What "fully automated" actually looks like
Most AI waits to be asked. The interesting work is the work that runs, finishes and files itself while you're doing something else.
A chatbot waits. It sits in its window until you open it, type something, and read what comes back. Useful, but it never does anything you didn't just ask for. The work worth paying for is the other kind - the work that happens while you are not looking.
Here is what that looks like across an ordinary week. None of it needs a prompt. These are standing jobs, running on their own.
A chatbot waits to be asked. A team just gets on with it.
You set how far it goes
Automatic does not mean out of your hands. You decide, job by job, how much rope each one gets - and you can move that line any time.
New work usually starts in Approve, where you see and sign off every output. As a routine proves itself, you move it to Auto and stop thinking about it. Trust is earned one job at a time, on your terms.
Why this is the actual product
A chatbot gives you a paragraph. This gives you a thing that happened - a call handled, a report sent, a lead filed, an invoice paid. The output is not text to act on later. It is the action, already taken. That is the difference between asking an assistant and having one.
And it compounds. Every job you hand over is a job that keeps getting done without you, every week, for as long as you want it to. The work doesn't just get easier. It stops needing you for the parts that never really needed you - which leaves your hours for the parts that do.
Hand over the first job
The fastest way to understand it is to give it one thing that runs itself, and watch what your week feels like without it.