Different businesses. Same result:
nothing slips.
Instagram & inbox answered in your voice — quotes from your real pricing, deposits collected while you work.
Calls, emails, and meetings become notes, stages, and drafted follow-ups. Your reps sell; the record keeps itself.
Your past-customer list, worked automatically — matched to what they bought, approved by you in one tap.
It reports what it catches.
In dollars and hours.
Every system I install sends a monthly report like this one. If the number stops beating the cost, the report says so and you cancel. That's the deal.
Anything your business does the same way twice a week can be handed off.
Some handoff work loses money when it slips — the unanswered call, the quote nobody chased, the customer who drifted off. Some just eats your hours — the retyping, the status updates, the Monday report, the invoice chasing. Same employee, both jobs. The demos above are common builds, not the catalog — the audit looks at your actual tools, data, and day-to-day flow, and maps everything worth handing off. If the honest answer is "nothing," you'll hear that too.
Audit. Build. Run.
The audit — find the leaks
One conversation and a look at how work actually flows through your business. You get a written map of where money and hours leak, what plugging each is worth, and real prices. $750, credited in full toward the build.
The build — your tools, made smarter
Built on what you already run — your phone system, Instagram, Shopify, CRM, calendar. Scoped, revocable access your admin approves. Live in 2–4 weeks.
The run — vigilance, not vibes
Monitored and tuned, with a monthly report in dollars: conversations caught, orders taken, customers recovered. If it ever stops paying for itself, the report says so and you cancel — keeping everything built.
I use everything I sell.
My own company is found, sold, and serviced by these systems every day. See the machine →
The shift starts whenever you say.
Describe a normal day — the calls, the tools, the work that shouldn't need you. I'll tell you what's worth handing off, and what isn't.
Start with the audit →