Say goodbye to tedious tasks.
For owner-operators tired of spending their evenings on admin work the business should have already taken care of. We do the setups you haven’t gotten around to — Claude wired up for the office-manager tasks that eat your week, or the real homepage your shop is still missing. Either way, you get back to the work you actually started the business to do — and you own what we build, on the path you pick.
You didn’t start the business for this.
Sunday, 9:14pm.
You’re sorting receipts at the kitchen table that you swore you’d handle Tuesday. The week starts again in eleven hours.
Thursday, mid-afternoon.
For the fifth time this week, you’re re-typing the same answer to the same intake question. You know it should be a template. You haven’t had time to make one.
Last Tuesday.
A regular mentions their cousin was looking for you online and almost couldn’t find you. The homepage you’ve meant to make for two years is still on the back of a sticky note.
The first of the month.
Three invoices from last month are still unpaid. You meant to follow up two weeks ago. You will mean to follow up next week, too.
What you’ve been meaning to set up.
The list shifts by business — templates, follow-ups, the homepage that never got built. The fact that it’s all sitting there, half-set-up or not set up at all, doesn’t. Here’s what setup looks like across three different small businesses.
A new batting cage
- A real homepage that shows the cages, prices the parties, and routes the booking
- Birthday party inquiries handled end-to-end, from quote to thank-you note
- Instagram DMs answered while the inquiry is still warm
- A Sunday-night summary of what booked, what didn’t, and what to push next week
A home renovation contractor
- A homepage that shows the work, the team, and a clear way to request a bid
- Bid writeups generated from your walkthrough voice memos
- Friday updates to the homeowner — what got done, what’s next, what’s blocked
- Next week’s sub schedule, confirmed before Monday
A neighborhood barber
- A real homepage with the menu, hours, and tap to call — book button straight to your platform
- Appointment confirmations the night before, rebook nudges when someone cancels
- Client memory: the cut, the part, the kid’s name, the chair they like
- Instagram captions drafted in your voice from the photos of cuts you just finished
Your version isn’t on the list? Good — the engine is the same. The setup is where the work happens.
Not a magic button. A setup.
The reason your week is what it is: too much of it sits at the edge of getting done. Templates that would save five emails a day. Follow-ups that close the loop. A homepage that handles the part of discovery you can’t be in two places for. Useful — and not happening, because the day is already full.
We do the setup. Sometimes that’s Claude wired up to handle the office-manager tasks. Sometimes it’s a real homepage your shop hasn’t gotten around to. Either way, the work it could be doing is sitting in a hundred small judgment calls about how your business actually runs — and once we set it up, it runs.
Capability transfer, not vendor lock-in. You own what we build. You can take it with you.
Two paths after we build.
When the setup is done, you pick how you want to work with the result.
Path A — We keep tending it.
We host your site, watch the platform updates, fix anything that breaks, make the small content changes you ask for. A small monthly fee. You never touch the technical bits.
Path B — We teach you to tend it yourself.
One sixty-minute screen share where we walk you through running your own site using Claude. After that, when you need to update your hours or prices, add a service, swap a photo, change a color — you talk to Claude, Claude does the work, you ship it. You own the whole stack and never see a monthly bill from us.
Most owner-operators pick A because they’d rather not think about it. The ones who pick B usually say some version of “I’d rather pay once and own the keys.”
(Pricing for both paths sent on request — just ask.)
Two ways we help.
Set up Claude for the office-manager tasks
Map your week, configure Claude to handle the things that don’t need you, hand it over. The work the business should have already been taking care of, finally taken care of.
Build the homepage your shop hasn’t gotten around to
A real page that shows your work, your hours, and a clean way for someone to book — mobile-first, made for the customers who want to look around before they call. For shops where the first thing missing is a real online home.
How it works.
Map what’s missing
We sit with you for an hour and walk through what eats your week — and what’s missing from the front door. The tasks that come up over and over, the homepage that never got built — those are the targets.
Set up what we agreed on
We configure the work for your business: your voice, your tools, your customers. Claude wired up for the office-manager flows. The real homepage your shop is missing. Or both. Most setups take one to two weeks.
Review and run
You stay in the loop on anything that matters — decisions, exceptions, money. The setup handles the rest. We check in for the first month to tune what doesn’t feel right yet. You own what we build.
Things you’re probably wondering.
- "I’m not technical."
- That’s the point. We do the setup. You use it the way you’d use a new staff member — by handing them the work.
- "What if I don’t like the homepage?"
- Then we make one update pass, free of charge. The page is built first so you can see what you’d actually get; if something’s off, we fix it. You only pay if you decide to keep it.
- "Is my data safe?"
- Claude doesn’t train on your data. Whatever we build for you is yours. If you ever stop working with us, you keep it and can run it anywhere.
- "How much, and am I locked in?"
- A flat setup fee, then your choice: monthly tending or a one-time lesson that hands you the keys. No subscriptions you can’t cancel. No lock-in either way.
Want to see what your week could look like?
Fifteen minutes on a call. Tell me what’s been sitting on your sticky note — the templates, the follow-ups, the homepage you keep meaning to build, the admin that piles up — and I’ll tell you whether a setup can take it. If yes, we talk about what it’d look like. If no, you’re out fifteen minutes.