The day eaten before 10am
You open your email “just for five minutes” before the important work. By 10:30 you’ve replied to twelve people — and the important work waits until tomorrow. Again.
An AI assistant configured like a chief of staff: it sorts what deserves your decision, drafts your replies, and keeps track of what you said you’d do — and what others owe you.
Tell me when it shipsYou open your email “just for five minutes” before the important work. By 10:30 you’ve replied to twelve people — and the important work waits until tomorrow. Again.
On that call three weeks ago, you made the call. Everyone said fine. Nobody did anything — and you’re the one who finds out when the client starts chasing.
A warm prospect, a proposal sent, “I’ll chase them Thursday.” That was three Thursdays ago. You can barely reopen the thread.
Your inbox isn’t a mailbox: it’s a to-do list other people write for you. As long as you’re the one sorting, prioritising and chasing, every email is one more micro-decision in your day — and tracking the real decisions comes last.
The classic answer is hiring: an assistant, a right hand, a chief of staff. Expensive, slow to train — and in the meantime, you keep holding everything in your head. That’s exactly what breaks.
An AI agent takes the job differently: you hand it your emails and notes, it separates what needs your decision from what needs a standard reply, it keeps track of what was decided and what’s gone quiet. It doesn’t decide for you — it makes sure you only decide what’s actually worth deciding.
The kit is being built. Sign up and you’ll be the first to know when it’s out.
No. You download a folder, open it with Claude Cowork or Codex, and talk to your agent in plain language.
Only if you choose to. The missions are designed to work both ways: you paste in the emails that matter, or connect your mailbox if your tool allows it. And nothing goes out without your review: the agent drafts, you send.
No. It covers the part of that job that eats your days when you have no one: the sorting, the follow-ups, the decision tracking. Judgement, relationships, strategy — that’s still you.