Back in the 1980s, a furniture store owner in Nebraska was drowning in the same questions. “What size will fit?” “Will this match my room?” “How long will it last?” He answered them hundreds of times. Then one day he wrote the answers down on index cards and kept them under the counter. Customer asks, he hands them a card. That was it. A tired guy who didn’t want to say the same thing again. Sales went up. Customers stopped hesitating. New staff got useful faster than he expected. The whole place just got easier. What he’d stumbled onto wasn’t something he could have named at the time. People weren’t confused by the furniture. They were confused by the decision. Hand them the right answer at the right moment and they buy. So he wrote more cards. Covered more questions. Eventually his staff could handle almost anything without interrupting him. Researchers who studied stores like his noticed something worth paying attention to. Small operations that prepare answers before the questions arrive tend to outlast better-funded competitors far more often than you’d expect. Not because the owner works longer hours. Because he stopped rebuilding from zero every time. Making money online works the same way, and most people have it backwards. They keep piling on. Another tool to learn, another tactic to bolt on. What’s actually slowing them down is that they start from scratch on everything. Open a new project and there’s that blank page again. The people getting somewhere with AI right now aren’t doing that. They figure out once how they want to sound and who they’re talking to, then build something they can reload. The AI handles the rest. That’s how this Prompt Builder works. You give it context about your situation and it produces prompts fitted to your business rather than something vague enough to belong to anyone. Next time you need copy or emails, you open it and go. Worth a look: https://link.ckv.to/prompt-guide Sometimes what changes things isn’t doing more. It’s not having to solve the same problem twice. Regards, P.S. Most people don’t need another side hustle. They need to stop making the same decisions over and over. |
