Everything from the workshop, plus the tools to keep building. Your AI is only as useful as the clarity you give it. This is where you turn what you know about your business into a system your AI can actually run on.
Three steps. Do them in order. By the end you know where you stand, what your AI operating system should look like, and what to do in the next 90 days.
Five minutes. Where your business actually stands: what is ready to hand to AI, what needs clarity first, and where the quickest wins are.
Start →Write your business context once: what you do, who you serve, how you sound, what your rules are. Every tool and every AI conversation builds on this file.
Build it →Turn the assessment into a sequenced 30/60/90 plan: what to set up first, what to automate next, what to leave alone.
Most people bolt AI onto their business one prompt at a time and wonder why the output sounds generic. The fix is structural. You write down your business context once, in one foundation file. Then each part of your business (strategy, sales, marketing, operations) becomes a department that inherits it.
Your AI stops guessing who you are. Every draft, every analysis, every plan starts from your actual situation, your actual market, your actual voice.
Each department is a set of skills your AI runs with your foundation behind it. Start with one, build it properly, then add the next.
Content engine, positioning checks, channel plans. Built on your voice, not a template's. Three ready-made skills to copy and adapt.
Open department →Pipeline follow-ups, outreach that sounds like you, call preparation, proposals.
Deciding what is actually worth doing now. Market shifts, pricing, focus. The layer above the tools.
The repeatable internal work: reporting, documentation, process. Quiet time savings that compound.
A skill is a written instruction file your AI follows every time, so you stop re-explaining yourself. These builders turn what you know into files that work in Claude, ChatGPT, or whatever you use.
Guided questions turn one repeatable task (your weekly report, your outreach message, your proposal format) into a SKILL.md file your AI executes consistently.
Build →Define a full role, not just a task: what the agent owns, what it never does, how it escalates to you. For when a skill grows up.
Ready-made skills to copy, adapt, and load: follow-up sequences, meeting summaries, content drafts. Growing collection.
Everything from your session, in one place.
The full deck and the worksheets you used in the room, ready to revisit.
The starting files from the session: foundation template, first skill examples, prompt patterns that hold up.
The portal gets you building. When the question is what your business should actually be doing with AI (in your situation, in your market), that is a conversation.
Let's talk