Automation consultants charge $15K for what Claude Code now does in 2 hours.
I know because we're the ones who used to charge it.
Here's the exact process:
Step 1: Discovery (20 min)
→ Paste your org chart, tool stack, and top 3 bottlenecks
→ Claude interviews you with clarifying questions
→ Outputs a full process inventory ranked by time cost
Step 2: Workflow Mapping (15 min)
→ Describe any department's daily operations in plain English
→ Claude builds a complete process map
→ Every manual handoff, redundant step, and automation trigger flagged
Step 3: Opportunity Audit (10 min)
→ Feed it the workflow map output
→ Returns your top 10 automation opportunities
→ Ranked by ROI, complexity, and build time
Step 4: Architecture Design (20 min)
→ Claude designs the full system architecture
→ Which tools connect where, what the data flow looks like
→ Agents for complex logic, linear flows for the repetitive stuff
Step 5: Build (ongoing)
→ Claude writes the actual workflow JSON
→ Self-documents everything as it builds
Step 6: The output.
A live dashboard your whole team can work from.
→ Clickable process maps for every department
→ Automation opportunities ranked by ROI
→ Implementation progress by phase
→ KPIs updated in real time
→ One link you share with clients, freelancers, or your team to execute
This is what we hand every client at the end of discovery.
The .md file is what makes all of it possible.
Without it, Claude guesses.
With it, Claude builds like a $15K consultant.
Like this post, RT and comment "BLUEPRINT" and I'll send you the full prompt stack and the .md file we use internally. (Must be following so I can DM you)
🎁 Bonus: The first 100 people get a real Precision AI Blueprint — an actual sample audit doc from a client engagement so you can see exactly what the output looks like.
i built a digital product last saturday morning and it made $1,100 by sunday night
not because it was good. because it was specific.
here's exactly what i did hour by hour:
9am: opened facebook groups in three niches i was considering. scrolled for 20 minutes each. one group had the same question posted 6 times in 2 weeks. "how do i write a cover letter that doesn't sound like everyone else's."
9:40am: searched the same question on quora. found 23 detailed answers from actual hiring managers explaining what they look for. screenshotted all of them.
10:15am: opened a google doc. organized the best advice into a step by step format. added 5 fill-in-the-blank templates based on what the hiring managers described. 13 pages total.
12:30pm: uploaded to gumroad. wrote a title that described the pain not the product. "the cover letter template for people who've applied to 50 jobs and heard nothing back." priced it at $33.
1pm: set up a faceless X account. wrote 8 tweets about cover letter mistakes. scheduled them across the next 3 days. every tweet described a problem. none of them mentioned the product.
1:45pm: done. went to the gym.
by sunday at 11pm: 34 sales. $1,122.
the product took 3 hours to make using information strangers posted online for free.
here's what most people would've done with that same saturday:
spent 4 hours picking a niche. spent 3 hours designing a logo. spent 2 hours choosing between gumroad and shopify. spent the entire sunday "refining the sales page."
launched the following thursday to zero sales because they built for themselves instead of building for the person who's frustrated at midnight.
the whole game is:
find where people are complaining → build the fix in one sitting → price it $29-$44 → post about the problem not the product → let ghost buyers find you at night
i documented my full weekend product system. the research method, how i write product titles that sell, the pricing data, the tweet templates, everything.
RT this and comment "WEEKEND" to get it (must be following or i can't send it)
•Savannah Guthrie visited memorial with sister Annie on March 2
•They placed yellow flowers at the growing tribute site
•Family statement: "We will not stop until we bring her home"
🚨 BREAKING: Pasadena police officer shot during gun battle at Metro station
Sources: @ABC7
•Officer Bryan Vasquez, 5-year veteran, exchanged gunfire with suspect
•Suspect Malcolm Buchanan, 32, killed by police
•Officer Vasquez out of surgery, stable condition
•Incident occurred at Sierra Madre Villa station Monday night
Investigation ongoing.
#BreakingNews #Police #Pasadena #GunViolence #LawEnforcement #News
👁️ "The hills have eyes" - now literally in San Diego.
A vast surveillance network is recording every driver passing through Southern California border roads.
Hidden cameras in trailers. License plate readers along remote roadways.
All without much public disclosure.
This is happening while most people are focused elsewhere.
Questions worth asking:
• Who's watching?
• What data is being collected?
• Who has access?
#SurveillanceState #SanDiego #Privacy
H/t @nypost@californiapost for the coverage
Balancing safety and security:
Law enforcement needs tools to protect communities...
But those tools also create attractive targets for hackers.
The question isn't whether to use technology...
It's how to use it RESPONSIBLY.
What's your take?
Should there be mandatory cybersecurity requirements for police technology?
👇 Interested to hear perspectives from all sides.
#LawEnforcement #Tech #Cybersecurity
🔓 The topic nobody's talking about: Law enforcement tech has a HUGE cybersecurity problem.
Police departments are rolling out AI, license plate readers, and surveillance networks... but who's securing these systems?
Consider:
• Police databases have been breached (Baltimore, Dallas, Atlanta)
• Ransomware targeting law enforcement is rising
• Body camera footage storage vulnerabilities
We trust cops with our data. But who watches the watchers' systems?
#LawEnforcementTech #Cybersecurity #Police
The transparency gap:
Unlike private sector companies, law enforcement often isn't required to:
• Report data breaches publicly
• Meet specific cybersecurity standards
• Allow independent security audits
This creates challenges:
→ Public trust erodes when breaches occur
→ Departments may not have resources for proper security
→ No baseline requirements across jurisdictions
Should there be minimum cybersecurity standards for law enforcement tech?
#PoliceReform #Accountability
On this day in 1986: Janet Jackson drops her iconic 'Control' album, blasting hits like "Nasty" and "What Have You Done for Me Lately" into our boomboxes! Gen X, this was our soundtrack to rebellion. Also, Reagan's SOTU after Challenger, NHL All-Stars in Hartford. Memories? #80sNostalgia #GenX #Throwback
Remember when mixtapes were the ultimate love language, and 'dial-up' was our daily cardio? Gen X, we're the originals who survived Y2K and still question everything. What's the one 90s trend you miss most? #GenX#Nostalgia#ThrowbackThursday