A fleet of AI agents runs my business on autopilot — research, drafts, videos, monitoring — and every morning one three-minute brief tells me everything that happened. This is the exact system. You can build your first agent this weekend.
Most people build a dozen disconnected automations — a dozen new chores, a dozen places for something to silently break. The Daily Brief Method is a specific shape with three layers.
Each agent does one job well. "Draft tomorrow's post." "Research three leads." "Check the site is up." Narrow jobs are reliable jobs — a vague agent is an unreliable agent.
One agent manages the rest. It knows which spokes ran, collects what they produced, and catches what failed. One place to look. One place for errors to surface.
Every morning the orchestrator hands you one document: what ran, what needs your decision, what failed. Three minutes of reading replaces an hour of checking.
"Automation you can't see, you can't trust. The brief is the steering wheel — the agents are the engine."
I'm Rodney. I run a real business — construction technology and mapping — plus the content brands that document how I automate it. To keep all of it running without drowning in repetitive work, I built a fleet of AI agents — a dozen-plus strong: research, drafting, video rendering, posting, monitoring, bookkeeping.
I learned the hard lessons so you don't have to. One of my agents once died silently for four days while reporting "success" every morning. That failure is why the method has a watchdog, why every agent reports into a brief, and why nothing irreversible ships without a human pressing approve.
I'm not going to show you a screenshot of a bank account. What I will do is hand you the exact system I run every day — the architecture, the build steps, and the mistakes that cost me time so they don't cost you any.
No. The method is built on plain-English "job descriptions" and modern agent runtimes (like Claude) that can read files, use tools, and run on a schedule out of the box. If you can write an email describing what you want done, you can write an agent's job description. The playbook walks the build step by step.
Almost nothing to start: an AI subscription you likely already have, free scheduling built into Windows or Mac, and plain files for memory. My whole agent fleet runs on roughly a hundred dollars a month total — less than a freelancer would charge for one afternoon.
Both. The trigger layer is Task Scheduler on Windows or cron on Mac/Linux — the playbook covers each, including the two setup gotchas that silently stop scheduled agents (I lost a day to one of them so you don't have to).
14-day, no-questions-asked refund. And it's yours forever, updates included — when the method improves, your copy improves.
Run the free Task Audit tonight. Build your first agent this weekend. Read your first daily brief Monday morning.
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