Not decks. Not talk. Real tools that run on their own — reading, drafting, filing, following up — so your team stops doing the same thing by hand and gets the time back.
I came up through sales and business development before I went all-in on AI. So I don't just ship an automation and walk away — I find the thing actually worth automating, build it, and make it pay for itself.
A few things I've built for businesses. Names kept private, but each one is a real task that used to eat someone's day — now running quietly in the background.
Built for a business owner drowning in email. It reads what comes in, drafts each reply in their own voice, and files it by topic. They open their inbox to answers waiting for a quick yes — not a wall of unread.
Built on contract for large brands through a Cape Town AI studio. The agents answer inbound calls, hold a natural conversation, capture what the caller needs, and route it to the right place — day or night, no one on hold.
Finds the right prospects, works out who to contact, writes a genuinely personal first message, sends it, and tracks what comes back. It only pings the owner when a real reply lands — so their attention goes to conversations, not admin.
Client sites that do more than sit there — like a leadership consultancy's self-scoring diagnostic that turns a visitor's answers into an instant tailored report, and a service business whose booking form confirms, schedules, and files itself. Fast, clean, self-contained.
The honest flex: this site's author doesn't just sell automation, he lives on it. A system scans the market every morning, ranks roles by pay, drafts a tailored pitch for the best ones, sends them, and only notifies me when someone actually replies. You're looking at the portfolio of the machine that found you.
Pick something your team does by hand, every week. The number below is what it adds up to — and roughly what an automation gives back.
I'm Jack. I build AI automations for businesses under my studio, FirmMind — based in Cape Town, working with clients here and abroad.
My rule is simple: automate the boring thing someone does twenty times a day without thinking. That's where the real time hides — not in the flashy demo, in the quiet repetition. Find it, build it, and give the human their day back.
Before AI, I spent years in sales and business development — top of the team inside two months at one SaaS firm, booking rooms with CEOs at some of South Africa's biggest companies. That's the part most builders miss: I can talk to the people, understand the business, and then go build the thing.
One conversation, no pitch. Tell me the task; I'll tell you if it's worth building.
Email me