The AI drafts.
You decide.
Nothing goes out
the door until
you say so.
A kit for putting AI to work in your business this week — without handing it your customers, your voice, or your reputation. First win in 30 minutes, using a plain AI chat. No install. No accounts.
Your rate, your hours, times 52. I don't pick any of the numbers and I don't round them in my favour. The kit won't erase this. It might cut it — and you'd be the one to find out, which is the only way you'd ever believe it.
I spent $25,000 finding out
what doesn't work.
A $15,000 build I couldn't change a line of once my business moved. Ten thousand more in courses and platforms that broke in ways nobody could diagnose. And one trial run that nearly sent a wrong number to a real customer — I caught it, and I won't always.
Every one of them was selling the same deal: trust it, or don't use it. This kit is the third answer. You read the draft. You send it. That's the whole trick, and it's the only one that survived.
The mirror test.
You can run this right now, in whatever AI chat you already have open. It costs nothing and it settles the argument better than anything I could write here.
That's not a reason to avoid AI. It's the reason it needs a gate — and the reason the gate has to be you, not a setting. Every template in this kit ends with a check you run before anything moves.
What you actually get.
A zip. It downloads, it opens, it's yours. Nothing calls home, nothing needs a login, nothing expires.
The Playbook
The manual. How AI jobs are actually shaped, how to build the memory, how to run the gate, and the six moments in your week worth handing over first.
The Mission Briefing
The fast path. One idea per slide, twenty minutes, cross-referenced to the Playbook for when you want the depth.
The Templates
Copy-paste prompts for the jobs that eat your evening: replies, the end-of-day sweep, chasing money, reviews, sorting enquiries, posts — plus the recipe for writing your own.
Your Business Brain
One plain document that holds your prices, your policies, your voice. Paste it once per chat and every draft stops being generic. Includes an interview that writes it with you.
Daily tools
The Quick-Fire card for beside the laptop, and a first-week sheet with seven boxes. Seven ticks and the habit exists.
The Claude Code starter
For later, or never. If pasting ever starts to grate, the same method as folders on your machine — drafts in, approved out. Needs a paid Claude plan; the kit is complete without it.
Three reasons to close this tab.
Your judgment is the product.
The kit just gives it something to judge.
Thirty minutes from now you can have a draft in front of you that sounds like you, knows your prices, and is waiting for your yes.
Get the kit $97Full refund within 3 days of delivery — no questions, and you keep the files.
Questions before or after: [email protected]
You just did that
for one job.
Now do it for the other eleven. Then rank them. Then work out which ones an AI can actually draft today, which ones need something built, and which ones you should leave alone entirely — because some jobs are only worth doing by hand and nobody selling automation will ever tell you that.
That's a day's work and you'd be guessing at half of it. It's called the Full Audit, and it's the same arithmetic you just ran — across your whole week, with a verdict on every line.
You pay, then I look
Recon happens after payment, never before. I'm not going to audit your business for free and call it a sales call. That's the same trick I paid $25,000 to learn.
A form and a screen recording
The form asks about your work, your week, and your hourly rate. Then you record a few minutes of what actually happens when a job arrives — not what's supposed to happen. One call if it's murky.
The arithmetic, within 7 business days
Every job in your week, your numbers, ranked by what it costs you. Including the verdicts you won't enjoy: sometimes the honest answer is "the $97 kit already covers this one, don't spend more." You paid for an answer, not for agreement.
If you build, the fee comes off it
Decide to have it built and the Audit fee is credited in full against the build. You don't pay twice for the same thinking. But the arithmetic is the product — it's worth having even if you never build a thing.
What it costs: a flat fee, credited in full if you go on to build. The number isn't on this page yet — the intake form isn't finished, and I'm not taking money for a door I haven't hung. Builds are quoted per business; anyone publishing a build price hasn't seen yours.
If this is describing you, the next step is an email, not a checkout. Tell me what's eating your week and I'll tell you whether an Audit is worth your money — including when it isn't.