There are 47 browser tabs open from yesterday. You can't remember why most of them are there.
You open Claude and start a new conversation. Before you can even get to the work, you're explaining yourself again. Your business. What you do. Who your clients are. What makes your approach different. What you never say. The same explanation you typed last week. And the week before that.
The output comes back and it's fine. Generic, but fine. You spend the next twenty minutes reshaping it into something that actually sounds like it came from you.
By 10am you're looking for a document a client asked for. You sent it before. You know you sent it. You spend fifteen minutes across four different apps before you find it buried in a folder you haven't opened since January.
Brain fog sets in around 11. You wanted to do the creative work today. The strategic thinking. The stuff that actually moves things forward. It keeps getting pushed.
At 8pm, you're still at it.
This is not a discipline problem. This is not a prompting problem. This is what happens when your business lives in ten different places and none of them talk to each other.
It's a foundation problem.
The women I see getting genuinely useful, genuinely on-brand output from AI aren't the ones with the cleverest prompts. They're the ones who built the thing underneath the prompts. A proper foundation. One place where everything that matters about their business actually lives.
Not scattered Notion pages set up three months ago and not touched since. Not a folder full of documents they'd have to dig through to find. Not a one-page positioning brief pasted into a Claude Project and hoped for the best.
A structured, functioning workspace with six clear sections: strategy and positioning, brand and voice, offers, brain dump, a financial command centre, and a dedicated space for working with AI.
When that's in place, everything changes.
You open Claude and it already knows you. Your voice, your offers, your clients, the things you say and the things you'd never say. You stop explaining. You start doing. The first draft actually sounds like you. The suggestions actually apply to your business. The back-and-forth becomes much, much shorter.
And here's something I want to be clear about: this is not about Claude specifically.
The hub lives in Notion. It's yours. It works with any other AI tool you point it at. If something better comes along next year, your business context travels with you. You're not pouring everything into one tool and hoping that tool stays useful.
It's also not a thing you build once and leave alone. It's a working document. A living system that gets smarter as your business does. Every time you clarify your positioning, every time your offers shift, every time you work out a better way to describe what you do, it goes in. The hub improves. Your AI conversations improve with it. The longer you have it, the better it gets.
This is what separates the women who feel like AI is actually working for them from the ones who are still getting outputs that could have been written for anyone.
I built mine about six months ago. Not because I had spare time. Because I was losing too much time not having it.
The before is embarrassingly recognisable if you're where most women are right now: brain fog by 11am, the same four-minute explanation every time I opened a new Claude conversation, Notion pages I'd half-set-up and abandoned, creative work pushed to the end of the day when I was already running on empty.
The after is the reason I turned this into a service.
The Hub Install is a 90-minute 1:1 live Zoom call where we build this for your business. Not a template to fill in later. Not a course to work through. A live build, with me walking you through it and your actual business going in as we go.
By 35 minutes, you're using Claude with your hub for the first time. By 75 minutes, your AI assistant is built, named, and loaded with your context. By 90 minutes, you're done. Hub live, populated, yours.
This is the right fit if you're running a business and a household, if the mental load of holding everything is the real problem, if you've tried Notion before and it didn't stick, and if you're tired of AI outputs that could have been written for anyone. It's not the right fit if you're happy with 47 tabs open and you don't mind hunting for documents on a Tuesday morning.
If you're using AI regularly and still feel like you're not getting what you should be getting out of it, this is almost certainly why. The tools are capable. The foundation is missing.
Details and discovery call booking: wisewomenuseai.com/hub