Getting the Most From It
How to Frame Your Questions
Specific questions produce better responses than vague ones. "How do I grow my business?" will produce a broad answer. "My lead generation score is at 31 and I've been relying entirely on referrals for the past year. What are the most effective ways someone in my industry typically builds a non-referral pipeline?" produces a focused, actionable response. You don't need to front-load everything before asking. The AI Coach will ask clarifying questions if the situation calls for it. But the more specific the starting point, the more directly useful the first response tends to be.
Treating It as an Ongoing Relationship
The AI Coach becomes more valuable over time as it builds a picture of how you work. Entrepreneurs who use it consistently as a sounding board for decisions, a check-in point when things feel stuck, and a space to think through challenges openly tend to get considerably more from it than those who use it occasionally for one-off questions. It isn't a replacement for human advisors, mentors, or peer relationships. It's a complement to those relationships: available at any time, without scheduling, and without the social dynamics that can make it harder to ask basic questions or admit uncertainty.
When Not to Use It
The AI Coach works best for business-specific questions and decisions. It's less suited to replacing the emotional support of a mentor, the accountability of a peer group, or the specific expertise of a professional in a regulated area such as law, tax, or finance. For questions in those domains, the Coach can help you think through the business implications but shouldn't be your sole source of guidance.