Eight working templates to build an AI knowledge base for any business and sell it as a service. A six-question intake, an AI build prompt, and a proposal with a real number on it. No code. No software to host.
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The knowledge that makes a business specific lives in three places: the shared drive, the email archive, and one person's head. Hand an AI none of it and you still get an answer — confident, fluent, and wrong. The model isn't broken; it's guessing. The businesses buying AI right now will pay someone to fix that. This kit makes sure that someone can be you.
A law firm, a coaching practice, an agency, an e-commerce shop — all of them have client context worth structuring. You learn the method once and sell it into every one of them. The seven-note shape never changes; only the facts you pour in do.
The same method is a $750 audit or a $4,750 build — you size it to the buyer, not the other way around. Then a monthly retainer turns one build into income that shows up every month.
You're not reselling someone's app, so nobody can raise your price or sunset the feature you built your service on. The client's knowledge stays theirs, in plain files any AI can read. "Own your foundation" is the whole reason it's worth paying for.
No database. No hosting. Plain files the client owns, one clean doorway for the AI to read through, and one rule that makes the whole thing safe to sell: nothing becomes trusted memory until a human approves it.
And you don't write these by hand. You answer six questions; the kit's build prompt has the AI generate all seven — structured, source-backed, on-brand — in about two minutes. You bring the four facts only you know. It does the other ninety-nine percent, which is typing.
A sequenced start-here guide: zero to a working knowledge base and a sendable offer in one sitting.
The questions that extract what a business actually knows, plus the 5-check test that proves the vault works.
Paste it into Claude Code or any capable AI — all seven vault notes plus a preview, in about two minutes.
The file that keeps any AI honest: read the notes, cite sources, never guess, propose-then-approve, always.
Two install-ready AI skills that capture new material and run a weekly health check — the machinery of a monthly retainer.
Sensitivity labels, minimum-access rules, and the client-facing page that answers "how will you handle our data?"
Problem, deliverables, scope, terms. Swap in a client name and send. Three priced tiers ready to quote.
The three-tier pricing logic, the tier-picking test, and the four "not included" lines that protect your margin.
Build a vault for a prospect's business, then ask their AI for a real task — a client reply, a product description, a meeting brief. It answers in their voice, with sources. Now run the same ask in a blank chat with no vault.
"Certainly! Here's a warm, professional reply your customer is sure to love…" — right up until it invents a refund policy you don't have.
Right stakeholder, right priority, honors the red line, cites the note each fact came from — and flags the one thing it couldn't verify instead of guessing.
That contrast is the whole pitch. No slide deck required.
REPLACE_WITH_GINA_QUOTE — Gina's own words about the result (her real quote, not ours).
REPLACE_WITH_PAUL_QUOTE — Paul's own words about the deal won or time saved.
REPLACE_WITH_FRED_QUOTE — Fred's own words about the trust process.
Names confirmed (real clients). Drop in each client's own words before publishing — no invented quotes ship.
No. The "build" is plain markdown files an AI writes from a prompt in the kit. If you can fill in a form and paste text, you can deliver this.
Any tool that reads plain files. Setup guides cover Claude Cowork, Claude Code, and the Notion / Google Drive route for clients on other stacks. The vault is portable by design — you're not locked to one vendor.
They're not paying for typing. They're paying for judgment and a trust process: what to capture, how to structure it, how to handle confidential material, and a propose-then-approve rule that keeps the whole thing trustworthy. That's the line between a professional fee and gig-work rates — and the kit's data-trust one-pager is exactly what draws it.
Yes. You build your first vault on your own brand or a business you know, so you walk into the first conversation with a live demo. The proposal and pricing files then hand you the outreach-to-offer path. (The optional Swipe Pack scripts the outreach and the fit call, if you want the selling side done for you too.)
A course teaches concepts; a prompt pack hands you inputs. This is a delivery system — intake, build, trust process, priced proposal. The end state isn't "now you understand it." It's an offer sitting in a prospect's inbox.
Instant access after checkout: the eight files, in markdown and text, usable with any AI and any editor, forever. Every future template update is included at no extra cost.
Because it's a one-time price for a system a client pays $750 to $4,750 to have built. It's launch-priced to get it into working hands quickly. The math only has to work once for the kit to have paid for itself many times over.
The businesses buying AI right now will hire someone to fix their memory problem. The kit makes sure that someone can be you — this week.
Prefer the whole system in one purchase? The Complete System — the kit, the Swipe Pack, and the Retainer Engine — is $247, versus $341 bought separately. Get the Complete System