I'm Andy. I build AI automations for small businesses here in Chicago — the repeating work like emails, updates, and follow-ups, set up to handle itself inside the tools you already use. You sign off on what goes out, and you own everything I build.
It starts with one paid hour of real work — not a sales pitch.
You've seen the demos. AI can write the email, sort the list, draft the reply. The catch is the canyon between "AI can do this" and "this is running in my business every day, without me."
Crossing that canyon is unglamorous work: hooking the AI into your inbox, your files, your calendar; teaching it your rules; getting it to run on its own so you're not babysitting a chatbot. That part is the actual job, and it's the part I do. The clever AI is the easy bit. The plumbing around it is everything.
We spend an hour on where your week actually goes. I point out the handful of jobs worth automating — and I'm straight with you about the ones that aren't. You leave with a written plan and a flat price for each, whether or not you build with me.
I set the automation up inside your own tools — your email, your files, whatever you already run on. There's nothing new for you to learn. You just watch the busywork start moving off your plate.
From there it runs on its own and brings the results to you. Nothing gets sent, posted, or filed until you say go. That's not a setting buried in a menu — it's how I build, every time.
I'm in Chicago. I'm one named person you can sit across from, call when something's off, and send your friends to — not a support queue or a logo three time zones away.
A lot of "AI guys" will build whatever you ask and mail you an invoice. Plenty of what you could automate isn't worth the trouble, and I'll say so. You only pay to build the things that actually earn it back.
The accounts, the logins, the systems — all in your name. I work as a guest in your setup. If you ever want to part ways, you keep everything and I step out. No lock-in.
"The inbox stopped eating the whole morning."
A commercial furniture dealer was drowning in vendor email — quote requests, scheduling, order updates, every one answered by hand. I built a system that reads each message, drafts the reply in the company's own voice, and files it where it belongs. Now the pile mostly handles itself, and a person just skims and approves. Same work, a fraction of the hours.
One hour together, in person or over a call. We map your week, pick the jobs worth automating, and you walk away with a written plan and a price for each. Start here if you want proof before committing to a build.
I build the automations inside your own tools and hand them over working, with your sign-off built into anything that matters. Flat price, agreed before I start. No meter running.
I keep an eye on it, fix it when the tools it touches change, and tweak it as you grow. Anything genuinely new gets its own quote, so this line never quietly balloons.
Every price is flat and out in the open. The first step is one paid session — not a pitch you have to sit through.
A short, free kit for getting AI to pull its weight in a small business — the same thinking my paid work is built on. No charge, because a few good templates shouldn't cost you anything.
No sign-up, no catch. It's a PDF — open it anywhere.
I'm Andy, based in Chicago. I build and run these systems for real businesses every day — this isn't theory or a deck of slides. You work with me directly: I'm who you call, I learn your setup, and I'll give you a straight answer about what's worth doing.
This field moves fast. Part of what you're paying for is that I keep up with it, so you don't have to.
Everything lives in your name — the accounts, the logins, the systems. Nothing goes out, gets posted, or gets filed without your okay, and that's baked into how I build, not a box you have to remember to tick. Want to walk away? Take all of it with you. I just remove my access. That's the whole deal.
$125 buys a working session: we figure out where your time goes, decide what's worth automating, and you leave with a plan — build with me or not. That's the entire first step.