Short, practical walkthroughs. Each one takes you from an empty screen to something working — follow the steps in order and you'll have a real result in a few minutes.
Turn a rough idea of your customer journey into a live board you can actually operate.
Create a column for each stage of your journey — for example Awareness, Interest, Consideration, and Purchase. Keep it to the stages that matter; you can refine later.
Under each stage, add the channels, offers, or actions that move someone forward. This is what turns a diagram into an operating system.
Step back and read the funnel end to end. When it looks right, export it to keep a backup or share the plan with your team.
Separate life admin from the business, then run both without them bleeding into each other.
Open Task Manager and pick Daily Mode for personal life or Operator Mode for the business. You can switch any time.
Add each task with a category, a priority, and a due date or time. Getting it out of your head and onto the board is the whole point.
Clear anything under Overdue first, then move through Scheduled. Let the priorities decide your order, not your inbox.
Open the insights view to see how the week actually went. It only ever summarises your own local data, so it's a private mirror — not a report to anyone.
See how small changes in your inputs compound into very different outcomes over time.
In the Growth Simulator, enter today's numbers — audience, conversion, and whatever drives your growth.
Nudge one input at a time and watch the projection respond. This is how you find which lever is actually worth pulling.
Try a conservative case and an ambitious case. The gap between them is your planning range — far more useful than a single guess.
Your work is stored in your browser, so this is how you keep it safe and carry it to a new device.
Open the tool and use its export action to save a file of your current data. Do this for each tool you care about.
Send the exported file to the new device however you like — email, cloud drive, or a USB stick.
Open the same tool on the new device and use its import action to load the file. Your work reappears exactly as you left it.