Week of June 28: Just Say What You Need
Week of June 28: Just Say What You Need
Until now, running your workforce meant knowing how to drive it — what's a project, what's a task, who picks it up. This week, that knowledge becomes optional. Meet Everyday Mode: say what you need in plain language, and your workforce sorts out the rest. You stop operating it and start delegating to it.
What's New
Everyday Mode
A simpler way in. Tell your Chief of Staff what you want done the way you'd brief a colleague, and it turns the conversation into real work — no setup, no structure to learn. You say it; it builds it.
It Asks Instead of Guessing
When what you said could be one quick task or a whole project, your Chief of Staff pauses for a question instead of assuming. One clear question, your answer, and it's off — so you never find out it took the wrong shape after the work's already done.
Dial In How It Works
Tune Everyday Mode to your comfort: decide how much room your workforce gets to run on its own before it checks back, and how much horsepower goes behind the work — lighter and faster, or slower and more thorough. Your call, and you can change it any time.
Ask for Changes Right on the Deliverable
Not quite right? Leave a note right on the deliverable and it goes back for another pass. Refining the work is part of the flow now, not a fresh start.
Turn a Project Into a Routine
Anything worth doing once is usually worth doing again. Hit Repeat on a project and it returns on its own schedule — so the standing work runs itself while you move on to what's next.
Under the Hood
Voice Mode now reaches your phone — jump into a Huddle on the go and brief your workforce hands-free. The "talk to it" from June now fits in your pocket. Voice action receipts are back in the Flow Log, mobile project launches are sturdier, blocked tasks read more clearly, and work routes itself to the right atom more reliably.
Fifty-six weeks in. You built it, you talk to it, you trust it, you see it your way — and now you don't even have to think in its terms. Just say what you need. See you next Sunday.