Monday · 7:41am
The inbox
147 unread. You answer the first one before your coffee brews. You’ll answer nine more before you know what the week is about.
Live from the operating room
Two weekly screencasts. Each one is a real task (inbox triage, CRM update, Canva rewrite, weekly report) handed off end-to-end to an AI assistant you already pay for. Copy the prompts. Ship the task. Delete the calendar block.
Your week, up close
You’re not lazy. You’re not slow. You’re drowning in work that shouldn’t need to exist, and every week it takes a little more of you.
Monday · 7:41am
The inbox
147 unread. You answer the first one before your coffee brews. You’ll answer nine more before you know what the week is about.
Thursday · 11:08pm
The weekly report
You planned to start at eight. You’re starting now. You’ll finish at one. This is the fourth week running.
Friday · 4:55pm
The CRM
You’ll update HubSpot this weekend. You said that last weekend. Sales has noticed. The pipeline numbers reflect it.
Four knowledge-work tasks (inbox, CRM, reports, meeting follow-ups) eat roughly fourteen hours every week. They don’t shrink when you work harder. You already know that. You feel it every Sunday night.
While you read this
2023
Sundays were for clearing the backlog your Fridays couldn’t finish. Everybody did it. Normal.
2025
Your competitors handed that backlog to AI. They ship three things in the time you ship one, and they sleep on Sundays.
2027
They won the contracts. Closed the deals. You worked harder than all of them. The gap got bigger anyway.
The work didn’t get harder. Other people got leverage. Every quarter you’re still doing the busywork yourself, the gap compounds. You can’t close it by working harder. You close it by delegating to an AI that doesn’t sleep, doesn’t quit, and doesn’t need a desk.
The guide
No theory
Real emails, real CRM records, real Canva files. No toy examples. No demo hospitals named Acme.
Copy what’s on screen
Every prompt, every click, every setting is on screen frame-by-frame. Pause, rebuild in the tools you already pay for, move on.
For operators, not engineers
No Python. No APIs. No "open your terminal." Just prompts, a browser, and the SaaS you already pay for.
Your next Monday
Same week. Same job. Same tools. But the parts you were never hired to do? Handed off. Here’s what that actually looks like.
Monday · 8:03am
The inbox
Already triaged. Three decisions queued: the ones only you can make. Everything else replied, archived, or scheduled. You haven’t opened Gmail yet.
Thursday · 4:42pm
The weekly report
The draft was waiting when you sat down. Fifteen minutes editing the one paragraph that matters. Sent. Gone. You eat dinner with your family.
Friday · 5:00pm
Close the laptop
No Sunday dread. No Monday backlog. The calendar block you deleted a month ago, still deleted. Weekend is yours. Next week starts clean.
Not a productivity fantasy. Just what a week looks like after you delegate the four tasks on the other side of this page. The screencasts below are exactly how.
The plan
01
The recurring task you secretly dread. Inbox triage. The Monday report. The CRM update. Pick the one your calendar has a standing block for.
02
Every prompt, every click, every setting is visible frame by frame. Pause, rebuild it in the tools you already pay for, move on.
03
By Friday that task is handed off for good. Next Monday, pick another one. Your calendar gets lighter every week.
No account required for free episodes.
Not theory. This week.
Go Pro to watch →
Go Pro to watch →
Membership
Free plays every week. Pro unlocks the full shelf. Cancel in a click. A tool whose whole point is to un-trap you shouldn’t trap you into keeping it.
Kick the tires. Keep them.
$0
The full shelf, every drop.
$49 /mo
Seats for the whole org. One invoice. Priced per seat, quoted in an hour.
Let’s talk
Volume discount. Custom onboarding.
One more thing
Six months from now you’ll either have handed off the boring parts of your job, or you’ll be watching somebody who started this week take it. AI compounds. So does avoidance.
The first episode is free. It takes fifteen minutes. You’re one prompt away.