A Chief of Staff. An EA. An ops analyst. A RevOps admin. A recruiter coordinator. A strategy consultant on retainer. This is the team most CEOs need but cannot afford. The harness in this book does the work of all of them. The book is ninety-nine dollars.
Six roles. The headcount most CEOs would hire if their P&L allowed it. Below is what each one costs at a believable mid-market loaded rate, and what the harness in this book does in their place.
The harness is not a chatbot with a longer prompt. It is a Chief of Staff, an analyst, an EA, and a RevOps admin running on the same operating system, with a memory that compounds across all of them.From Chapter 2 · What OpenCLAW Actually Is
A Chief of Staff would have written you a Monday brief at 6am: pipeline, hires, three flags, the one decision that matters. The harness writes the same brief, in your voice, every week. On cron.
A RevOps admin would have cleaned the CRM, surfaced stalled deals, and prepped you for the call. The harness does the cleanup the night before, posts the digest in Slack, and pre-writes the agenda.
A recruiter coordinator would have screened twelve resumes against your rubric. The harness scores them all, attaches the three to interview, and drafts the outreach.
A strategy consultant would have drafted the quarterly memo. The harness has been drafting it all month, pulling decisions from the log and metrics from the digest, and hands you the second draft, not the first.
An EA would have closed your week, surfaced what slipped, and queued Monday. The harness writes the Friday Wrap, files the decision log, and texts you a one-line summary at 5:30pm.
You read fifteen pages of the chapter on memory architecture, decide the harness is right about the deal it flagged, sleep, and walk into Monday already two moves ahead.
Five parts, twenty-five workflows, the 90-day roadmap, and every appendix template in copy-paste form. The book that makes the $1.47M unnecessary.
Two hundred and seventy pages. Twelve months of free updates as new workflows ship. Less than the cost of a single hour of the strategy consultant on the line above.
Get the book →Direct-response copy that overclaims is bad business. So.
You write down the company once (memory tier 1), and the workflows once. The harness then runs them. The first weekend is real work; the next ninety days are the payoff.
OpenCLAW lives on your laptop. You will type brew install at least once. If the command line is something you avoid on principle, this book is not the right purchase.
The harness pays for itself in the first hire it lets you not make. The book pays for itself in the first hour of the first day.
The one-pager from Part V. Day 30. Day 60. Day 90. The exact calendar Andrew walked. Sent to your inbox the moment you sign up.