Ask it about a client
"Bring me up to speed on this account." It pulls the recent emails, what's due, and where the project's at, in seconds, not an afternoon.
You've been invited to Agency Brain
You don't need to build anything, install anything clever, or understand how it works under the hood. Here's what you've been given, and how to get your first win today.
Agency Brain is a shared AI assistant your team set up. It already knows your agency: your clients, how you work, the jobs you do over and over. Your scout taught it the way your agency does things.
You talk to it in plain English, and it does real work alongside you. You're not here to build it. You're here to use something that's already built, and already knows your world.
A few things to picture before you even open it.
"Bring me up to speed on this account." It pulls the recent emails, what's due, and where the project's at, in seconds, not an afternoon.
The report, the reply, the recap, the first draft. It does these the agency's way, because your team already taught it how.
Every skill your team builds, you get. The more your agency uses it, the more it can do for you.
Three small steps. None of them technical.
Your scout or owner set you up and pointed you to the app, or sent you a link. Open it. If you can't find it, that's your scout's department, not yours to solve.
Pick a job you'd normally put off, and ask for it in plain words, the way you'd ask a sharp new colleague. Don't overthink the wording. The first small win is the whole point of today.
Your scout or owner set this up and can see the whole picture, so they're your go-to, not the internet. A quick screenshot of what you saw helps them sort it fast.
Agency Brain runs inside Cowork, a friendly app from the makers of Claude. If you've never used it, the free Cowork course gets you comfortable in about an hour, no jargon. Then your agency brain will feel easy.
Take the free Cowork course →You're early, and that's fine.
Agency Brain is in soft launch, so the odd rough edge is normal. Nobody expects you to be an expert. Try one thing, see what happens, and tell your scout if something trips you up.