I gave the whole operation one brain
For a while my setup was a pile of separate tools that didn't talk to each other. A dashboard here, a notes app there, an AI in a browser tab, files scattered across folders I'd forget by morning. Every one of them useful. Together, a mess.
This week I collapsed it.
One place, one brain
Now there's a single back office. It watches the real numbers, and built into it is an assistant that can see those numbers and actually help: spot the trend, name the gap, tell me the next move. The difference from a chatbot in a tab is that it knows my situation, because it lives where my situation lives.
The part I care about most is where the brain runs. It runs on my own machine, on my own plan. Nothing rented, no per-message meter, no data handed to a platform to do who knows what with. The server holds the work. My machine does the thinking. They talk over a small private line I control.
Own the brain. Don't rent it by the question.
Why it matters for one person
When you are the whole company, friction is the enemy. Every tool you have to wrestle is time you don't have. Pulling it all into one surface that actually knows me means I stop managing tools and start running the business.
It isn't finished. Nothing here ever is. But the shape is right now: one place, one brain, mine.