You give it a job. It hands back finished work.
Write the proposal. Answer the phone. Send the morning summary. Your helpers do real jobs for your business — and you see the price of every single one.
No tech skills needed. If you can write an email, you can run a helper.
A helper at work
You ask → it works → you get the result
You asked for
Sum up this week's sales notes
Gather what it needs
DoneYour files, notes, and past work — nothing else.
Do the work
NextWrite the document and save it in your folder.
Hand you the result
WaitingThe finished file, a short note, and the price of the job.
Everyday jobs
What can it actually do?
Things you'd normally do yourself — or pay someone to do. Here are the jobs people hand over first.
Write the proposal
"Use our template and last year's numbers." Done and saved in the right folder.
Answer the phone
It answers common questions from your own documents — and passes the tricky calls to you.
Send the morning summary
What came in overnight, what's on today, and the three things that matter most. Ready by 8 AM.
Do the research
"Look into this market and tell me what's changed." You get a tidy write-up, not 40 open tabs.
Reply to texts
Customers text your business line and get a helpful answer — even when you're busy.
Handle the repeat stuff
Weekly reports, follow-ups, reminders — set it once and it runs on schedule.
Make a space for each client or goal
Think of it like a separate room for each client. Their files, their helpers, their bills — nothing ever mixes with anyone else's.
Pick your helpers
A writer, a researcher, a phone answerer, a scheduler — choose the ones you need. Each one has a clear job.
Plug in your stuff
Point it at your files, calendar, and inbox by describing what you want in plain words. No code, no setup guide, no IT person.
Get the finished work
Documents land in your folder. Calls get answered. Summaries show up on time. And every job shows you what it cost.
Your spaces
Sunrise Bakery
2 helpers · 14 files
Northside Studio
3 helpers · 31 files
My own to-dos
1 helper · 6 files
Each space is its own locked room. Nothing crosses over.
Pick a helper
Writer
Proposals, reports, summaries
Phone answerer
Your business line, covered
Researcher
Digging, reading, comparing
Scheduler
Daily and weekly tasks
Mix and match — each space gets its own team.
Plug in your stuff
You typed
"Use the files in my Client Docs folder, and check my calendar before booking anything."
That's the whole setup. Plain words, not settings screens.
Your results
Q2 Proposal — final.docx
Saved to Sunrise Bakery / Proposals
3 calls answered today
1 passed to you for a refund question
This job cost
$1.42
Well under your spending limit
Why people switch
Less chatting. More done.
Most AI tools give you a conversation. This one gives you your time back. See real examples →
Every client gets their own room
Files, helpers, and bills stay inside one client's space. You'll never mix up Client A's work with Client B's — it's simply not possible here.
Client A
Their files only
Client B
Their files only
Two locked rooms. No shared walls.
It picks up the phone
A helper can answer your business line and reply to texts using your own documents — store hours, return policy, pricing. When a call needs a human, it hands it to you.
"Are you open Sunday?"
Answered from your store-hours page
"Can I return this?"
Answered from your return policy
"I need a refund on a custom order"
Passed straight to you
It works while you sleep
Set a job to run every morning, every Friday, or the first of the month. The work is waiting for you — you didn't have to remember a thing.
Morning summary
Every weekday · 8:00 AM
Weekly client report
Fridays · 4:00 PM
Invoice reminders
1st of the month
No mystery bills
Every job shows its price, and you set a spending limit so nothing runs away from you. At the end of the month, you can explain every dollar. See plans →
Market research write-up
$0.62
Client proposal draft
$1.40
Phone line — all of Tuesday
$2.10
Hand over your first job today.
Create an account, make a space, and give a helper something to do. Most people are up and running in minutes.