Studio OS
Services scattered everywhere. Password here, password there. The seeds of operational chaos are like a spark in a dry forest — things might hold together, but they can fall apart surprisingly fast. STUDIO brings order to your chaos, and its intelligent layer gives that order pace and results.
I designed Studio for myself — and by my own standards.
The guiding principle was a refusal of complexity. If I have to search for something, that's a design failure. If something takes longer than a second, that's a problem to solve. Speed and simplicity aren't bonuses — they're requirements.
The same logic drives security. One password. No compromises. A single barrier that stops the vast majority of threats — without slowing down everyday work.
Service integrations follow the same rule: one login, data from five different sources in one place. No context switching, no lost tabs, no passwords on sticky notes.
And where routine tasks would otherwise steal attention, the agentic layer steps in. Small tasks run themselves. You steer the direction — not the traffic.
Studio is a Personal Operating System.
At full capacity, it enables one person to manage an entire digital project — their own or a client's. Smaller teams find room to collaborate. Solo entrepreneurs run their entire business from one place.
I used to describe Studio as a Digital Office. But an office doesn't have analytical machines.
BIDDER monitors your Google Ads and tells you exactly where budget is burning. SEO Beast crawls websites, analyses results, and generates concrete recommendations. These aren't tools you go and operate — they're machines that work for you and bring results on their own.
Workbench is where CRM meets project management. Pull up a client — see history, projects, status. Pull up a project — see tasks, people, context. No switching between systems, no hunting for connections that already exist.
Stewart is a different category entirely. A personal universal agent that doesn't ask — it simply works. Sees everything, knows everything. Where routine would steal your time, Stewart is already done.
Foreman receives a plan in .md and handles the rest. Analysis, specification, implementation — you approve, Foreman oversees.
Studio started as an office. Today it's an office with an analytical department and a specialist unit that executes whatever it sees needs doing.
Your favourite activities — studying Google campaign results, editing copy on your own website, generating articles and rewriting them so they don't sound like they were written by a semi-literate algorithm, analysing competitors, SEO, monitoring social sentiment — forget about all of that in Studio. If you want to.
This is what a day looks like for a solo entrepreneur using Studio:
The homepage as default view shows what needs attention first. It displays incoming mail and recommends what requires a priority response. SEO and Ads are monitored by intelligent systems — on Monday morning you read the weekly summary, on regular days you only react to notifications that something is happening.
Every Friday afternoon Stewart generates a report on service availability, load, and any simple fixes it has already filed as tasks — which it will oversee itself.
You have a great idea for an improvement on one of your projects. You create a task and hand it to Foreman. Foreman handles analysis, specification, and a plan. Once the plan is ready, you get a notification — you review it, approve it, and Foreman makes sure the implementation goes smoothly and to standard.
One person. Full capacity.
I offer Studio OS to clients because I use it myself — for everything.
I finally stopped searching for where I put things. Everything is in one place and every morning Studio tells me what needs to happen first.
I thought I needed a team. Turns out I needed Studio.


