Thursday, 16 April 2026

Two Kinds of Judgment. Most People Can't Tell Them Apart.

Every decision you make is either becoming a rule — or it needs you present every single time.

There is no middle ground.


Fossilized judgment is stable. You've made this call enough times that the answer is predictable. Encode it. Systematize it. Automate it. Let it run without you.

Live judgment is still moving. The context shifts. The stakes are high. New information changes the answer.

Encode this — and you don't get automation. You get a confident, consistent, wrong machine.


The Trap

Most people fossilize too early.

They take a judgment that was working because someone sharp was making it fresh each time — and they write the playbook. Build the process. Ship the agent.

For a while it looks like scale. What it actually is: yesterday's thinking, running at tomorrow's speed.


The Filter

Two questions. That's it.

  1. Is the underlying truth still moving?
  2. What happens when the answer is confidently wrong?

Stable truth + survivable error = fossilize it.
Everything else = stay live.


This Isn't New

Great managers already do this. They push routine calls down and hold the contextual ones close.

The law does it. Statutes are fossilized judgment. Judicial discretion is live.

AI just removed the friction that used to slow you down. Building an agent now takes an afternoon. That's extraordinary leverage — and leverage doesn't care whether you encoded something smart or something stupid.


The One Thing

Sort your judgments before you automate them.

Fossilize the stable ones. Revisit them on a schedule — the world moves, and yesterday's rule becomes tomorrow's liability.

Stay live on everything else.

The judgment you can never automate is the one about what to automate.


Get that one wrong and you don't scale your business. You scale your blind spots.

SOPs Are the Ceiling

If you can SOP it, you can automate it. If you can automate it, you can hand it to an agent. Spin up thirty specialized agents, run them in parallel — suddenly one person runs an organization.

True. Also incomplete.

The bottleneck migrates

With one human doing five things sequentially, the sequencing is implicit. They just know what's next. With five agents running in parallel, something has to decide what each one consumes, where outputs land, how conflicts resolve, and what gets escalated back to a human.

The work doesn't disappear. It moves. From doing to orchestrating.

That's where the real IP sits in an agent-heavy system. Anyone can stand up agents. Very few can orchestrate them well.

The SOP is the ceiling

A vague SOP makes a vague agent. A sharp SOP makes a sharp one.

The specialization isn't in the agent. It's in the crispness of the SOP it's running.

Most "our AI agent didn't work" stories — when you dig — aren't agent problems. They're SOP problems. The team never had a real SOP. They had a vibe. They handed the vibe to the agent. The agent returned a vibe. Everyone called it an AI failure.

Before you build an agent, write the SOP as if a new hire on their first day had to follow it. If you can't write that document, you don't have a process. You have a habit.

Not everything SOP-able should be agent-ified

Build cost + maintenance cost + debugging cost has to beat just doing it.

For high-volume repetitive work, this is obvious. For low-frequency judgment calls, the agent is a tax. You'll spend more time maintaining it than you'd have spent doing the task.

Two questions before you build anything:

  • How often does this run?
  • How stable is the underlying judgment?

Fossilized vs. live judgment

Every judgment in your business falls into one of two buckets.

Fossilized judgment is stable. The world has stopped moving around it. You've made this call a hundred times and the answer rarely surprises you. Safe to encode. This is what agents are for.

Live judgment is still moving. The inputs shift, context matters, the stakes of being wrong are high. Encoding this is dangerous — you freeze a decision that needed to stay dynamic, and the system quietly rots.

The mistake is treating these as the same. Founders either refuse to fossilize anything (stay trapped as the bottleneck) or fossilize everything (ship a system that's confidently wrong six months later).

The real unlock

The unlock isn't "build lots of agents."

It's figuring out which judgments have stabilized enough to fossilize, SOPing those ruthlessly, and keeping yourself in the live-judgment loop for everything else.

The meta-layer — orchestration above all the agents — is how you stay in that loop without touching every decision. It surfaces the live stuff to you. Handles the fossilized stuff without asking.

Automating judgment is the point. Automating the wrong judgment is how you scale your blind spots instead of your business.

Pick what you fossilize carefully. That choice is the one thing that can't be delegated.

 If you can SOP it, you can automate it. If you can automate it, you can hand it to an agent. Spin up thirty specialized agents, run them in parallel — suddenly one person runs an organization.


True. Also incomplete.


The bottleneck migrates


Now my job is to get things done .. i don't need to do it personally now

 Now my job is to get things done .. i don't need to do it personally now

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

How to create an SOP in Claude


  1. Do it once manually — just get Claude to complete the task end-to-end
  2. Ask Claude to summarise what it just did
  3. Ask it to turn that summary into a prompt
  4. Run the task again using that prompt
  5. Refine the steps and set permissions
  6. Let it build tools for automation + coding
  7. Update the prompt to incorporate the new steps
  8. Add verification — it should check the output of each step
  9. Check: is the output satisfactory?
  10. Create the final prompt
  11. Define a stop condition — when should it halt, escalate, or ask for help?
  12. Schedule it with an agentic workflow
  13. Let it run repeatedly — then revisit, refine, and re-encode as needed

Saturday, 11 April 2026

You Are Only As Safe As Your Utility

Here it is. Raw, no hedging, no softening.



Let's not dress this up.

If you have no utility to someone — on any plane, in any form — they will be brutal with you. Not cruel in the dramatic sense. Just indifferent. Which is worse. Indifference is hatred with better manners. They will not remember your name. They will not lose sleep over your absence. You will simply cease to matter, and the world will proceed without a single hiccup.

This is the operating system of a capitalist society. And it is not a bug.

Now here's the thing people misread: utility doesn't have to be economic. It can be emotional, social, intellectual, reputational. You can be useful as a source of laughter, as a connector, as a mirror someone thinks clearly in front of. The plane doesn't matter. What matters is that you occupy one.

The moment you vacate all planes — you are dead. Not metaphorically. Socially, professionally, relationally dead. People will tolerate enormous amounts of friction, inconvenience, even personal dislike — if you are useful enough. They will bend over backwards for someone difficult if that person has leverage, talent, access, or insight they cannot easily replace.

Remove the utility. Watch how fast the warmth evaporates.

This is the truth that polite society refuses to say out loud. We are trained to believe in unconditional regard, in relationships that transcend transaction. And yes, those exist — at the margins, in the rarest bonds. But as a base rate model for how the world works? Utility is the variable. Everything else is noise.

The right response to this is not cynicism. It is clarity.

Stop wondering why someone went cold. Ask instead: what utility did I lose? Stop being surprised when loyalty evaporates after a role change. Ask: what was I useful for, and is that still true? Stop mistaking tolerance for affection. Ask: are they here because they want to be, or because they need to be?

Build your utility deliberately. Across multiple planes. So that even when one collapses, you are not left with nothing.

The people who internalize this early — not bitterly, but clearly — are the ones who stop wasting energy on relationships that were always transactional, stop misreading proximity for warmth, and start building the kind of irreplaceability that actually compounds over time.

This is not a sad truth. It is a useful one.

And you already know what we do with useful things.



Ride the Curve

 

You don't get rich working hard. You get rich working near something that's compounding.

Find the curve. Strap in. Let the math do what effort can't.

In 1995, it was the internet. In 2010, mobile. In 2015, cloud. Today, it's AI — and the gap between people inside it and people watching it is widening every quarter.

Here's the thing nobody tells you: you don't need to build the exponential. You just need to be touching it. Use the tools. Ship with them. Sell into the wave. Write about it. Hire because of it. Let your work compound at the rate of the thing you're attached to — not the rate of your own two hands.

Linear effort on a linear curve gets you a linear life.

Linear effort on an exponential curve gets you somewhere your effort alone never could.

Pick your curve. Then go stand on it.

Business is going feminine. Nobody noticed.


For most of history, running a business was a physical sport. You drove to the client. You walked the factory floor. You shouted across the trading pit. You closed the deal over whiskey because you had to be in the room. The work rewarded stamina, territorial instinct, the willingness to out-grind the other guy. It was masculine by design, because the medium demanded it.

That medium is gone.

The client is on Zoom. The factory is a dashboard. The trading pit is an API. The deal closes in a thread. What's left — the actual edge — is taste, attention, pattern-reading, the patience to listen to a customer until you hear what they aren't saying, the discipline to hold a relationship for years before it pays. None of that is muscle. All of it is the stuff women were told, for centuries, was "soft" and therefore second-tier.

It was never second-tier. It was just waiting for the physical layer to get out of the way.

The most masculine arena in human life is quietly becoming one of the most feminine. And the people who've been training their whole lives for exactly this are about to eat.