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Sunday question: when did AI stop feeling like a novelty and start feeling like a tool?
There's a moment when something shifts. At first you're impressed by what AI can do. Showy things. Conversational this, clever that. Cool for a week, then it gets old. Then one day you just reach for it. Not because it's impressive. Because it's faster. Because it's easier. Because it just works. That's when it stops being a novelty and starts being a tool. For me it was writing follow-up emails. Used to stare at a blank page for 10 minutes. Now I dump notes into Claude and get a first draft in 30 seconds. I barely think about it anymore. That's when I knew. It stopped being "wow, AI can do that" and started being "why would I do it any other way." When did that shift happen for you? Was it sudden or gradual? Drop it below.
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Saturday question: what's one automation you built that actually stuck?
Most automations get built once and abandoned within a week. They break. They need babysitting. Or they just get ignored. The ones that actually stick have one thing in common: they solve a problem you run into every single day. Not once a week. Every day. Here's how I think about it. Before building anything, I ask three questions: 1. How often does this problem show up? 2. How long does it take me to deal with it manually? 3. If I never had to touch it again, how much would that change my week? If the answer to all three is "a lot," that's your first automation. For me it was content repurposing. I was spending 45 minutes every time I wanted to turn a LinkedIn post into something else. Built a simple Claude workflow. Now it takes 5 minutes. That one ran for months before I touched it again. The automations that fall apart are usually built to solve a problem you only care about in theory. Build for the daily friction, not the interesting use case. Your turn. What's one automation you built that's actually still running? What problem does it solve? Drop it below.
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Friday question: what's one thing AI still can't do for your business?
I talk a lot about what AI can do. But here's a better question: what can't it do yet? For me, it's the stuff that requires real human judgment. The nuance of a client's situation that you only pick up after years in the industry. AI can analyze data, write content, automate workflows. But it can't read the room when someone is hesitant about a major financial decision. It can't know when to push and when to wait. That's the stuff I still do manually. And realistically, I think that's the stuff that will always need a human in the loop. Curious what your line is. Where does AI stop working for you?
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Stop Selling on Discovery Calls. Start Diagnosing.
Most people lose the deal in the first 5 minutes. They jump straight into "here's what I can do for you" before they understand the actual problem. That's like writing a prescription without examining the patient. I'm a financial advisor. When someone sits across from me, I don't immediately pitch a portfolio. I ask questions. I listen. I figure out where the real friction is. Same thing applies if you're selling AI services, consulting, or anything else. Here's the framework I use. Four questions. That's it. 1. Where does your business actually come from right now, and how do you capture it? 2. Once someone shows interest, what's the exact step-by-step process your team goes through? 3. What's the most repetitive, annoying task slowing everything down? 4. If your volume doubled tomorrow, what breaks first? Question 4 is the killer. That's where the real opportunity lives. When you diagnose before you prescribe, two things happen. The prospect trusts you more. And you actually understand what to build. Stop talking. Start listening. The sale follows. What's your go-to question when you're on a discovery call? Drop it below.
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Thursday tutorial: 4 steps to build an AI inbox that summarizes your emails every morning
Most people start their morning drowning in email. Here's how to fix that in 4 steps. Tool stack: Make.com + Gmail + Claude Step 1: Connect Gmail to Make.com. Set it to trigger every morning at 7 AM. Pull all unread emails from the last 12 hours. Step 2: Pass the email subjects, senders, and snippets to Claude with this prompt: "Here are my unread emails from overnight. Summarize the 3 most important ones I need to act on today. Flag anything urgent. Skip newsletters and promos. Be concise." Step 3: Send Claude's summary to yourself via Slack, Telegram, or email. One clean message. Before you even open your inbox. Step 4: Batch your replies. You already know what matters. You're not reacting, you're responding. Total setup time: about 90 minutes the first time. Saves 20-30 minutes every single morning after that. The shift this creates is real. You stop letting your inbox decide your morning priorities. You decide. I've been running this for a few months. The days I skip it, I feel it. What does your current email routine look like? And if you've already automated something like this, what's your setup? Drop it below.
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