Automate
Stop being the bottleneck in your own business.
Every repeatable workflow in your business triggers tasks someone is currently doing by hand. Automate builds the systems that handle them instead.
The problem
Right now, a person is the system.
The inquiry goes cold
Someone sends a message. It sits until you have a moment. By then they've heard back from someone else. An automated response would have prevented it.
Every job leaves a trail of admin
The work wraps and you're not done. Records to update, folders to create, invoices to send. Every job, manually, because the system doesn't exist yet.
The follow-up lives in your head
Check-ins, review asks, rebooking prompts. They should happen at the right moment. They happen when you remember, which means inconsistently or not at all.
The reporting is always behind
You should know last week's numbers without looking for them. Instead you pull it together by hand when someone asks. The data exists. It's just not surfaced.
What gets automated
The front of the business and the back of it.
If it happens the same way more than once, a system can do it. These are the key areas where that matters most.
Every new inquiry gets an instant reply, a calendar invite, and a confirmation. No one waits. No matter the time of day.
When a new customer signs on, your team gets notified, files get set up, and the intake goes out. It runs the same way every time, without anyone starting it.
Follow-ups, review requests, and rebooking reminders go out at the right time. Consistent every week, not just when someone remembers.
Job status, outstanding invoices, and weekly summaries without having to pull them. The business stays clear without the extra work.
Most businesses have at least one workflow that doesn't fit a standard category. If it follows the same pattern, it can be handed off to a system. We find those in the mapping process.
The process
Map. Identify. Build.
01
Map the workflows
We walk through how your business actually runs, from first contact to filed and invoiced. Every repeating task gets documented: what triggers it, who handles it, and what breaks when it's skipped.
02
Identify what to automate
Not everything gets automated. We separate the tasks that only need a human because no system exists yet from the ones that genuinely need judgment. Both sides of the business get looked at equally.
03
Build, test, and hand off
Everything is built against the confirmed logic, tested before it goes live, and fully documented so you know exactly what runs when. You get a written summary of everything built. No black boxes.
Your process is consistent. Your systems aren't.
This is for businesses where the work happens the same way every time, but the surrounding tasks (responses, records, follow-ups, notifications) still depend on a person to push them forward.
If you're doing the same thing manually every week, and a system could be doing it instead, that's exactly what this closes.
Automation can't fix an undefined process. If every job or customer engagement runs differently, there's nothing repeatable to automate. That's a different problem, and a different engagement.
Same if you're actively restructuring how you work. Automating a process you're about to change is wasted work.