Your business lives in twelve places. Sales in one tab, email in another, leads in a spreadsheet, stock in your head — plus an automation you set up months ago that you think still runs.
You're not the owner. You're the integration layer holding it together, and you're what breaks when you take a week off.
One dashboard, on desktop and phone. It shows you everything, and it runs everything.
Your numbers — sales, leads, spend — live, not six dashboards
Every automation you own: green if it ran, red if it didn't
Buttons that do things — run the report, post the content, chase follow-ups
Alerts that reach you before a customer notices
A chat box that commands any of it in plain English
That's the difference between owning automations and having a business that runs itself. Most people have the first and think they have the second — until something dies quietly and they find out three weeks later.
And it's yours. Not a subscription to someone else's software. Nobody can raise the price or switch it off.
30 minutes to fill in one form, in your own time. No calls, ever.
Access to the tools you already use
No technical skill. That's the point.
It runs in your own accounts, on your card: Anthropic ($15–35/mo) plus a small server ($10–15/mo).
None of it is paid to me. Most businesses pay $200–500/month in software for less, and own none of it.