Proof

What it did for one studio.

The first assistant I built runs a real, fast-growing business. Here's the work it quietly took off their plate, and what that gave back.

The business

Sumhouse is a fast-growing social media studio.

It works mostly with restaurants around Southern California, and Kaitlyn co-owns it. It's where this all began: the first assistant I built, for a real team with real deadlines.

The friction ran on two levels. The team's footage was scattered across drives, hard to find, and every post meant logging into each account and retyping the same details. The owners had a harder problem: no real visibility, so work could quietly slip.

I didn't walk in with a plan. I just asked honest questions about how their days actually went. That's exactly how I'd come at your business too.

The fix was simple. Footage in one place, easy to find. Posting by just asking, across whatever accounts they choose. And the owners got eyes on all of it, with the guardrails to catch what used to fall through, so they could hand off more and grow.

The result

About three hours of their day back. For each person, every day.

Three months in, and it's still climbing. It didn't reinvent how they work. It just lifted the busywork off, so the team can spend the day on the parts that actually need them.

None of that is specific to social media. Almost any small business buried in the same kind of work can have the same relief.

Want the same?

Let's find your three hours.

I'll build a working version of your assistant so you can try it first. If it feels right, we'll grab a time to map it out together.

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