PROJ #202603
I built a browser that knows what I'm supposed to be doing.
Four tabs. Actions, Contacts, Inbox, Browse. That's the whole thing.
I open it in the morning and it tells me what fell through the cracks — three deals went stale, tomorrow's appointments aren't confirmed, my hottest lead viewed the proposal three times and I still haven't called. I click "Do it" and it shows me the plan: read the pipeline, filter the stale ones, draft the emails, send them, log everything in Close. I review it, hit go, and it's done.
Contacts isn't an address book. It's everything I know about a person on one screen — their deal size, the last time I called them, notes from that call, CRM link, and whether they prefer texts or phone calls. No tabs. No searching. I click a name and I'm briefed.
Browse is a real browser. I'm still checking Reddit, still reading articles, still doing research. But now it's inside the same window as my pipeline, my contacts, my inbox. I don't context-switch between "working" and "browsing" because they were never separate activities — I was just pretending they were by using different apps.
This is the workflow OS I needed when I was managing leads at 11pm from three different apps on my phone. It's not a CRM with a browser bolted on. It's not a browser with a sidebar. It's the thing I open instead of everything else.
Built for Main Street. Built for the operator who is the business.