Do Good Work

Most conversations about AI in consulting stop at productivity. Doing the same thing faster. That's the wrong frame entirely.

In this episode, I break down the three form factors for digital products: information products, software products, and what I'm calling actors. An actor is an AI agent or multi-agent orchestration that deploys your expertise on your behalf without requiring your ongoing presence at every step. The distinction that matters: an actor becomes a producer when it generates real market value, not just activity.

I walk through how I built this into my own content pipeline (four hours down to fifteen minutes), how clients are using actors to overdeliver on their initial offer at 2-3x the going rate, and why "efficiency" is the wrong frame for what's actually happening. This is the next piece in a series. The Services Stack covers the thesis. The New Value Quadrant covers pricing. The Post Scope Era covers practical sales and delivery changes. This episode covers the new form factor that makes all of it possible.

Key topics covered:

  • What a "form factor" actually means and why it matters for how you price and package
  • Form Factor 1: Information products (ebooks, courses, coaching, communities) and the key person problem
  • Form Factor 2: Software products and why they require a team and capital
  • Form Factor 3: Actors, AI agents that produce outcomes on your behalf
  • The distinction between an agent that acts and a producer that creates net new market value
  • Why your methodology, positioning, and expertise dictate the value an actor creates
  • Real example: content scheduling from four hours to fifteen minutes
  • How clients are using actors to deliver 2-3x more value at standard pricing
  • Efficiency vs. production: doing the same thing faster vs. creating something new
  • Why speed to value creation might be the real variable
  • Human flourishing as the real goal
  • Three steps to build your first actor

CHAPTERS

00:00 The Market Votes With Its Dollars
02:05 Every Digital Product Follows the Same Arc
03:00 What a Form Factor Actually Is
03:45 Form Factor One: Information Products and the Key Person Problem
05:30 Form Factor Two: Software Requires a Team
06:30 Form Factor Three: Actors
08:45 Acting Is Not Producing
10:15 From Four Hours to Fifteen Minutes
13:30 When Client Agents Become Sales Mechanisms
17:15 Skip the Course, Skip the Login, Go Straight to Value
18:00 What Agencies Charge $5,000 a Month For
21:00 What If Speed to Value Is the Variable?
23:00 When You're Stuck in Delivery, You Stop Building
24:30 Three Steps to Build Your First Actor

What is Do Good Work?

Do Good Work is not a label but a way of living.

It is the constant and diligent effort to achieve a new level of excellence in one’s own life.

It is the hidden inner beauty behind the struggle to achieve excellence.

It is not perfect but imperfect.

It is the effort, discipline and focus that often goes unnoticed.

The goal of this podcast is to highlight that drive.

The guests I have on this show emulate this drive in their own special way. You’ll be able to apply new ideas into your own life by learning from them.

We will also have 1on1 episodes with me where we’ll dive into my own experiences with entrepreneurship and leadership.

Every episode is designed to provide you with ideas that you can apply and grow in excellence in all areas of your life, business and career.

Do Good Work,

Raul

So I grew up in direct response
advertising, not brand advertising, direct

response in digital marketing where every
dollar you spend has to produce a return.

'cause I was spending on behalf
of bootstrapped businesses with

the owner's actual budget, and
there was no room for guessing.

If an ad didn't convert, we
didn't get to blame the algorithm.

You had to look at the offer and
figure out why the market said no.

And this drilled the following idea
in my mind the market votes with its

dollars or it doesn't vote at all.

And I spent years in that arena.

That's where I cut my teeth.

I've been able, thankfully, to manage over
25 million in direct response ad spend

where every dollar had to make a return.

I've also been able to help lead and build
revenue teams to produce 15 million in

a single year, and that landed us on the
Inc 5,000 fastest growing companies list.

And, training thousands of entrepreneurs
and workshops, programs and live events.

And along the way, I also was part of the.

Agencies that help some of the largest
info product businesses online grow.

And I saw, and I'm only sharing this
frankly 'cause I wanna share the read the

digital assets or the digital products
that I've come across in my journeys.

I saw the arc of all the digital
products online from eBooks to become

courses to become coaching programs
to become cohorts in communities and

communities that turn into live events.

And that's on the information play only.

But when you actually go from building
an information as like just a thing that

you have as a cool thing to an asset is.

Taking that information and transforming
how you facilitate, deliver and package

value from that information into a
community or a group of people around

that center of gravity, the information.

And I've also built the service businesses
like the agencies themselves that

help service these kinds of clients.

Scaling delivery, managing remote
teams across 12 time zones, and

serving clients that have developed
an over multi-year relationships.

So having seen both sides of this,
the companies that sell expertise.

And helping companies build and
operationalize their systems to

deliver that expertise at scale.

I've been thinking about the following.

Okay.

Every digital product that we
have, like right now, it follows

a similar arc, like a story arc.

You start with your offering
and the market tells you whether

that offering is valuable or not.

Again, it's voting with its
dollars, and if it's valued, then

you go ahead and build more of it.

You generate more consistent recur
exchange, valuable that we call revenue.

Through that asset or
whatever you've built.

And that's when it
becomes an actual asset.

That's just a thing that you have
not just an offer where it can

actually produce value at scale.

And with that thinking, I used to
think that there's only two types of

form factors for digital products.

But now with ai, I think
there's a third and.

The third, I don't think most people are
thinking about or having fully worked

out yet, because a lot of this is new.

But I also don't see the conversations
like with my private conversations that

I have on calls or behind the scenes
conversations that I have on podcasts.

we're not thinking about this.

And I hope to kind of elaborate
on what the third form factor is.

But before I do.

I need to define my terms.

What is a form factor?

A form factor, or a digital form factor
is how a digital product takes shape.

It's not just what it does, and
it's how it's delivering value.

So how you capture that value, how
you deliver, package it, and price it

and give it to the market, as well as
how that value or that product or that

digital form factor evolves over time.

For example, like an ebook in
a coaching program, they might

have the same information.

They actually might have the
same knowledge, but they're

delivered differently.

They're priced differently.

There's perception differently,
and people buy different ones

depending on who they are.

The way that value is delivered and the
way that you evolve as a person,, as

well, as a product evolves over time is
different because a book usually becomes

either a coaching or it can be one-on-one,
or it can be groups and a group coaching

firm usually can become cohorts and or
live events, so they evolve differently.

They package almost the same thing
together, but it's a different modality.

And with ai, I think there's
now three form factors.

These are not like stages or revolutions.

These are just three distinct
form factors that have their

own set of rules or properties.

They may not be principles
they're at least properties,

and we're gonna call them rules.

So form factor number one, we've
just been talking about that.

Info products, information products,
and this is where I grew up.

You have eBooks, you have
courses, templates, you have

playbooks, coaching programs,
cohorts, communities, live events.

And the original information
stays at the core.

So like you can only build an ecosystem
or a little multi like a little

universe around this information.

If the main thesis stay interconnected
and they're within their own like mini

universe and the evolution is nonlinear.

It can be natural, it can be
crisscross, it can be multiple ways,

but it could be an ebook that becomes
a course or a course that becomes

coaching that becomes a cohort.

Communities, lab events, et cetera.

So there's different ways to evolve.

You can go straight from
book to coaching to cohort.

You can go straight from coaching cohorts
to communities and then write a book.

There's multiple ways that this evolves.

But the requirements or the
principles or the rules around this

is that you're the one driving it.

Like the information isn't valuable
without someone in front of it, and

your presence literally is the product.

So for the information to evolve,
it does require you to help

that information to evolve.

So you go from being an author to
a coach, to a community leader, and

every step requires more of you.

Now, I know when you build infra products
and you scale that, 'cause we've, I

mean, I've seen it done it firsthand.

You can scale like economies of scale for
you to have a higher effectively Hourly

rate, but it's still limited to you.

You're the single like most important,
like key man or key person risk.

So these are not drawbacks.

I'm not just saying like there's
pros and cons to each of these.

These are just principles to be aware of.

Now the second form factor
is software products.

These are software as a service.

These are tools.

These are.

Platforms and they evolve
into more software.

And sometimes software does
leverage the info play.

I know we did that.

We did info.

And then software you have
training library certifications.

You can build communities
around the product.

And the evolution comes
through new features.

New integrations potentially launch
into new markets, and you do need

an engineering team, or at least a
staff or maybe even agents to, to help

deploy it and grow that evolution.

However, the requirement of the.

Principle stays the same.

Software requires a team engineers
support infrastructure capital to

grow the software into new software.

Now, what I'm gonna describe as
form factor number three might

sound like software, but it's not.

But form factor number three is
actors, and this is the new one.

An actor is an.

Agent or a set of multi-agent as an
orchestration that acts on your behalf.

So it acts, it performs it.

A, it executes on your behalf.

It takes an input, it makes a decision,
it produces an output and moves

things forward without requiring
your ongoing presence at every step.

Now, this sounds like software, but it's
not because a tool, it's not something,

it's not something you need to log into.

It's not like a tool that
you need to log into it.

It's also not information.

It's not a course or something
you have to go through.

In order to know what to do, and then
you execute based on that information.

And it's not like a login that
a client has to log into and

then learn how to figure it out.

it's an actor performs software
still requires you to learn.

And there's even some softwares that
I personally use that have their own

a library of academies or learning
centers, or even their universities,

like their own acade, like their own
universities, to go through all this

training to know how to use the tool.

An actor skips that and
it produces the outcome.

So instead of, Hey, I bought a tool,
I gotta learn how to use the tool.

It's, Hey, this thing is performing
this activity for me, and I'm

getting the outcome and I'm
reaping the fruits of that outcome.

So an actor.

Is an AI agent, but it
produces an outcome.

You don't log in, you don't need to
learn, you don't need to like operate

or connect it or do all these things.

Maybe sometimes you do in the setup, but
the and output is it operates for you.

So again, to distinguish this from
information, remember information

requires you to evolve it.

Software requires the team to evolve
the software into more software.

But the cool thing about an
actor, the third form factor is

that it requires your expertise.

To evolve, which is the coolest thing.

It doesn't need your ongoing presence
for it to execute on delivery, but

you can evolve it through your mind,
through your expertise from you knowing

what it needs to do and improving that.

So you would improve the orchestration.

And the orchestration
handles the delivery.

Now, I wanna make a distinction
because an AI agent can be an actor,

but not all actors are producers.

So for example.

You can build an AI agent, like right now,
like you can build it over the weekend.

It can take you a couple hours.

You can do it for free.

You can do it at a cost, like
it's effectively a very low cost,

but an actor that generates.

So again this agent's
acting on your behalf.

If it just does something for you,
great, but when it starts creating

value, that is measured through
revenue, it's a producer, and I wanna

make that distinction very clear.

AI agent can be like, acts on your behalf.

But it doesn't become a producer until
it creates actual net new value and you

capture that value in form of revenue.

It produces value and potentially
revenue on your behalf.

And again, you can build an agent in
a couple of hours and that's cool.

And you might even have something
that could be like automated, that's

great, but it doesn't, if it doesn't
generate real market value it's

honestly just a cool, shiny, cool thing.

The goal is to create net new value
that the market will pay for, which

is why I shared the experience about
ads and offers that the market has to

vote with its dollars that it cares
for, and that it is actually valuable.

Now, the interesting part here is
that an actor, again, it becomes a

producer, but it needs your methodology
to be baked into how it works.

It needs your accumulated
knowledge, driving its decisions,

and your positioning, like how
you're currently positioned in the

marketplace to determine whether.

The output is something that the market
will pay for, or if it's just gonna

be like a random agent that automates
generic slop and it's not a producer.

So your positioning, your community
knowledge, your methodology

does dictate the value that your
actor produces on your behalf.

Again, AI, agent producing,
acting on your behalf.

If it's just taking actions, it's cool.

That's okay.

But if it's actually generating and
creating new market value on your

behalf without you having to be present,
that's when it becomes a producer.

So here, your expertise is still
the asset, the actor, the AI agent

acting on your behalf is how you
deploy your expertise at scale.

So let me share some examples and I'll be
transparent with what I'm currently doing.

Here's one simple example I have.

More, but they're not ready for public.

But here's one simple example is
that content scheduling for me used

to take around four hours a month.

Sometimes that could be four hours a
week, and I don't like to admit that,

but yeah, it can take four hours a week.

On average, it might take
around four hours a month.

That's getting all the things pieced
together, making sure that the copy is

good, making sure that the images are
good, that the videos are on point, that

we schedule them even with an assistant
to have them upload it, schedule it,

use my writing, make sure that I wrote
everything, make sure that it's in

alignment, that the dates are good.

It still takes about four hours.

And this is work that's necessary.

'cause yes, content does drive revenue
for me, but it's easy to fall behind.

It's not something that's, ooh, it's aha.

I'm looking forward to scheduling
all these things together.

So even with an assistant in the
scheduling, it's still needed more of me.

So I built a solution.

I created an internal series
of agents, not just one agent.

I created a master agent, and then from
there micro agents that's that feed it

up to handle the entire content pipeline.

So it extracts.

Insights from all of my digital
interactions, drafts content

ideas, and when it's ready,
it formats it for my review.

And if for longer pieces or bigger pieces
or important pieces, it interviews me.

I work with it.

I wrestle ideas with it so that anything
that I produce is higher quality.

And the cool part is once we have
assets that we can deploy or content

pieces that we can deploy, I don't
have to log into a scheduler.

I don't have to upload anything.

Honestly, it does it all for me
because I've trained it on what

to do, how it needs to do what
I want to, has my standards.

And the awesome thing.

It executes at the standards
every single time in me because

I might some days be tired, may
maybe be unavailable or be busy.

I may not execute at 110%
all the time this thing does.

So I used to take four hours.

Now it takes about 15 minutes.

It's.

Crazy.

15 minutes is a long time,
but still it takes 15 minutes.

I do like to review, do like to make
sure everything is in alignment and it's

able to produce higher quality stuff.

Not the copy, but not the ideas,
but some of the images, some of

the cuts that we make on my videos,
like that's the cool part, but

that's not the most important part.

The most important part
is now I have free time.

I have free time.

That helps me focus more on creating
more of these, like my hope is

that what I'm producing right now.

Is higher value and more important for you
and will continue to compound over time.

Because my goal is to create the best
quality content that I personally

can create, given my resources
and given the limitations of time.

So instead of spending hours with
the logistics and figuring out the

schedule and the other, I hate all that.

Even the assistant, like having
an assistant help me do this.

And I now have an, a series of actors,
agents execute for me and they're

producing, like this is actual, like
they're able to execute my level,

my standard, and they're learning.

Every time I interact with it, it learns.

And interacts and it evolves with me.

So every time that we do a new
syndication or a content syndication,

it learns from the previous ones.

So the next V one draft of how
we're gonna schedule everything,

it's already better than last time.

And I really like that.

And this is where the actor, the AI
agent that's acting on my behalf,

it's actually now becoming a producer.

Because again, the content that I create,
yes, content does drive revenue for me.

But the cool thing is I don't
have to create net new time or

find additional time to do this.

It's packaging everything that I'm
already doing and helping me execute

in the flow, in the execution.

So that's really important.

I'll give you another example.

So a few of my clients in
my portfolio of clients.

Have this baked into their
initial offering where their

initial offering is a product.

It's a, is an it.

They're, they're getting support from
their agents to produce a product, but

that product itself can become a sales
asset and not just like a simple oh, cool,

here's a front like entry level offer.

The entry level offer is two to three
x more valuable than the going rate.

What other people can pay for
right now, and this is because I

wanna overindex not only with my
work, but my clients, I push them.

We wanna overindex on value.

So if someone buys from my client
their initial offering, I can

guarantee you they're gonna be getting
about two to three higher value at

not a two to three higher price.

For what other people would charge
because they're baking their methodology

into an actor that produces an asset for
them, then that asset itself becomes a

sales mechanism for them to go deeper.

So when a prospect engages with
a product or a new client engages

with the entry-level product, even
though we're saying entry level,

that doesn't mean it's low tier.

It's just the first initial touch.

the end client is going
to get immediate value.

That's my goal.

How do we over index and
overdeliver on value?

And when they interact with my
clients The end client is gonna

get real insights, real progress
towards their goals and expertise.

That naturally tees up the
next conversation of how they

can go deeper with my clients,
and that's the beauty of it.

And I talked about this when I
wrote and did the podcast on.

The post scope era is that we need
to earn the right, when you're

working with clients to go deeper.

You can't just sell the back end of the
highest ticket thing in the beginning.

Maybe sometimes you can't, but
you need to earn the right, it's

a relationship, it's a dance.

You wanna help your end clients go
further and go like immense value.

And my hope here is that with
these agencies, actors that

become producers, you can do that.

And when you leverage these things.

The actor itself, the AI agent that
acts on your behalf is producing,

and it over delivers on value.

And the beauty, it's helping my clients
get out of pure execution, like getting

them out of the weeds as part of it.

And that same asset that this agent
produces can become a sales mechanism

because the value speaks for itself.

But it naturally.

Forces the relationship to deepen
and go further if it makes sense.

Again, we're not pushing anyone
to do any action that they don't

want, but we're enabling over.

If we over index on value, then
the relationship is naturally

there to share with the end client.

Here's how we can help you
even further, and then it tees

up the conversation to have.

To go further in the relationship, either
with new scope, recurring scope, or a

bigger ticket offering on the backend.

So just to contrast with how this
is, again, different from the other

models and the information model.

The course had to sells
you on a transformation.

If you buy this book, if you buy this
thing, you'll be better with your

health, better with your finances,
better with your relationships, but

someone has to consume it and someone
has to act on that information.

That gap is like large.

And most people, if you know, I think
it's like a three or 5% like completion

rates of any information, like most
people don't make it across that gap.

Even in software, like how many people
actually fully utilize all the softwares.

If you log in, if you look at your
p and l right now and you look at

all the softwares that you're paying
for, are you fully maximizing every

ounce, every squeeze, every juice of
all the softwares that you're using?

Probably not because you may not
even not even know what you're

using it to its full potential and.

The nice thing is with actors
with a third form factor, you

can just go straight to value.

You can go straight to a end outcome.

And again, to recap,

what makes all of this work is
your methodology, your unique

process of delivering results for
clients is baked into how these

actors, these producers function.

What it surfaces in the next step.

And I talked about this in the net new
value quadrant and the services stack

that if you focus on and outcomes and
value you'd be selling with your clients,

you'd be selling at the top of the stack.

Belief in transformation
you wouldn't be selling.

Here are the hands, here's the
things that we can do for you.

Let me give you one final example
from my own practice just to,

to hopefully take this home.

Part of some of the go-to-market work
that I do for clients includes like

full research for their leads, signal
detection, business case development,

and actual custom curated lead generation
strategy and prospects to reach out

to and why to reach out to them.

Growth strategy roadmap, like
that's just part of what I do.

And to do that from scratch, it
takes about four to six weeks.

That's cool.

It's normal.

Not because I'm inefficient,
it's just because that's, I mean,

when you do this kind of work,
it naturally takes that long.

Now with actors that produce and
outcomes with me, alongside with me,

yes, I can do some of that work a
little faster, but that's not the point.

The key thing is now I'm able
to help clients go miles further

because I'm able to produce an
outcomes and deliver on value.

I'm not outsourced, and I know there's
gonna be a lot of critics thinking about

this, but I'm not outsourcing my thinking.

I was on a call with a gentleman
and he's building like large data

centers, and I tend mentioned what's
possible and what we're doing, and

he's saying, well, it sounds you
know, some of those strategies might

just not be smart enough or whatever.

If you can have an actor produce and help
you with you, then it may not be there.

that's not the point.

I'm not outsourcing my thinking.

I'm not stopping thinking.

That's like cheap level zero,
like neg negative thinking.

So what I'm able to produce now,
because we're focusing on end outcomes

and value, I'm able to produce
what literally other agencies are

charging at least 5,000 a month to do.

And I know this because I've
helped build those other agencies.

Alright.

The thinking that I want to capture here
is that we are able to now capture value,

deliver that faster, and focus on the
highest levels of the relationship with

the client for the end transformation
or the future that they wanna build.

And none of this would've been
possible without the third form factor.

These actors, these AI agents
help produce alongside with me.

The strategy is still mine.

The focus and the positioning and
the judgment and how I like, have

nuance of what I review with clients,
what I build with clients, the

offers that I help clients with.

That's still me, but I'm now able to
take that and go further and focus on

end outcomes and over index on value
because I have actors that are now

becoming producers for me, alongside with
me, and they handle the research, the

assembly, and documentation, which frees
my capacity to focus on not only things

that I couldn't before but focus on.

More client relationships, having clients
be happier, more value for the client,

increasing my client lifetime value,
increasing revenue, increasing impact,

and I'm doing the work that actually
still requires me and the agents,

these actors that are producers are
producing activity that supports it.

And just to reframe, efficiency is doing
the same thing faster, which is cute.

But a producer, an AI agent that
acts on your behalf and produces real

market value, creates value that you
couldn't do in the past or before.

So let me give you a contrasting.

Another contrasting example here.

So a friend of mine built a digital
agency and it was kind of cool.

His story's amazing over
like the last 10 years.

He started like a music ministry and
then now like he's building the agency.

He's built the agency and he's exiting
with Earnouts, which is freaking amazing.

That's remarkable.

He built a business that
works on his behalf.

It generates real market value.

it compounded the value over time,
where now he could sell it as an

asset and that asset's gonna help
him grow, and it's gonna help him and

his community and his family thrive.

That's amazing.

I keep coming back to his story
'cause it's just amazing to see

him grow and do what he's doing.

Like I love that.

But I'm sharing that example 'cause
that's, I just described pretty much

like almost any business, right?

A business is supposed to execute on your
behalf and produce value on your behalf.

Yeah.

Like I get it.

However, this is the question
that I've been wrestling with.

What if the speed to value creation
is fundamentally different?

What if it's not by cutting corner?

We're never gonna cut corners.

We're never gonna be cheap.

We're never gonna skip your expertise.

But what if the speed to value creation is
actually choosing the right form factor?

Think about that, because if we're
leveraging your expertise is the asset.

And when you develop actors that deploy
that on your behalf and create real

market value and they become producers
and you're able to do that at scale.

You could potentially model what other
businesses have done through building

employees, infrastructure, different
locations, but you're able to do and

encode that with orchestration over
months and maybe weeks versus years.

And that's what I don't think a
lot of people are in our industry

that fully internalized this yet.

Because right now a lot of
people are thinking in prompts.

They're thinking that AI's productivity,
they're thinking about a way to do

the same thing faster in efficiency.

That's real and that's cool, but
that's not the third form factor.

The third form factor fundamentally
shapes how you package your

expertise and it keeps working for
you whether you're there or not.

And I think that's the
most important thing.

And we already knew this, like
your clients, at least I hope your

clients are paying for the outcomes.

They're not paying for your hours.

So I, I wanna contrast that with that
final story because that's why I think

the power of this third form factor comes
through because you can use the third

form factor again for your own internal
to augment work for more market value.

And I think that is the play.

But eventually you can probably leverage
that so that it's in itself because

it's own different digital product.

Now, why am I sharing all this?

What is my hidden goal?

Like my hidden goal truly
is human flourishing.

So I wanna be honest about this,
like if you're a consultant, agency

owner or a coach, I think you can
leverage this thinking or this

opportunity with the third form factor
to stop being trapped in delivery.

Not because delivery doesn't matter,
but because when you're stuck

in the weeds, you stop building,
you stop innovating, you stop

focusing on creating net new value.

There's a significant difference
between doing the same thing more

efficiently and creating something
genuinely new that didn't exist before.

And that genuinely new thing can help
people go further and create net new

value for yourself, for your clients,
and at the end outcome that your clients.

Produce in the marketplace.

And when you do that, a
paradox actually happens.

You're not working less, you're actually
working more in the work that matters, and

you're focused on improving the producer,
the AI agent that's producing value.

You're focused on deepening
your client relationships.

You're focusing on creating things
that you previously couldn't

do because you were buried in
execution or in the day-to-day.

If an actor, the AI agent that
performs on your behalf, handles the

delivery, you handle the improvement.

And the technology isn't
here to replace you.

It's here to amplify
what you're able to do.

And that's the thing that I believe with
human flourishing, that's the goal that

I have here for you, is about helping
you go further to serve more people at

a higher quality without burning out
at your own capacity in the process.

And I think that's the best application
of technology to help humans go

further than they could before.

So that more people can access your
expertise, your real thinking and

experience, real transformation, and the
end goal is flourishing for everyone.

You win, your clients win.

The impact of your work wins.

Your team wins, their families
win, the community they live

in, win, and so on and so forth.

So if you're sitting on expertise that
can become a producer, you've probably

already felt this gap that I'm mentioning.

You're doing work that the market
values, you're delivering real results.

You're doing amazing work,
but you're burnt out.

You're stuck on time.

There's not enough hours
in the day for you.

Hours or time is truly the ceiling
of what your business can produce.

I think you can close that gap
now, not by buying a tool or

subscribing to some platform.

Here are three things
that I would recommend.

Number one, map out your
methodology clearly enough that

it can drive orchestration.

Pretend you're writing a
manual for someone else.

Pretend you're writing.

Book.

Like really think about this.

And I know even before AI kept telling
people to think about their own thinking

and write down their strategies and
their thoughts, very few people do that.

So I'm really hopeful that right now
you'll map out at least your methodology.

I want you to take that time.

This is probably the most important
thing that you can be doing.

Writing is still a competitive advantage.

Map out your methodology.

Think about your own thinking.

Second is identify what in your
delivery actually requires you.

And what just requires your thinking.

This is different from having staff
or hiring people, but it's akin to

those lines what actually requires you
versus what requires your thinking.

We're not outsourcing your thinking,
we're just gonna build an actor.

So step three is to build an actor
to carry your thinking into the

world while you focus on improving
the actor so it becomes a producer.

And if that's interesting to you, this
is the exact work that I do with clients.

So if you're a consultant, agency
owner or coach with proven expertise,

like you've actually done the thing,
you've done it a hundred times,

handwritten over and over again.

We're not going from
scratch or from zero to one.

You've actually have expertise and
you wanna explore what a third form

factor looks like in your business.

I'd love to have that
conversation with you.

Connect with me here, DM me, message me
any way you can, and we'll go from here.

This is Gerald Hernandez.

Do good work.