbound ports.
Deterministic and auditable
Every action is logged by the named control it touched, so any seat or access run is reviewable.
Compliance ready
SOC 2 Type 1 complete, Type 2 in progress, with HIPAA deployments supported via BAA.
See it run on your Autodesk workflow
Scope one high-value Autodesk workflow and watch StitchOps run it live inside your own environment.
Before and after StitchOps
Trade the seat-admin queue for a workflow.
Autodesk never shipped an API for half of this. Your admins just absorbed seat changes and access reviews as manual work that never scales. Here's what changes the day StitchOps takes it over.
From stuck workflow to live automation
Start with one Autodesk workflow prove it, then expand.
You don't buy a platform on faith. Pick the Autodesk workflow that hurts most, watch it run inside your own systems, and let the proof of value make the decision for you.
1. Pick the painful one
Name the Autodesk task everyone calls unautomatable. That's the workflow we scope.
2. Describe it in plain language
Tell the AI assistant the steps. It builds a runnable workflow on a visual canvas.
3. Run it in your environment
The agent executes inside your network, pulling Autodesk credentials from your own vault.
4. Measure, then expand
See hours and dollars recovered, then add the next Autodesk task as a sub-workflow.
What's your next move?
Autodesk isn't going to automate itself.
Those seat changes and access reviews have been manual this long because everyone assumed they had to be. The only question left is whether you want to see it run, dig into the details first, or leave it manual for another quarter.