AI-Ready Or Not?

The Foundation Before the Agents: Jenny Blake on What Has to Be True Before AI Actually Works.

After two years of watching the AI hype cycle from the sidelines, author and keynote speaker Jenny Blake (Free Time, Pivot) finally dove in — and now she's hitting inbox zero for the first time in fifteen years of self-employment. But the leap wasn't about the tools. It was about what she had already built underneath them. In this opening episode, Travis and Jenny unpack the infrastructure - context files, documentation, clean processes - that separates people who get leverage from AI from people who get noise.

"The AI is only as good as what it knows about you."

About This Episode

Jenny Blake has spent the last few years publicly underwhelmed by generative AI. It impressed her (everyone can write a poem in ten seconds) but it didn’t transform her business. 

Then, at the start of 2026, something shifted. Claude Cowork launched for non-developers. Notion released Custom Agents. Her brain, in her words, "caught fire."

This episode is not about which tool to buy. It’s about what has to be done in your business before any of these tools can give you leverage. 

Jenny walks through the practical prerequisites - context files, markdown documentation, the "interview me until you're 95% clear" prompting pattern - and Travis connects those principles back to what founders and revenue leaders are dealing with at larger scale: messy CRM data, tribal knowledge in people's heads, and processes that were never written down.

If you’ve been sitting on the sidelines wondering whether AI is finally worth your time, or you've tried it and found it more annoying than useful, this conversation is the context you've been missing.


About Jenny Blake

Jenny Blake is the author of three award-winning books: Free Time: Lose the Busywork, Love Your Business; Pivot: The Only Move That Matters Is Your Next One; and Life After College. She runs a media and growth strategy company, licensing her IP to clients such as Google, CHANEL, and the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Before launching her own business in 2011, Jenny co-created Google's global drop-in coaching program, Career Guru, which is still in operation today. She hosts two podcasts with over two million downloads combined: the Webby-nominated Free Time podcast for heart-based business owners, and Pivot with Jenny Blake for navigating change. She lives in New York City with her husband and their German shepherd, Ryder.


Key Takeaways

  1. Context files are the foundation, not the AI. Jenny's agents only became useful once she'd fed them markdown files describing her business, her clients, her voice, and her goals. The AI is only as good as what it knows about you. Before every prompt, she tells the model to read her context files first.
  2. Reverse prompting: make the AI interview you. Instead of trying to front-load every piece of context in a prompt, tell the model: "AskUserQuestion until you're 95% clear on what I'm trying to do." The questions it asks will surface blind spots you would have missed.
  3. The agentic shift was specific and recent. Jenny was a skeptic for years. The turning point was agents (Claude Cowork, Notion Custom Agents, Perplexity Computer) launching for non-developers in early 2026. The difference from older automation: you direct them in natural language, and they improve themselves with every run.
  4. AI levels the playing field for neurodiverse operators. Travis, diagnosed with ADHD in 2023, describes the shift from seeing AI as a way to replace assistants to seeing it as a way to work around personal weaknesses, so he can spend more time in his strengths. The frame is not "replace a person," it's "build a better version of yourself."
  5. A good idea is no longer enough. Anyone can vibe-code a copy of your product in an hour. The moat is now distribution, marketing, and taste, the things AI can't replicate on command. A "one-person billion-dollar startup" usually means the founder already had marketing leverage, not just a working prototype.
  6. If it's not documented, it can't be delegated. This applies to humans AND agents. Travis realized the SOP he was writing to hire someone was also the exact prompt an agent needed. Documentation isn't overhead, it's the interface between you and everything you could offload. Most companies have skipped this step, and it's about to bite them.
  7. You have many doorways in and you only need one. Jenny's closing advice: you don't have to be a software engineer anymore. If you're a good people manager, problem-solver, builder, opinionated about taste, or simply curious - that's your doorway in. Pick one and stop waiting.


Chapter Markers

00:00  —  Cold open & welcome

00:30  —  "Impressed but underwhelmed": what changed in early 2026

05:30  —  Reverse prompting: make the AI interview you

07:30  —  Context files and why Claude Desktop is the unlock

10:30  —  The Claude Council prompt and open-source prompt sharing

12:30  —  Travis's origin story: HubSpot, INBOUND, and the ADHD unlock

17:00  —  Starting small: solve a real pain point, not a novelty

19:30  —  Why learning time has to live on your calendar

22:30  —  The vibe-coding trap: when a good idea isn't a moat

27:30  —  Small businesses have the advantage — for now

30:00  —  Notion vs. Claude Desktop: when to use which

33:30  —  The prerequisite nobody talks about: clean data, documented processes

35:30  —  SOP-to-agent: 30 minutes of cleanup becomes 2 minutes

37:30  —  Every question lives three lives: Jenny's documentation principle

39:30  —  Why Jenny doesn't use AI to write

41:00  —  "Words I Hate" and tropes.fyi: controlling AI voice

44:00  —  Closing: the many doorways in — pick one, stop waiting
 

Resources & Links Mentioned

Jenny's Books
Jenny's Podcasts, Newsletter, & Community

Tools & Platforms Mentioned

Books & Podcasts Referenced

Connect with Jenny Blake

Connect with Travis

If This Episode Resonated

If your company is buying AI tools but hasn't done the work underneath - clean CRM data, documented processes, a single source of truth - that gap is the whole reason the tools feel disappointing. The AI Readiness Scorecard diagnoses it in about 10 minutes.

Get Your AI Readiness Scorecard

 
Production

Recorded in Descript Rooms. Edited in Descript. Hosted on Transistor. Clips via Opus Clip.

AI-Ready or Not is a production of Rainier RevOps.

What is AI-Ready Or Not??

Most companies are buying AI tools. Almost none of them have the data, processes, or systems in place for those tools to deliver.

The CRM is a mess. The processes aren't written down. The tribal knowledge is locked in three people's heads. Then the AI gets layered on top, and nobody understands why it doesn't work.

AI-Ready or Not is the show about fixing the foundation first.

Host Travis Scott talks with founders, operators, authors, and practitioners about how they're actually using AI. What's working. What's not. What they had to do to make it work.

New episodes every two weeks.

Travis: thanks for, for hopping
on and, and being guest.

Number one, uh, for the podcast.

But yeah, wanted to have you on.

I've, I've, uh, been reading
your newsletters and, and we've

known each other for a while
and, uh, followed your evolution.

And, and now that evolution includes ai.

Like a lot of, a lot of, a
lot of companies, a lot of

solopreneurs, a lot of founders.

But I think.

You know, one of the things, one of the
most important things before layering

AI on, I mean there's a lot of benefits
it can add, but just like automation

and in free time, your book, you talk
a lot about automation and if you do

something more than once, try to automate.

And I think AI is a next level for that.

But with even old school automation, if
the foundation, the infrastructure is not

built properly, it will just make that.

It worse.

Right.

So so you've kind of already been, you
know, on the automation train for a while.

And, uh, I think in a recent newsletter
you mentioned that, you know, with

chat GPT and Claude and early on you
were kinda simultaneously impressed.

And underwhelmed.

But then something changed.

What was the catalyst that that
changed that perspective for you?

Jenny: Yeah.

Well thank you Travis, for having me.

And it's interesting because my second
book Pivot is all about navigating

what's next, navigating change.

And the mantra for that was, if change is
the only constant, let's get better at it.

And so in a way, this whole AI revolution
is affecting every single person because

it's changing a lot of how we work.

And then my third book, free Time came out
six months prior to chat GPT launching,

and the whole promise of free time is set
your time free through Smarter Systems.

I see

Travis: I.

Jenny: time as a verb.

a skill.

It's something you can get better at.

And the nerdy way to say it, it's
about operational efficiency.

I wasn't teaching how to make more money,
although I do think that's a result.

I was teaching how to do less busy work
so you can do more of your best work.

And I found that having worked at a.

A startup company as the first employee.

I worked at Google as it
grew from 6,000 to 36,000.

And then I worked in my own business and
I repeatedly saw either the owner or their

team members getting what I call beset by
the burdensome bees, bored, bottlenecked,

burned out, or buried by bureaucracy.

now you gave me a fifth B that
we could add, which is bloat.

if you do have really.

Heavy Franken stacked software
or really bad processes that

weren't given a lot of thought.

There's a lot of bloat and waste as
well, and even the best businesses are

subject to entropy where like a house
in the woods, chaos will eat the house.

If you don't actively, I, I am
mixing metaphors now, but like,

give your business a haircut.

And cut the things and systems and process
and backend that are no longer working.

So that was already my passion with
free time, which is the 27 chapters

are about systems thinking strategies
where even if the owner felt like,

oh, I already know all this, they
could hand the book to a team member

and say, here, this is how we work.

This is how we work in a really
lean, agile way at the intersection

of revenue, joy, and ease.

And so of course, as AI tools
started rolling out LLMs and Chat.

I was impressed.

Wow.

Right up home in the blink of an eye.

But for the last few years it
did not m transform my business.

My day-to-day operations and I work
as an author, keynote speaker, I

license my IP to companies, and now
Pivot and free time are sort of my

two business skis, my two focus areas.

But are

Travis: we're recording the.

Jenny: the end of April.

It wasn't until the start of 2026 when
Claude released desktop and they re or

desktop existed, but they released cowork.

So people who were not software
engineers could have a way in and not

just cowork computer use, where it
takes over your computer scheduled

tasks notion around the same time, and

Travis: February.

Jenny: released Custom agents that
were free are free to try until May

4th, depending when you listen to this.

To me, all of a sudden my
brain, my body was on fire.

I have not been able to
sleep for the last month.

I have always loved technology and to
me, the feeling that I have, seeing

how quick the innovation is and how
massively it has already changed and

improved my business and my life.

I feel that we're in, we have turned a
corner as at least if you're a business

owner, that there is an era where
computers didn't exist and then they did.

internet didn't exist and then it did.

for me personally, I lived through some
of those, like I'm an elder millennial.

I remember the days before
I got my first computer.

I remember before there was
the internet and a OL chat.

I remember before blogs were a thing.

And now this feels
exactly the same because.

In the span of two weeks time, I've
automated so much more in my business

and these custom agents that run
on schedules are sophisticated and

they catch things I wasn't catching.

It's required me and my team member to
almost have to, we, we do have to retrain

Travis: Myselves.

Jenny: our entire world
because it can do so much now.

And the

Travis: Last thing I'll
say it's different than,

Jenny: It's

Travis: it's similar to automation.

The automation was, if it's a,

Jenny: like if

Travis: like if any of
you're familiar with,

Jenny: or Make or

Travis: literally, I

Jenny: you plug

Travis: plug in very specific and

Jenny: and that

Travis: that is kind of,

Jenny: know,

Travis: you know, software engineers like,

Jenny: okay,

Travis: okay, I want my software to.

Jenny: each other.

I'm gonna plug in these steps
and it's gonna do what I say.

But agent AI is even more powerful
because with your own natural

language, it can do it for you.

It can improve the things
you don't even think to ask.

And it's recursive.

It improves itself with
every run if you ask it to.

It's just mind blowing.

And we're only at the very beginning.

Travis: Mm.

Yeah, absolutely.

I, and yeah, I'm, I'm Gen X, so I also
remember the, the transition, right.

Pre and post internet and, and everything.

And I think you, you'd said
something interesting about how

we can help you improve on things.

You didn't even.

Realize or, or thought to.

Right.

And a, a big thing for me lately is when
I am writing prompts I've stopped just

trying to think of everything that I could
possibly include for context and what

my, I've, I've included reverse prompting
as a key instruction for my entire.

Claude to say, if, if I'm not
just asking a general question

about like, Hey, what is this?

Right?

But I'm, I'm writing a prompt
and there's a difference, right?

Then ask, ask me questions for,
to provide you with enough context

so you can perform the task.

And, and so now basically I'll write a
prompt and I'll say, uh, you know, if

I needed to act as something certain,
I'll say, act as if you're this.

Uh, this is what I need you to
produce and this is the kind of

format I need, and that's it.

I don't get into any context and
then it will ask me questions and it

kind of, sometimes it gets annoying
'cause I'm like, come on, come on.

But it's asking questions
that I would not have thought.

To include his context and it actually
gets me to the correct end point faster.

And so I think that's a, a key element
is, is that ability for it to see what

you, you can't see on the edges, right?

Jenny: Yeah, absolutely.

I have

Travis: have learned this
from other people, so

Jenny: credit, but.

Travis: credit, but.

Jenny: Before almost every prompt
I say read my context files first.

And that's why desktop is so powerful.

And context files are
important because you

Travis: Wanna tell

Jenny: about you, about your business,
your clients, your goals, how you

Travis: how you work?

Jenny: uploaded my books as markdown files
or had the AI convert them to markdown.

with every prompt I say, read my
context files first, and then I

explain a little bit, and then I say.

user question and you inter caps, I
learned that inter caps does matter.

It's called Camel Case Capital
A Ask capital U user question.

It's all one word, no spaces.

And that tells Claude,
interview me about what I want.

And it is so powerful and I'm so impressed
by the questions that it asks and how,

and I say, ask user question until you
are 95% clear on what I'm trying to do.

And so, yes, I'm with you and I
love, thank you for reminding me.

It's called reverse prompting.

I forgot about that.

Travis: Yeah, and I like the 95% piece.

I've kind of added something
to, to the lines of.

Help me make it bulletproof
or things like that.

Right.

Kind of the same thing, but I
like giving it a percentage.

And yeah.

And you mentioned context files.

How, how, how are you using those,
you know, they work for general

prompts, uh, you know, like you
mentioned, read these files first.

But how, how are they important
in terms of using agents

like you're using them now?

Jenny: Well, the difference Chat was
starting to do this, whether you use Chat

GT or Claude, it was starting to create.

Where you could upload same core files
that it would reference when you chat.

But chat was just a little more

Travis: Transac.

Jenny: with, and again, I keep referencing
Claude desktop because to me right

now, that's really the game changer.

The context files, there's the
ones that you create that you might

want it to reference every time.

You're working on something.

And for those of you, I know you're
probably at varying degrees of, of

where you are on all of this, but in
very simple terms, a markdown is just

stripped of all extraneous formatting.

So it's just how the AI reads
things very quickly with the minimal

token use compared to Google Docs
or God forbid, Microsoft Word.

That's so just overloaded with
formatting and a bunch of crap

that slows down these LLMs.

So.

I learned a lot.

I mean, what I love right now,
what's happening in this space is

so many people are open sourcing.

They're sharing, they're sharing on X,
they're sharing GitHub repositories,

they're sharing on Substack.

They are so generous with
try this prompt first.

Try this.

I am.

I am now creating a resource guide
too, for anyone who joins my free time

community, where I'm giving a database
of all my favorite prompts because, uh.

Like someone shared with me when I
was just getting going with this,

something called Claude Council.

It was a Google doc.

I'll send it to you, Travis, if
you wanna put it in the show notes.

Travis: Yeah,

Jenny: all you do is copy,
paste, and you ask a business

question, like some strategy

Travis: question.

Jenny: you're genuinely debating.

Somebody else engineered this epic prompt.

You just copy paste and all of a sudden.

Five advisors weigh in a
contrarian, an expansionist, a

practical one, an imaginative one.

Each weighs in with their opinion.

They debate each other.

Then the, the, the prompt, like
then they read and see what are the

blind spots that no council member.

Noted.

And then there's a recommend, a
summary recommendation at the end.

So it's just this very cool
process that if you have context

Travis: Files already

Jenny: business and your clients and
your goals, suddenly you can engage an

Travis: in

Jenny: prompt like counsel
and get really solid answers.

And I

Travis: Wow.

Jenny: combination of those
two things that, for me, the

experience has been miraculous.

I feel.

So

Travis: So empowered in my business.

Jenny: less alone in my business as
a solopreneur, less alone in the big

decisions, how I approach things.

It gave me the energy back to even
relaunch my private community, which

I've been paused for over a year.

And I was kind of flailing.

It's like now I can offload so much
more of the work that was draining

me or just really messy, like

Travis: Like all the stuff

Jenny: under the

Travis: rug.

Jenny: was not urgent or important.

And oh, I just feel so
empowered to get things done.

Like I, I shared a story of how Claude
Code took over my computer for a day

and fix 300 broken links on my substack.

And that was such a relief because
even my team member doesn't

love doing that kind of thing.

So not only did I enough to pay anyone
other than my a hundred dollars a

month max plan on Claude, but it
worked tirelessly in the background.

It's just so empowering.

Travis: Yeah.

Jenny: I know.

I'm sounding really hypey and I
actually sat on the sidelines for the

last two years just because I didn't
wanna turn anybody off by talking

about AI and now I can't help it.

I actually don't want people to be
left behind just 'cause they're.

Intimidated by all this.

If you hate it for ethical,
environmental privacy reasons and you're

morally opposed, I totally get it.

I share some of those concerns, but I,
I can't keep sitting on the sidelines

about it, just for that reason.

For me personally,
everyone else is different.

Travis: Yeah.

Yeah.

No, I, I, I agree and I
have those same concerns.

And it, it is just some
cognitive dissonance, right?

That, that is involved with it.

But yeah, I was kinda the same
boat, like there was all the hype.

But I wasn't quite seeing it yet.

Like the actual, you know, how can this be
helpful outside of just a novelty, which

is kind of what I felt it was at the time.

And, and I'm a HubSpot,
uh, partner and I, I've.

Implemented HubSpot for lots of
companies over the years and they,

they were among the first CRMs to
introduce their own AI embedded into it.

And, you know, early on I just was
like, I don't really see the value.

It's almost gonna take me more effort
just to talk to this thing when I already

know how I'm gonna create what I'm
gonna create that it might help me with.

Right.

And then I went to their
inbound conference, uh, in

September in San Francisco.

And, before I've just been
like, yeah, yeah, whatever.

I don't see it.

. This isn't helpful.

It's noise.

But this year or last year, I
guess I, I remember thinking

it's finally turn the corner.

I can actually see how it's useful.

And it was driven by agents, kinda like
for you, that was the turning point to

where, okay, this can actually help me
in a lot of different ways, not just.

In my business where I am solo, to help
prevent me from being the bottleneck

that I've been for the last five years.

But I got diagnosed with A DHD
in 2023 after having it for 40

plus years and not knowing it.

Uh, but that it all made
sense once, once I found out.

And so there's things that are strengths
and there's things that are profound

weaknesses for someone like me with a DHD.

And I was sitting there during inbound
thinking, and the very first thing didn't,

didn't, it didn't, it wasn't how can I,
you know, replace a, an assistant or VA

or ea or have it run all these tasks?

It was, how can I leverage this
technology E so I don't have to focus

so much on my weaknesses, right?

And I can focus on those strengths and
the superpowers that I have from A DHD.

That some people may not have.

And that to me was just a light bulb
of like, finally, finally something

can help me get around the system that
has been built, not for people like

us and level the playing field, right?

And so that's what I was really excited
about and it was that point that I

started to really dig into agents.

The flight home I was
sitting in the airport.

At SFO and I was creating something in
Google to block my calendar if I had

x number of hours already scheduled or
this number of meetings scheduled, and,

and now I don't remember how I did it.

And so it just runs and I don't know
how to turn it off, but it works.

I guess if I'm gonna protect
my time, it's, it's relentless

because it's always blocking it.

But but yeah, I think
there's just so many.

Positive I implications of AI for people.

And instead of thinking of it as
replacing you, to me it's, think of

it as building a, a better you right?

With these agents behind you helping you.

Right?

So, so yeah, that was kind of
the turning point for me as

well at that point in time.

Jenny: And I love that story, and I
think there's nothing so joyful as

when you fix something that genuinely
feels frustrating or friction filled.

Oh, and just like for me, I have it read
over 50 newsletters I subscribe to over

like maybe 900 Substack newsletters.

I think of it like I run a newspaper
and I'm the CEO or I'm the editor in

chief and these are my columnists.

But in any case, it's obviously
more than I can keep up with.

And now my email assistant, which
is a custom agent, I use Notion just

'cause I've been in notion for five
years, but every day I've told it.

Scan through my newsletters and
surface recommendations, what

you think I would like, and it
knows I'm interested in agent ai.

It knows some of my, I'm interested in
writing and craft, and so now it tells me

what's happening in my same box folder.

That's the service I use that filters
all newsletters out of my inbox.

And I'm missing less, but I'm
catching more in terms of.

Content that I might find interesting
that before was just getting

totally washed out of my email.

I wasn't seeing it whatsoever,
and sometimes I was missing

important billing stuff.

So I think when people are intimidated
with where to start with this stuff.

I would say either start building
something that just sparks joy,

like around one of your habits,
you know, uh, hobbies or habits or

like you said, Travis, it's really
like looking at a pain point or a

bottleneck or a frustration or a drainer
and saying, could the AI do this?

And now you can just ask Claude in code
or desktop or cowork, can you do this?

What do you propose?

How, how do you suggest we go about this?

And it will tell you as well.

You could even just say, this
is what I'm frustrated about.

user your question until you're clear on
what I need, and then help me brainstorm

solutions and ways you can help.

So I think it's

Travis: It's also learning right now.

Jenny: It's a skill to ask

Travis: Ask

Jenny: for

Travis: help,

Jenny: because it can give it now.

Whereas in the past it was really
hard to ask Za Zapier like, or

Zapier, I never know how you say it.

It was really hard to ask
automation tools like.

can you

Travis: help.

Jenny: You have to go to their
help center and still really slowly

learn how to fix whatever you are
breaking, whereas now you don't.

It takes over.

It fixes it for you.

It tells you.

It's like so remarkable how capable
and imaginative they are at problem

solving ways beyond you can think.

So I do agree it's such a.

Such a like Iron Man superpower.

We've all been given

Travis: Yeah, absolutely.

And I think if you've.

Been around technology and
the evolution of everything.

Like, like we have, and seen it go
from, from nothing to where it is now.

You know, we, we understand that things
are gonna evolve and it's gonna change

and it's gonna look drastically different.

Right.

I mean, the internet evolved and looked
drastically different, uh, over time.

And I think that, and I think
that also is what makes.

Some of us skeptical of things, of
jumping into early of the hype and,

and everything knowing, hey, it's gonna
evolve and maybe it's just not ready.

I'm not ready for where it's at right now.

But I think, yeah, I think the sooner
you can jump in and build a foundation.

The less catch up 'cause it is
moving fast and I think it's

gonna be much more difficult maybe
because now you can't ask it.

How do I do these things?

So you can catch up quickly, but
there's gonna be a whole lot further

you have to go to get at to the
same level as someone else, right?

And of course they're gonna make
it look easy like everything else.

People with experience make it look easy.

You get frustrated when you
can't get there in a day.

But it is gonna take time and
I think people should get into

it as quickly as they can.

I think so.

Jenny: might have to dedicate time like.

I, there's another guy who said
this on Lenny's podcast, which

I really enjoy, where it's

Travis: It like

Jenny: it's

Travis: it's not gonna happen in a day.

That's not gonna happen week.

It's not like

Jenny: take a week, learn it, and you're

Travis: done.

Jenny: You, I

Travis: I think all now have to carve out.

Jenny: percentage of time to
be learning and playing around

and experimenting because.

two days, there's new feature
releases, things change.

The interfaces change.

I think it's part of our
job now, no matter what kind

Travis: Kind job you actually have

Jenny: I mean,

Travis: mean, again, unless
you're totally opt out.

Mm-hmm.

Something else.

Jenny: But I see it

Travis: it part

Jenny: now and as part of
my team member's job as

Travis: as

Jenny: she, I've told her, please put
learning your time sheet and put a

Travis: learning plan.

Jenny: and there's gonna be growing
pains because it is awkward sometimes.

We or now I have to figure out how
to delegate to her subsequently, then

to the custom agent or maybe to an
agent that manages other subagent,

like it's a really weird time.

I think we all have to be, a
little humility and also dedicate

the time to learning right now.

Travis: Absolutely.

Yeah.

And yeah, and, and it's hard.

I think that's probably the
most difficult thing for people.

And that's why I just finished rereading
Cal Newport's book Deep Work because

it's that important, I feel to really
good, good at carving out that time.

Blocking it, protecting
it, uh, with everything.

You have to be able to, to go into
that deep work of learning and

testing and experimenting, right?

Because as soon as you let that
dry up, it's going to accelerate.

Past you.

Right?

And that's my biggest fear right
now is, is getting too busy.

Business is picking up finally.

And I fear that it's just gonna
eat my entire schedule and I

can't let that happen right now.

And and so I think if you're a company
maybe you worked at Google and, and

I recruited at Microsoft and, and
it was Google's 20% time of being

able to work on whatever you wanted.

That made it hard for me to recruit.

People against Google, but I think
you almost have to work that into

your business model for your people.

Not just for like building new things
like Google did, but for learning and you

know, maybe building through ai, but just
learning and having that time to dig in.

That's uninterrupted, right?

Jenny: Yeah, and I think agree with
the hype, like the over hype as far as

I think I'm hearing some people talk
about it like, oh, you need now is a

good idea and you're capable of building
it, and they're failing to mention,

yeah, but okay, sure you can vibe code
your new idea in three days, but then

the next person can copy it in an hour.

Because they can just hand that to
Claude Code and say, duplicate this.

so

Travis: So

Jenny: it's

Travis: now it's

Jenny: marketing

Travis: the marketing's

Jenny: gonna be

Travis: gonna be different

Jenny: great is your new idea.

Do

Travis: idea.

Jenny: grand or a million or
10 million to throw behind it

Travis: It

Jenny: actually the marketing or not?

It's not just a good idea.

It's not just the capability to create it.

And I think

Travis: I think that's being left out

Jenny: conversation I'm

Travis: hearing.

Jenny: like.

No, the idea is not, that is not only
gonna cut it now, and that's, I think

that's gonna be gnarly for all of

Travis: All of us.

Jenny: Where just

Travis: It's like

Jenny: LinkedIn was,
and slop, amplifi long

Travis: before ai.

Jenny: was like, to me, just intolerable.

Just like a bunch of humble bragging
showboating, really annoying.

Oh.

Uh, now it's like really intolerable.

I, I loathe the Chad GT's
writing style output.

I cringe.

I can't stand it.

But

Travis: but now we're.

Jenny: equivalent in terms
of products and services.

Like there's gonna be like slop sass, you
know, where people make it in an hour.

And stupid story that went viral about
the guy who vibe coded his way, his

first one person billion dollar startup.

It's like, well, yeah, if you're
selling Ozempic and you're

practically running a fraud scheme.

the scenes.

Oh sure.

You can get to a billion.

So I do agree there's a lot
of hype and there's gonna

Travis: Gonna be a lot of

Jenny: challenges, and I do think
there's gonna be really awkward.

Tumultuous periods where we
already know entry level people,

it's harder for them to get jobs.

'cause the AI is so good
at that kind of stuff.

And if you're a

Travis: if you're a business

Jenny: it's

Travis: owner, it's like,

Jenny: Claude

Travis: oh.

Jenny: design.

What

Travis: What happens if you're,

Jenny: What

Travis: what happens

Jenny: your bread and

Travis: if write a letter

Jenny: For

Travis: for me?

I run

Jenny: business.

They're pretty

Travis: pretty remarkable.

Jenny: at talking through
career next steps.

It's not a hundred percent
replacement of a person.

But it's doing a lot.

So I think in every industry we're gonna
have to be looking at this and seeing

how we adapt and it's, I don't think
it's gonna be clear cut or overnight

really for any of us, unless you.

Your pivot is, know,
talking about gen to ai,

Travis: Yeah.

Yeah.

Jenny: say, it's like selling
shovels in a gold rush.

Like you might not find
the gold, you can sell a

Travis: Double.

Jenny: And I'm not saying for better or
for worse, I'm just saying like, it's,

it's gonna be, it's gonna be confusing
and I think it's gonna be confusing

for almost everybody in different ways.

Travis: Yeah.

Yeah.

And there were a couple things
that you mentioned there that

I think are, are important.

The entry level.

The thing is, is really big because
it, it is good at, at those things.

And I think where the superpower comes
in between a person and AI is that person

leveraging their experience and their
taste to know what good looks like to

then be able to coach it and manage it.

Right.

And if you're entry level.

Coming into a, a, a new career, you
don't have that wealth of experience

in you stumbling and learning over time
to then be able to leverage that to

make it really, really work for you.

Right.

And, and then the vibe coding thing
as, as a HubSpot partner and CRMs,

I keep hearing about people vibe,
coding their own CRMs, and I'm like.

I am sure that was a fun weekend project
for you, but now who's now gonna manage

it and maintain it when it goes down, when
you hire people, how long is the training

and onboarding gonna take for them to
learn this new thing versus HubSpot that

they might have used at another role?

Right.

And I think you know, as a recruiter
in technology back in the day.

And, and I would work for a company,
Comcast, Microsoft, whoever, who

would say, you know, we really
want someone with experience using

these tools or these platforms
because the onboarding is faster.

And then I'd talk to people at
companies who had built their

own homegrown, CRM or ERP.

And it is just like, you're gonna
come in and it's gonna be really hard

for you just to catch up to where
you need to be in six months because

you're now learning the basics.

Right?

And so, I don't know if people are fully
understanding the, the, you know, to

kind of Dory Clark's book, the Long Game.

They're not really looking
at the long game right.

With some of this stuff.

Jenny: And it depends how big and
how complex your organization is.

Like I know

Travis: I know people.

Jenny: have canceled Salesforce and big
expensive build outs that they spent a

lot of consulting money on, and they're
gleeful to cancel it and builds in their

own environment and have full control and
pay $0 other than the coding token costs.

But I do think you're right.

It works better if you're a really small
company, like it's one or two of you.

And Markdown files aren't that
friendly for team members to be using.

So yes, you could have it build
a dashboard and that's what

a lot of people are doing.

And now they're launching like
live artifacts and there's a whole

lot launching in that arena as
far as dashboards and shared info.

But yeah, it's gonna be much
harder for bigger organizations

to do that kind of thing.

And.

I guess

Travis: I guess the flip side that

Jenny: the

Travis: the opportunity right now,

Jenny: you're a

Travis: small business,

Jenny: because we're at
the front of the wave.

We're agile enough to
do all this and try it.

friend Travis Strom as well,
has canceled so much software.

He got into open Claw and blew my
mind with what he's created and.

So small businesses, like I

Travis: I think in the last six.

Jenny: at when the pandemic hit, small
businesses were hit really, really hard,

especially as bigger companies tightened
the belt and then consumers, even though

I hate that term, but like day-to-day
people didn't also have as much money

to spend with those small businesses.

But now I feel we have the
advantage because we're agile

enough to try this stuff.

We don't have as enormous like
infrastructure and security

questions and approvals, and I
can't even imagine how frustrated

Travis: Frustrated

Jenny: if I worked

Travis: I would be,

Jenny: company and there were
like all these limits and ceilings

on how I could use these tools.

And approval chains and just bureaucracy.

So

Travis: yeah.

Jenny: guess the part of me I feel
really excited is like, ooh, for once we

get to rock it out ahead and be at the
front of the curve and we're gonna know

Travis: What's coming

Jenny: even the big companies

Travis: because

Jenny: we're able to really try
it first and just dive right in.

Travis: Yeah.

E exactly.

Yeah.

And, and I think that's a, a key
point is the bureaucracy of being

able to use these things because I
couldn't imagine the way I, I use

Claude, uh, in other, other tools.

To have to give that up or have
to ask before I, I do something.

I, I don't know if I could, I
mean, that's why I work for myself

because I can't do that stuff.

Jenny: Right,

Travis: or, or not ai.

Jenny: Right.

Travis: but but yeah, that, that's,
that's in, uh, that's a great point.

And what, so, and you mentioned
using notion and, and its Agen

features and Claude and, and I think.

For people who are just getting into it.

I, I think a key point is
understanding there's a lot of

different AI platforms, right?

There's Claude and Manus and
Perplexity and, and Notion has its

own, but I, but I feel like they.

Have their own strengths and
learning how to use them for

different things I think is also key.

And so when you're using notions,
agent functionality, and clawed,

how are you, what's the delineation
between where you'll use Notion

and where you'll use Clot?

Jenny: So all of my notion
agents are powered by Claude.

I get to choose the model and they
give you seven or eight choices at

the time of this recording it's opus
seven, but I'm sure within a week

it will be some other wild model.

I think the main difference
is it, it depends.

Once you have what I call a
delightfully tiny team or bigger.

Notion is friendlier as far as
team collaboration and getting the

business out of your mind and onto a
shared Like ago, we had SharePoint.

It was a Microsoft product.

Again, really bloated and annoying.

Notion is exceptional.

For creating an externalized business
mind that is searchable across all

information in the business, customizable,
you really start with a blank slate.

You can do anything you want,
create any database you want.

You don't have to be tech savvy.

Now, you can ask the AI to do it for you,
and it will and inter linkable so you

can at reply, team members, client pages,
transactions, everything's customizable,

inter linkable for that reason.

I think it's easier to work with a team.

Yes, they're custom agents in
notion and some people are that

it's gonna be too expensive and
notions, token cost seems high, but

Travis: But if you have money,

Jenny: mind, let's say you

Travis: you have

Jenny: and you

Travis: and you can import it,

Jenny: you

Travis: allow you to import
from your stack as well.

Jenny: It's

Travis: it's just so

Jenny: for

Travis: sharing, collaboration, and

Jenny: client facing pages and.

Seeing your business in front of you, and

Travis: especially.

Jenny: team members to do the same.

And I run my whole personal
life in notion too, and my

Travis: And my colleague

Jenny: Sherwood and I,

Travis: and I who created a time operat

Jenny: Just so

Travis: just so people,

Jenny: to start from scratch

Travis: because otherwise

Jenny: at a blank page
in a blinking cursor.

I

Travis: I think comes down to,

Jenny: I

Travis: I just learned, I knew

Jenny: WY week, what
you see is what you get.

But today I've

Travis: I.

Jenny: learned what gooey stands
for, which is graphic user interface,

as in notion is the gooey wy wake.

Like you see it, it's in
front of you, it exists.

Whereas I feel when you're using Claude
desktop, yes, there's a bunch of markdown

files and sure you can have obsidian up.

So you could easily click through
and view them, but it'd be very

overwhelming for a team member.

And I find that despite my best
efforts, my markdown files are still

all over the place in my Linked
AI folder from Claude Desktop.

Whereas in notion, I'm much more
intentional about where things

Travis: Go.

Jenny: and again, now the AI
can find anything you want.

So it's

Travis: So it's so powerful.

Jenny: I think my

Travis: My biggest

Jenny: I'm not

Travis: not.

Jenny: like, I'm not trying to
sell Notion, but I can share

what it did for me was that.

Instead of having to search for
information about my business

and not knowing, is it in Slack?

Is it in a Google Doc?

Google Sheets in an Airtable?

Is it in here?

Is it there?

No.

There's only one place to search, and
that makes search actually functional

as opposed to wasting your time, unable
to retrieve the information you need

or even search for it because it's
spread across 12 software systems or 20.

Travis: Yeah, exactly.

And I think, I think that's also
where, you know, as I, as I am helping

companies prepare to layer AI on
because I think that's something that

they're not really thinking about
is how your processes your data.

Uh, need, your data needs to be clean.

Your processes need to be efficient,
optimized, your systems in place

and your, your documentation.

I, I think is, it's something that
I think a lot of companies have

overlooked or it takes too much
time and they haven't invested as

much time in documentation or proper
documentation, and I think that's gonna.

Come back to bite them.

And I know, I mean, I'm one of 'em be
I, it's, I think it's my A DHD because

I've just always been awful at that.

It's in my head and that's my superpower.

I can keep stuff in my head, but
then I can't hire anybody because

they don't have access to my head.

Right.

And so I think a critical,
critical part is.

Having that documentation in something
like Notion, that's where I've

started building my documentation.

I've used Notion off and on and,
and I think it's been too much of

a blank slate for me to come in and
be like, Ugh, this is overwhelming.

I'll, I'll do something else.

Right.

But I think you had a workshop back
in December maybe that I joined,

and that got me back into notion
and that was the nudge I needed.

And I'm glad because I hadn't quite
really got into the agen side of

things as deeply as I am now and
starting to put documentation in there.

It made that transition so
much easier because I had, I

have a client who sends me.

Uh, you know, his, the sales team
will create lists from ZoomInfo

every, every other week, and then I
put them into, to HubSpot for them.

But I have to do a lot of cleanup.

I have to add columns and do
the stuff, and it's a time suck

and it's not that complicated.

And so I started to create an SOP to
hire someone to then do this for me.

And then I realized the
instructions are there.

If I could.

I have instructions for
a person to do this.

These instructions would work for
Manus, which is what I used for that.

And so I had the spreadsheet in a
Google sheet and I had a link to the

notion page and I just said, Hey,
go follow these instructions and

take this Google sheet and fix it
and get it ready for me to import.

And it, it took something that
was taking me 30 minutes to do

down to like two minutes and.

Now the client has started to just
add new tabs to that Google sheet, and

now I've put an agent in Manus saying,
monitor the sheet and if a new tab

is added, automatically clean it up
and then let me know that you did it.

And so that another step, right?

'Cause like you mentioned, if you have to
do something more than once, automate it.

And so that's what I, I did.

So I think that having that
documentation is gonna be critical.

Jenny: And there's a couple

Travis: More

Jenny: I love how you have the
agent set up now a couple more

Travis: ways.

Jenny: It could be even easier for
you or anyone in that position where

let's say you do, I call it a manager
manual, but it's essentially SOPs.

So now you can create an onboarding
agent who helps onboard in Notion.

They also have just AI chat in
the bottom right hand corner.

So any page you're on, you can with ai.

It's not an agent, but it can answer
questions and do things on those pages.

So

Travis: So you.

Jenny: an agent where anytime we ask
a question in the chat, in the manager

manual, and an SOP does not exist,
interview me to help me create one.

And so that it knows it's either answering
the person's question or it isn't.

And if it isn't, it's helping create the

Travis: That

Jenny: and it's

Travis: taking the responsibility

Jenny: get to then be
in the passenger seat on

Travis: on that.

Still tell

Jenny: know.

I say in free time, every
question lives three lives.

A question that a team member
asks should never just.

Fall by the wayside.

That's the first life, the
time someone asks a question.

Second life is then it.

If it

Travis: It doesn't exist.

Jenny: goes into your documentation.

And the

Travis: And the third, the question.

Jenny: is, does it also need to be
posted on a customer facing resource?

And then the course you
mentioned is the Create Your

Idea Collection Systems course.

This is almost like an entry into
notion, and I love hearing that.

It got you back into it.

But people often save ideas and

Travis: Articles

Jenny: and inspiration all over the place.

It's in their email inbox,
it's in their notes app.

It's scattered everywhere.

It's on pieces of

Travis: paper.

Jenny: So the

Travis: So the, there is

Jenny: one

Travis: one database notion.

Jenny: your collection bucket, and that
every image, thought, idea, whatever it

is, article using the Web Clipper, it
all goes into the same place now with ai.

You could, you can select, say any
card in this database that doesn't have

topics, go ahead and fill in the topics.

And there's like smart AI
generation or bulk processing.

I've now given it like 10 snippets
at once and I say, can you

create cards for these 10 quotes?

Like it even

Travis: Even

Jenny: the

Travis: the,

Jenny: not even

Travis: even

Jenny: The agent for the idea

Travis: for the idea would
be once a week you summarize

Jenny: I've saved?

And give me a one

Travis: one paragraph summary

Jenny: a link to the full card.

You could also bring in your
content calendar, so you

Travis: could.

Jenny: and knowing, you know, you teach
a context about a newsletter that you

write and you say, every Thursday, at

Travis: at

Jenny: any

Travis: many articles I've,

Jenny: since the

Travis: last time you ran a

Jenny: Give me a

Travis: summary and make a recommendation.

Jenny: are

Travis: What are three things

Jenny: include in my next newsletter?

personally don't use AI to write.

I think it's a brilliant
editor, You could, if

Travis: could.

Jenny: to feed it your voice
documents or previous, you can

Travis: You,

Jenny: crawl a blog that you

Travis: you have say, what are

Jenny: What are my

Travis: guidelines?

Jenny: Well, another

Travis: Another thing I.

Jenny: it helps me draft a client
email, 'cause I do use it for some

professional email drafting, day-to-day
stuff, just high stakes contract, things

that I'm nervous about, will give it to

Travis: It

Jenny: I don't

Travis: if I don't like it.

If I do like it,

Jenny: do like it,

Travis: I in

Jenny: paste in what

Travis: what I,

Jenny: sent and I'll say.

Compare your draft to what I

Travis: I actually.

Jenny: and extract rules that
you can to the style guide for

how I write, how I communicate.

So I think part of this is.

Leaning on your feedback skills.

These agents are not
perfect at their first run.

They can do so much, but you do need to
be patient and commit to giving feedback.

I even create a little status field
in my hub where all my agents send

various briefs and reports and the
status says agent needs fixing.

And there's a little notes field where
I make a note of what I wanna fix.

'cause I'm sometimes I'm on the go and
I can't just make the fixes right there.

You can't do it on mobile yet.

I'm sure that will change, like the
agent's gonna need fixing for the first

few times it runs and just expect that.

Travis: Yeah, absolutely.

Yeah.

And I've, I've done similar, right?

I, I don't use it for, for my writing.

I've thought about using it for like
newsletters for my nonprofit where it

doesn't really need to be me writing.

And it could have, could be somebody I
hire, but I don't have to hire them now.

Right.

To just kind of write
about some basic stuff.

And I took my book and dumped
it in and to give it, you

know, 250 pages of how I write.

And, and that book was really
written how I talk anyway.

So it's a pretty good, uh,
example for it to pull from.

But it still will use a lot
of things like terms that.

Or, or widely used that I don't like.

And so I'll have to say, don't
ever use that word again.

I don't, I will never use that word.

But, but yeah, a lot of coaching.

So

Jenny: I have that file too.

It's called Words I Hate.

Travis: yeah.

Jenny: And then if you go to tropes, fyi.

A author created a tropes markdown
file where you can just download his AI

tropes document, it's markdown, and then
upload that into your, your tool and, and

just say, please avoid these AI tropes.

And also, yeah, I said it'll say
something like, it's a solve,

you know, using solve as a noun.

I'm like, no, solve

Travis: Yeah,

Jenny: Like, I hate that

Travis: yeah,

Jenny: use it

Travis: yeah, yeah,

Jenny: have a words I
hate marked on vile that

Travis: yeah.

Nice.

I'll have to do that because I have
a lot of those words working in.

Jenny: on the contrary, if people
send you nice kind things about

you or your business, I call those
keepers, and I've labeled those

in my Gmail for 20 years longer.

I also have a notion, a database
of when people say nice things

about a product or a service.

And I got this idea from
Jeremy Schiff Fling.

He wrote a book called Unbreakable
or Unstoppable, sorry, Jeremy.

It's really good.

It's about how to navigate
your career in the age of ai.

Anyway, it's

Travis: it's suggestion, but I also

Jenny: say,

Travis: say.

Jenny: all these keepers and surface
the key themes and cite your sources.

Like what are the key themes of what
people thank me for or say that I'm,

superpowers are and provide three to
five quotes for each of those strengths

and cite the source link back to
the original card that it came from.

That was a really powerful exercise
to get to know side of myself that

maybe I couldn't have put words to

Travis: Mm-hmm.

Jenny: that way.

Travis: Yeah, absolutely.

I love that example.

So I know we're coming up on, on time
and so I've got one question and,

and my 3-year-old probably coming
in is also that signal what buddy

Jenny: a cutie.

See free time.

It's like, so we can actually
go just live our lives.

Travis: I know well.

Jenny: will keep interviewing me in the

Travis: This is, yeah, exactly.

Exactly.

That's your elevator.

Oh, I love it, buddy.

Jenny: Hi,

Travis: I'm sick.

Do, can you say hi real quick?

Say hi.

Can you wave?

Can you wave?

Okay.

All right.

Can you, can you go out,
go watch super kitties for.

Five more minutes, I'll come get you.

And I You want me to keep this?

Yeah.

Awesome.

Thank you buddy.

But as a closing.

Well, and this is the thing I have
this, I had this closing question

and we already answered it.

And so my, my closing question will
be kinda outside of what we may have

talked about, is there anything that
we didn't mention that you think is

super important, especially for, uh,
business owners, founders to know?

Before jumping into ai.

Jenny: I guess what I would say,
you might've heard this in my

intro to AI workshop agent ai.

Don't let it intimidate you because
now in your natural language, it can

literally tutor you at every step.

And I think that mid-career
professionals and business

owners, so much going for you.

You don't have to be a
software engineer anymore.

And that's new.

That's as of 2026.

Now, if you're a good people
manager and delegator.

your doorway in.

If you are a good problem
solver, that's your doorway in.

If you run a business, you're
an entrepreneur, you're used

to building things from zero
to one, that's your doorway in.

If you're really opinionated
about what you like and don't

like, that's your doorway.

If you're simply curious, you're
just a curious person and you love

to learn, that's your doorway in.

You only need one of these doorways.

on that and don't worry about the rest.

And you're not behind.

You're actually, we're
at the front of the wave.

And it will tell you if, if you get
stuck, if Claude code tells you you need

to open terminal and copy paste this
and you don't know what terminal is,

you can literally say what is terminal?

then it says, oh, just search and
open it and then paste the code.

And you're like, where?

And it will say, oh, that
little blinking rectangle.

I mean, so that's how Let it tutor
you on anything you feel stuck

Travis: Mm-hmm.

Jenny: Don't sit it out.

Travis: Yeah.

Jenny: sit it out.

You have lots of doorways
in and you only need one.

Travis: Yeah.

Yeah, absolutely.

And and yeah, the nice thing about Claude
Oth, others might do this, but it can

actually look at screenshots and know
what's in an image, which is crazy.

And I actually had it walk me through
building a make automation and

injecting, uh, using Claude's API,
to have things run through a prompt.

And I would screenshot where I
was and it ask what do I do now?

What do I put in these?

Empty boxes, right?

And, and if there was an
error, I'd screenshot the error

and say, what's this mean?

How do I fix this?

And it just walked me through
the whole thing like that.

So, so yeah, it, it will guide
you and it can teach you a lot,

Jenny: And I just wanna say,
welcome back to the pod I'm.

So happy you're doing this again.

You're an amazing interviewer and
you're genuinely just curious, and

we're both so excited about this stuff.

I know it's gonna carry you, and
it's definitely like riding a bike.

Travis: Mm-hmm.

Jenny: interview conversation
skills went anywhere.

all here right where you left them.

So welcome back and it's
such a joy to be your first

conversation and bringing it back.

Travis: Thanks.

Yeah, I really appreciate that.

And yeah, I was so excited, uh, that you
were able to be my first, first guest and

you might've been one of my last on my one
before I gave it up before, so, exactly.

So, so yeah, thanks a lot for
joining and uh, yeah, we'll

have to do this, uh, again.