One topic. Your team. Something running by the end.
This isn't a course, and it isn't a cohort. Pete sits with a few of your people — on your actual work, in your actual tools — until something real is running.
You bring two or three people — account leads, creative directors, strategists, producers. We pick one topic that maps directly to what they do. And then we sit down and work.
No lectures, no demos, no slide decks, no certificates. Just hands-on construction against their real job. By the end, they have a deployed AI system running in their actual work.
It's not cheap. But the alternative is sending your people to a course where they leave knowing what an agent is. We leave them running one.
We've done it both ways — room presentations and sitting down to build. The people who sat through presentations left knowing what an agent is. They could hold the conversation. That's real.
The people who built something left able to do it again on their own. We've watched account leads, creative directors, people who've never written a line of code — ship live software. Three-agent pipelines. Web apps on the public internet. Because they were building alongside someone who knows how, not watching a slide.
That distinction is the whole offering.
Someone with no software background — none — built and shipped a three-agent system running on their laptop, pulling live data into a public web application. We designed it together, built it together, and it was deployed before we were done. Still running.
She described herself as "not technical but riding the vibe coding wave." She shipped a live web application before we finished. On the public web that same week. No prior software experience.
Pete has been building software since 1981. He's co-founded companies, designed one of the earliest graphical interfaces for the internet, and built the systems you see on this site.
You're not getting someone certified to teach AI. You're getting someone who's been building it — at production scale, for real clients — longer than most people in this industry have been thinking about it.
That's what makes it worth what it costs.
We'll figure out the topic, the format, and whether it's the right fit.
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