Danny De Vries Get the tools
English is the new programming language

The Busywork Review

Describe the repetitive tasks eating your week. Get an honest, scored teardown of what to automate first with AI — and the one step to take this week.

🗒️
Describe your week
the tasks you do on repeat
AI scores each one
sent once · nothing stored
🎯
Your first thing to hand off
a draft you confirm
Most owners know they should 'use AI more' but not where to start. Paste the boring stuff and get one ranked answer: the highest-fit, biggest time-sink to automate first.

🔒 What this touches: the description you paste is sent once to an AI model to score it, and the review shows here. Nothing is stored — no account, no database. Close the tab and it’s gone.

Reviewing…
Draft — a review you confirm
/100 busywork

The teardown — scored against the RETS fit test

Start here

Your first step this week

Always a draft. This ranks where to start — you decide what's worth handing off and you stay in charge of anything that reaches a customer. The tool reads; the person decides.

Run this review on your whole operation — get the installable skill, free → This page is the demo. The portable version is a skill you install once and re-run any time your week changes — free inside AI for Operators on Skool. Want your “start here” task actually built for you? → Don’t want to build it yourself? In the 5-day challenge you install one finished skill a day and walk out with your top busywork running itself — finish-it guarantee, lifetime access.

What this actually does for you

The hard part of AI for a small business isn't the tools — it's knowing where to point them. So most owners either do nothing, or automate the flashy thing instead of the thing that's quietly costing them an hour a day. You end up busy and no less buried.

This review fixes the targeting. You describe the repetitive stuff; it scores each task against a simple fit test, then hands you one ranked answer — the highest-fit, biggest time-sink to hand off first, and a plain-English step you can take this week. No course, no theory. A draft you confirm.

The RETS fit test Each task is scored on four things: Repeating, Rules-based, Text-shaped, and Safe-to-draft. A clean "high" passes all four — that's where AI earns its keep first.
One ranked answer Not a list of twenty ideas you'll never start. One Start here pick — the biggest time-sink that's actually safe to automate — and the next step to take.
You stay in charge It tells you what to hand off, not what to delete a human from. Anything that reaches a customer stays a draft you confirm. Nothing runs itself.