▲ THE LAST PHASE · SOLD OFF THE AUDIT ROADMAP ONLY · $9,800–$14,900 ONE-TIME
The routine work runs itself — under checks you set and sign-off you keep.
The last phase, not the first. Scoped straight off your audit roadmap: the workflows that eat your week get defined, automated, and checked — so they run to plan even on the days you're not in the building. Only proposed where your audit shows it will hold.
There's a version of your week where the routine work already happened.
Follow-ups out. Invoices chased. The report on your desk flagging the two things that actually need you. You stopped being the only quality control in the building — without giving up the sign-off.
This is the layer where AI pitches get scary — "autonomous agents running your business." Two honest facts before anything else: most businesses don't need this yet (your audit will say so if that's you), and work that runs itself is only safe when it can't approve its own output. That second part is the whole design here. I've written publicly about why AI must never grade its own work. My own system once refused to ship a piece of work because the AI made up a statistic. The gate caught it. That's what you're buying — the gates, not the magic.
What gets installed
Your audit roadmap names the routines worth automating — by dollar value, not by what demos well.
Each one gets defined the way you'd train your best hire: what comes in, what goes out, what good looks like.
Each one ships with a quality gate: checks it must pass before its work counts. Fail the gate, it stops and flags a human. It cannot pass its own work.
Anything customer-facing or judgment-heavy routes to your sign-off. It starts narrow. You decide when it gets more room.
You watch the log: what ran, what passed, what got flagged, what it saved.
▲ THE GUARANTEE — IN WRITING
If a gated workflow ships work to you that its gate should have caught, I fix the workflow AND the gate free — it's in the agreement. Your sign-off stays yours.
(A gate stopping bad output isn't a failure — that's the receipt that it's working. The guarantee covers the miss, not the catch.)
Logs are timestamps, not opinions — you can read them yourself.
Price
$9,800–$14,900 one-time, by workflow count and depth — the gates and routines get watched under Operate ($2,900/mo, month-to-month) afterward if you want. Audit credit applies. If the audit says your operation isn't ready for this layer, I'll say that in writing and you'll spend nothing here — that's what "sold off the roadmap only" means.
Your part: defining "what good looks like" with me for each routine — an hour of your judgment per workflow, once. Then reading the log until you trust it.
Fair questions
“Is this the ‘AI agents run your company’ thing from the cold pitches?”
Same words, opposite design. The cold pitches promise autonomy. This one is built on the premise that unwatched automation is a liability. Gates, logs, your sign-off. Boring on purpose.
“What if it does something wrong in front of a customer?”
Customer-facing routines route through approval until YOU widen the lane. Every workflow's gate exists to stop bad work before it ships — and if something gets past a gate that should have caught it, fixing the workflow and the gate is free. That's the clause.
“Will this replace my people?”
It replaces the re-typing and the chasing, not the people. Businesses that keep humans in the loop are the ones this works for — the design assumes yours stays that way.
“Why is it the most expensive install?”
Because it takes the most engineering and carries the most safety work. It's also last on purpose: it should be bought out of a roadmap with numbers on it, never off an ad.
“Contract?”
Install price once. The gates and routines get watched under Operate, month-to-month, cancel anytime.
This one starts at the audit. Book the 15-minute look and we'll see if your operation's even ready — I'll tell you straight if it isn't.
Start free, or start talking.
The system answers in under 60 seconds either way — and I call you the same day.
The Leak Check, in one line: we call your line the way a customer would, test your web form, and time what happens — you get the report free, either way.