Your co-founder does the building. You make the call.
Describe what your business needs. It plans the whole system, then builds it for you piece by piece, and you approve every step. The heavy lifting is handled. The decisions stay yours.
The building, the wiring, the busywork. Handled.
It does the operational heavy lifting, so your hours go to the work only a founder can do.
Figuring out what to build
It maps the forms, tables, workflows, agents and emails your idea needs, and how they connect, before a single thing is made.
You set the goalActually building it
Each asset is drafted for you and wired to the next, so you’re not starting any of it from a blank page.
You review as it goesConnecting the pieces
The handoffs between products are drawn in for you, so the system works as one, not five things to stitch together.
You change anythingThe first draft of everything
Copy, fields, steps and logic come pre-filled as a starting point you can shape, not a spec sheet you fill in.
You make it yoursFrom a sentence to a system, with you in the loop.
It plans, you approve, it builds, you review. Here’s the whole thing, start to finish.
This is the honest part most tools hide: it drafts a mostly-wired system for you, but you approve the plan, edit any piece, and decide when it goes live.
Four steps. You’re in control at every one.
Describe what you need
Tell it the outcome you want in plain English, the same way you’d brief a partner.
YouIt plans the whole system
It returns a blueprint, every form, table, workflow, agent and email your idea needs, and how they connect.
Co-founderYou approve, it builds
Greenlight the plan and it builds each asset one at a time. Watch it happen, change anything as it goes.
Co-founder You reviewReview and launch when ready
It saves into your real workspace. Connect your tools, make final edits, and go live on your call, never before.
YouA button does one thing. A co-founder thinks it through.
It architects first
It designs the whole system as a plan before building, so the pieces fit together, instead of spitting out one disconnected asset.
You stay in control
Every step is yours to approve or change. It proposes, you decide, nothing happens behind your back.
It knows your real tools
It builds with the actual products you’ll run on and leaves you to connect your accounts, so what you approve is what you launch.
It does the grunt work
The repetitive building and wiring is handled for you, freeing your time for the calls only a founder can make.
It’s powerful, it’s in beta, and it never pretends otherwise.
It never builds past a checkpoint without your go-ahead.
It drafts into your workspace. Launching is always your decision.
Expect a strong first draft to shape, not a finished business in one click.
The honest answers
It builds a mostly-wired first draft of the whole system, every piece your idea needs and the connections between them. You review each asset, change what you want, and connect your own tools before launch.
No. It plans first and waits for you to approve the blueprint. It builds into your workspace as drafts, and nothing goes live until you decide it should.
Tweak it. You can adjust the blueprint before building, and edit any individual asset as it’s created. It’s a starting point you shape, not a fixed output.
No. You describe what you need in plain English. It handles the building and wiring; you make the calls about what’s right for your business.
It’s capable and improving fast, and it’s honest about its limits. You stay in control at every step, so you always see and approve what it produces before it’s part of your setup.
Hand off the build. Keep control.
Describe what your business needs. Approve the plan. Watch it come together.