Chief of Staff

The antidote to AI
you can't trust

Every AI tool promises to “automate your work.” Then you try it, and every conversation starts from scratch. Nothing learns. Nothing sticks. You correct the same mistake twelve times. You can't delegate because you can't trust the output.

Ditto is different. Processes are durable — defined once, improved through use. Trust is earned, not assumed. Corrections compound. Your operations actually get better over time.

What makes Ditto different

Progressive trust

Everything starts supervised — you review every output. As Ditto proves reliable, it earns less oversight. If quality drops, it downgrades itself. You see the evidence: “47 runs, 83% clean, corrections decreasing.”

Corrections stick

When you fix something, Ditto detects the pattern and offers to make it permanent. “You consistently adjust the labour estimate on bathroom jobs. Teach this?” One tap. Fixed forever.

Visible reasoning

Every output shows what was checked, what passed, and what flagged. Confidence scores per item. Source citations. You review the harness's review — not raw AI output.

Quiet oversight

Ditto feels like a quiet reliable team, not a noisy approval queue. Daily briefings surface what needs your attention. Silence means things are working.

Who Ditto is for

People responsible for outcomes who are drowning in the operational work that prevents strategic thinking.

Business owners

“I can do the work. I just can't run the business AND do the work.” Quoting, invoicing, follow-ups — handled from your phone between jobs.

Operations managers

“Everything is reactive. I want to be strategic but I spend all day putting out fires.” Content, pricing, compliance — processes that improve.

Tech generalists

“I can see 20 things that should be automated. I just can't build 20 solutions.” Stand up processes in days, prove value in weeks.

Team managers

“I spend half my day reviewing things I've already told people how to do.” Processes across your team with trust you control per person.

Stop correcting the same thing twice

Start with one process. See it improve. Expand when you're ready.