For small business owners
We pickwhat's worthautomating.
Tell us how your week goes. In three minutes we'll show you the two or three things worth automating first — and the dozen that aren't.
What you'd save
On average, after setting up the one or two automations we recommend. The hours come back from things you're already doing by hand — follow-ups, no-show recovery, weekly reports.
Built for six industries
Each one has its own problems.
A law firm and a fitness studio don't share the same headaches. We've studied each industry on its own — so what we recommend actually fits how you work.
Restaurants
No-shows, reviews, the Sunday-night numbers.
Agencies
Client reports, follow-ups, meeting notes.
Dental practices
Recalls, chair-time backfill, insurance chasing.
Law firms
Intake, document chasing, client updates.
Fitness studios
Win-backs, rebooking, trial follow-up.
Coaches
Scheduling, accountability, session notes.
We tell you what to skip.
Most software tells you to automate everything. We don't. We'll point at the one or two things worth setting up this month — and tell you what to leave alone, and why.
An example · a restaurant owner
How one owner got six hours a week back.
A typical Friday after close: forty minutes mapping seats for the Saturday book, an hour writing review replies, another forty on the Sunday owner report. Three hours of admin, every week.
We looked at what they described and recommended two things: an automation that follows up with no-show reservations on Saturdays1, and one that drafts review replies in their voice. We told them to skip a third they were considering — it wouldn't have saved enough time yet2. Both were set up in eight minutes3. By the next Saturday, those three hours were back.
- We only recommend things we're confident about. If we're not sure something will save enough time, we say "skip for now" instead. ↩
- Most automation tools show you thousands of options. We give you two to five recommendations, with the reasoning attached — and tell you what to skip. ↩
- Setup takes about eight minutes because you do it yourself. No vendor call, no implementation engineer, no contract. ↩
Tell us about your week.
You'll have your list in three minutes.
No sales pitch. We just want to understand.
Tell us about your business and what eats your time.
The more specific the better. What does a typical week look like? What takes longer than it should?
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