Skip to main content

Choosing Kaiya's Effort Level

Kaiya gives you a direct say in how hard it thinks about a task. Use the effort selector next to the message box to pick an effort level before you send a message.

For most work you can leave Kaiya on Auto. Change the effort when a brief is ambiguous, the research is more involved, or the quality bar is especially high.


The options

Kaiya chooses between Balanced and Thinking for you, based on what you are asking.

Use Auto for most day-to-day work - it is a good default and will scale up on its own for more demanding requests.

Legacy

The Kaiya model used before the V3 release (March 2026).

Use Legacy if a task is behaving oddly on the newer model and you want a fallback to previous behaviour.

Balanced

Good for everyday work:

  • Running a candidate or company search
  • Drafting emails and short pieces of content
  • Following up on a conversation with refinements
  • Quick fact-checks and translations

Thinking

Use Thinking when a task is more demanding:

  • A brief is ambiguous and needs careful interpretation
  • Research needs to be cross-checked across several sources
  • Multiple related steps depend on reasoning
  • The output is reputation-impacting (client deliverables, shortlists)

Deep Thinking

Use Deep Thinking when quality matters far more than speed and you want Kaiya to go deep:

  • Detailed market maps or industry research
  • Sensitive or contentious topics that need nuance
  • A long list of items to evaluate consistently (more than about 10)
  • A task where you want Kaiya to double-check itself before finishing

When to move up from Auto

Move from Auto or Balanced into Thinking or Deep Thinking when any of these are true:

  • The task is ambiguous or requires careful interpretation
  • The research crosses several sources
  • The deliverable will be seen by a client
  • You are asking Kaiya to apply the same judgement across many items
  • You are working on a high-stakes decision

If in doubt, ask Kaiya which effort level it suggests:

Given the task I'm about to give you, what effort level do you recommend?

When to fall back to Legacy

Move to Legacy only if you notice that the newer model is handling a specific type of task less well than you remember. It is intended as a safety valve, not a default.