Modern Creator
Grow with Alex · YouTube

Claude Fable 5 Turns Your Social Media Into Income

A screen-recorded Claude Fable 5 session builds five reusable documents -- audience, offer, sales, knowledge, and headquarters -- for one real dormant account, then hands the running of it off to cheaper models.

Posted
2 days ago
Duration
Format
Tutorial
educational
Views
2K
92 likes
Part of the collectionThe Fable 5 PlaybookAll 45 Fable 5 breakdowns, synthesized into one page.
Read the playbook
Big Idea

The argument in one line.

A creator can turn one AI conversation into five reusable business documents -- an audience profile, a validated offer, a sales system, a personal-knowledge extract, and a combined project headquarters -- built once with an expensive model and run forever after with cheaper ones.

Who This Is For

Read if. Skip if.

READ IF YOU ARE…
  • A creator or small personal brand with an existing audience (any niche) who has never turned that audience into a paid offer.
  • Someone comfortable using an AI chat assistant who wants a repeatable system rather than one-off content ideas.
  • A solo operator willing to spend real time -- gathering screenshots, running a self-interview -- feeding real evidence into the process, not just prompts.
SKIP IF…
  • You're starting from zero: no account, no posts, no comments to mine for evidence, since the method depends on existing audience signal.
  • You want a fully automated, no-effort system; this still takes roughly a half-day of manual document-building per business.
  • You're looking for paid-ad or SEO acquisition tactics -- this is an organic-audience-to-offer method, not a traffic strategy.
TL;DR

The full version, fast.

The video argues that AI tools don't replace audience research, they operationalize it: feed Claude Fable 5 real evidence -- screenshots, comments, saved-post data -- instead of guesses, and it produces five documents: an audience profile, a validated offer, a sales/content system, a personal-knowledge extract, and a combined project 'headquarters.' Each document is built once with a premium model, then reused by any cheaper model in daily conversations, so cost stays low after setup. The core mechanism is evidence-over-assumption: every claim in the offer and sales copy must trace back to something the audience already said, bought, or did. The practical conclusion is to spend the effort up front collecting real screenshots and running a structured self-interview, then centralize everything in one persistent AI workspace so future chats never start from zero.

Free for members

Chat with this breakdown — free.

Sign in and you get 23 free chat messages on us — ask for the hook, quote a framework, find the exact transcript moment, generate a markdown action plan. Bring your own key when you want unlimited.

Create a free account →
Chapters

Where the time goes.

00:0000:24

01 · Intro

Cold open hook: the smart model thinks once, the cheap models work forever -- Fable's real use is a one-time build, not more content.

00:2402:15

02 · The Journey

Roadmap slide mapping the 5-brain system (Audience, Offer, Sales, Knowledge, HQ) onto one real demo account.

02:1506:56

03 · Brain 1: Audience Brain

Builds an evidence-based audience document from bio, screenshots, and comments; surfaces an old $2 Etsy planner as proof the audience already buys the category.

06:5610:27

04 · Brain 2: The Offer

Stress-tests three offer directions against a zero-new-belief test and lands on a $15 exam-season digital planner priced under a comparable physical product.

10:2713:38

05 · Brain 3: Sales Engine

Turns real comments and captions into selling angles, a funnel map, a launch sequence, and a one-sell-per-run posting rhythm.

13:3816:21

06 · Brain 4: Knowledge Brain

A structured self-interview extracts personal frameworks and results that public account data can't provide.

16:2117:57

07 · Brain 5: Business HQ

Consolidates all four prior documents into a persistent Claude Project so any future chat already knows the business.

17:5719:21

08 · Autopilot

Shows converting a document into a reusable Claude Skill -- e.g. an audience-fit checklist callable from any unrelated chat.

19:2119:42

09 · Outro

Recaps the completed 5-document system and points to the description for free resources.

Atomic Insights

Lines worth screenshotting.

  • Building a business with AI comes down to which model thinks once and which model works forever -- the expensive model builds the system, the cheap model runs it daily.
  • An offer passes its real test when buying it requires no new belief the audience doesn't already hold -- if you have to convince them of something first, you're selling persuasion, not a product.
  • A four-year-old $2 Etsy PDF with zero recent sales is still useful evidence -- it proves the audience already spends on the category, just not on a differentiated version of it.
  • Public screenshots and comments only get an offer to about a five out of ten; the other half comes from a creator's own untapped frameworks, results, and opinions.
  • A structured, one-question-at-a-time self-interview extracts a creator's most differentiated material faster than open-ended journaling.
  • Writing instructions for a weaker model, not the flagship one, is what lets a business system run cheaply once the expensive model has built it.
  • Selling too often is treated as the failure mode, not selling too rarely -- the stated rule is one sell post surrounded by value posts, not the reverse.
  • A reusable audience checklist can be invoked from any unrelated chat, so quality control no longer depends on staying inside the original research thread.
Takeaway

Five documents turn one AI chat into a durable business system.

WHAT TO LEARN

The expensive model's job is to build five reusable documents once -- audience, offer, sales, knowledge, headquarters -- after which any cheaper model can run the business from what's already written down.

03Brain 1: Audience Brain
  • Audience research works best from evidence -- screenshots, bios, saved posts, comments -- rather than assumptions, because it surfaces existing buying signals a creator would otherwise miss.
  • A weak monetization history, like an old low-priced product with no recent sales, is itself useful evidence: it shows the audience already buys the category, just not from a differentiated offer.
  • Consolidating research into one document turns a one-off analysis into a reusable reference that shapes every later decision on offer, pricing, and copy.
04Brain 2: The Offer
  • A product should be validated against actual audience behavior, not invented first and pitched to whoever will listen -- reversing that order is why most offers fail to sell.
  • The strongest test for a viable offer is whether buying it requires zero new belief -- if you have to convince someone of something first, you're selling persuasion, not a product.
  • Price should be justified in the audience's own spending patterns, such as pricing below what they already pay for a comparable item, so the case for buying today makes itself.
05Brain 3: Sales Engine
  • Sales copy pulled from real audience comments and captions reads as native to the account instead of like an outside pitch dropped into the feed.
  • A funnel can be mapped in plain content terms -- a reach post, a trust post, a sell post -- without separate marketing software to plan the sequence.
  • Overselling a small audience burns trust fast; alternating value and offer posts keeps a feed feeling like a person, not a storefront.
06Brain 4: Knowledge Brain
  • The most differentiated material a creator has is not public: it's the opinions, frameworks, and lived results that live only in their own head.
  • A short structured self-interview, one specific question at a time pushing for real numbers, extracts that material more reliably than open-ended journaling.
  • Time spent capturing personal methods and results raises the ceiling on every downstream document, because generic public data alone caps quality.
07Brain 5: Business HQ
  • Storing audience, offer, sales, and knowledge documents together in one persistent workspace means a fresh conversation starts already knowing the business instead of re-explaining context.
  • Writing instructions for a weaker model on purpose is what lets the expensive model be needed only once, to build the system, not to run it daily.
08Autopilot
  • Turning a one-off analysis into a reusable checklist lets a creator self-check new ideas instantly instead of re-running the original research each time.
  • The reusable checklist can be invoked from any unrelated conversation, so quality control doesn't depend on staying inside one long chat thread.
Glossary

Terms worth knowing.

Audience Brain
A single evidence-based document capturing who an account's followers actually are, what they want, and what they've already paid for, built from real screenshots and comments rather than assumptions.
Zero New Belief Test
A pricing and offer validation rule stating a product should require no new conviction from the buyer -- if the audience already believes the problem and the solution, the offer is ready to sell.
Business HQ
A persistent AI workspace (a Claude Project) that stores every prior research document so new conversations start already knowing the business instead of re-explaining context.
Knowledge Brain
A document built from a structured self-interview that captures a creator's personal frameworks, results, and opinions -- material that isn't publicly visible but differentiates the offer.
Resources

Things they pointed at.

00:44toolClaude Fable 5 / Sonnet 4.5 / Opus 4.5 / Haiku 4.5
16:52toolClaude Projects
18:19toolClaude Skills
Quotables

Lines you could clip.

00:15
The smart model thinks once, and the cheap models work forever.
Compact thesis statement, works as a cold-open hook for a repurposed short.TikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
05:05
Price sub $2 is a tip jar, not a product.
Sharp, funny reframe of underpricing.IG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
06:59
Remember, the product comes from their behavior, not from a brainstorm.
Standalone actionable principle.newsletter pull-quote↗ Tweet quote
09:24
A product passes when buying it requires no belief that the audience doesn't already hold.
Core validation rule, quotable on its own.newsletter pull-quote↗ Tweet quote
18:55
It's read the manual before starting the job.
Punchy closing metaphor for the whole system.TikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
The Script

Word for word.

Read-along

Don't just watch it. Burn it in.

See every word as it's spoken — crank it to 2× and still catch all of it. The same dual-channel trick behind Amazon's Kindle + Audible.

metaphor
00:00Cloud Fable five can 10 x your business. Most people just don't know how yet. So I took a real account, big audience, zero money, and built a whole business with it.
00:09Five prompts, the skills to run it from any chat, and one place where it all lives. Because here's what nobody's realized about Fable five yet. It's not for making more content.
00:19The smart model thinks once, and the cheap models work forever. Look at all of it. Here's the journey.
00:28If you're serious about making money online, you need to have a proper business structure. Today, I'm gonna show you live exactly how to do that using Claude Fable. Now Claude Fable is one of four Claude models.
00:39Okay? And there are three others, Heiko, Sonnet, and Opus, whereas Fable is either part of a subscription or you'll have to pay for the credits. But the way Fable, it works in our workflow, it doesn't matter whether it's pay per use or part of a subscription because we're only using it for specific things.
00:54And by the end, using this business headquarters, you'll be able to run all of this on Sonnet, on Opus. It doesn't matter. But to build it, we're gonna be using Fable because that's going to be our powerhouse that we use occasionally.
01:06Now we're going to be running this on this account right here, which is a productivity account similar to the previous video that I did. Again, if you wanna be in any of my videos, share your Instagram, YouTube handle, whatever, and I can potentially feature you like I'm doing right now.
01:20Now the reason I'm doing this account is because because it's actually dead, and there's a lot of information. I wanna see if we can come up with a business to revive this. But it doesn't matter what niche you're in, what world you're in, you'll be able to follow this step by step and do the exact same thing.
01:31By the end, you will have a business headquarters, and you're gonna learn a bunch of stuff. Now the first thing we're going to do is the audience brain. Okay?
01:38So this audience brain is what matters. Because, essentially, if you don't have your audience correctly understood, then you might have the perfect offer, but nobody to sell to or vice versa.
01:49Every decision downstream depends on who's actually here. So we're going to build this through evidence, not vibes.
01:56A lot of time, we're creating products or trying to build a business through vibes. Let's do this properly now with Fable. Now, essentially, the first thing we need to do is understand who's there, what they want, what they struggle with, already pay for behaviors, and this is via evidence only.
02:10Okay? And this is gonna produce our audience stock, which is super important for our headquarters.
02:18Okay. So here's part one. Now, again, everything will be available in my vault.
02:22If there's anything specifically you wanna ask me, ask in the comments, etcetera. Now, essentially, we can see right here. So the first thing we want to do, and as I said, wanna provide some information.
02:31So for this particular case, I've got the bio. I've got some screenshots. Then I've got some in kind of shots of actual comments and captions, etcetera, kind of getting that voice, getting how the audience gonna communicate, and you'll see how Claude responds to that.
02:44Now, again, if you don't have any of this information or you don't have many comments on your content, just look at a competitor. You can get so much con information from that. Just make sure that they're closely aligned with what you're trying to build.
02:57Remember, today is about building this business. Now this first prompt is about us getting this audience document that is leading up to this business headquarters. So the role you are investing by evaluating whether this creator's audience can become a business, you are skeptical, specific, and allergic to generic ideas allergic to generic ideas.
03:15Your money is on the your money is on the line. Okay? So this is super important because this is a serious thing.
03:20So, again, if you want to chain if you're a coach, if you're something else, you can change that. If you want to provide more information, again, YouTube channel, whatever, just change the context. And, essentially, this system here process rules output is going to allow us to get outputs like this.
03:34So, essentially, who's actually following? Start to break down the audience.
03:38So what do they want? The evidence baked picture. What have they already spent on?
03:42You know, paper planners, coffee shop habits, etcetera. And it gives us information that is so important already. Essentially, I could already make content from this, but, again, we're building a business.
03:51So requesting tools and recommendations, unprompting, unprompted. Honorable mention, weaker for monetization, etcetera.
03:57Bottom line is this is a save and implement audience of stressed female students who by aesthetic studies objects and want systems handed to them, reached through emotional reassurance rather than authority. So immediately that it is different. You know?
04:10Now what's funny here is that it was able to actually see that there were that it was selling something, and in the prompt I put that they were not this account has no audience and offer. But it was able to see just from me putting a picture of the bio that they had my shop there. So essentially, was like, okay.
04:27You know what? Let me check my shop, and I shared, you know, the story that they had. It's now available on my Etsy from not for not even two pounds.
04:35So there you go. And then these are from the story. Good.
04:38What this shop has highlighted. So the she's already monetized badly and nearly four years ago. No offense.
04:43You know, we can all improve, and we all make mistakes, which matches the, you know, the the date. So the Shock isn't a live business. It's a fossil, a single page daily planner PDF sold on Etsy for not even $2.
04:53This account has a had a zero visible monetization activity since. So the product in sync was right. Execution was the full market.
05:01You know, price sub $2 is a tip jar, not a product. Essentially, you know, you could be selling for more here based on this output. One genuinely valuable detail, the gratitude section, etcetera.
05:12Okay. So essentially from there, I asked it to consolidate this information into my audience documents. So from here, I was able to get this.
05:20So the account at a glance, who it's actually following, all from a sync a few bits of information and the light prompting using fable. And, I'm using the default setting of high.
05:30So, essentially, I was able to get this. And what you want to do is then save this and start to build this chat right here or this Google Drive where you save your documents. But, again, we're gonna use this later, and it's easy to grab it in the cloud anyway.
05:41So, essentially, that was my audience document done. And then we had the skill.
05:47So this is something which is super useful for anyone using Claude Fable. It can actually recreate your skills.
05:54So for example, I've created this or this audience document. Right? So if my whole account was, you know, my for my business, so I'm, you know, Robin, and I'm creating all these different chats, essentially, what I could do now that I have this information about my audience, I could turn this into a skill.
06:10And, this will be available. You could turn this into a skill, and, essentially, what it will do is turn it into a skill so you can see right here. And all I would do is press save skill.
06:18And then anytime I, for example, have, um, I'm in a random chat and, you know, I might be going off topic or I want my skill to just double check that what I'm working on in that moment fits with my audience and is something that will actually you know, they actually want.
06:36And this is invaluable. So now anytime, I could just press audience and boom, it will run it, and it will be able to check based on what we've created this brain, whether it kind of aligns with that or not. And you could do this for any step that we're doing and on other stuff you're working on.
06:51Now let's move over to the next one as we build this system.
06:59Remember, the product comes from their behavior, not from a brainstorm. Most people invent a product then hunt for buyers. That's backwards, and that's why most offers die, And that's affected me as well.
07:09You know? So it's something that we all have to work on and kind of understand. Okay?
07:13It's not just vibes. It's understanding, and that's what we're building. So the offer.
07:17Okay? Now we're go through three directions, the test price logic and the ladder. This is an extremely important part because the product comes from behavior or not from a brainstorm.
07:25So how are we going to do this now? And this is all in one chat. So step one, one direction per behavior.
07:30Okay? So, essentially, what it will start to do is based on kind of the previous one, the audience document, It will start with this prompt right here, which, again, I'll be sharing why this matters, process, you know, kill until one survives, defend the survivor in plain language, build the survivor into a complete offer.
07:47So it's gonna come up with loads of different ideas, and that's why Fable is kind of this deep thinker, and then it will present this kind of winner in this free fall. So you can see from here, it's gone through a bunch of different ones.
08:00Step two, zero new belief test. Every input every component belief has receipts in their account, etcetera, etcetera. Fail.
08:06Fail. At seconds five, like. I don't want to fund it.
08:09Etsy has a thousand digital planners at $3 saturated to death. True for the planners, but she isn't selling a planners. She's selling her systems.
08:16Boom. We're taking it further and further. What breaks their 10 x?
08:19Almost nothing digital downloads, zero marginal cost, no fulfillment. The real 10 x risk is file sharing among students, etcetera.
08:25It's going deeper and deeper. The defense playing language, the complete offer. So, you know, if you are doing this for yourself, you could just cut off for a client forever for anyone.
08:34You can obviously go through this, digest this more, break it down. The complete offer, the chaos free student. Her own vocab, hacks for a chaos free student life is already a grid post.
08:44So this is a and remember, you know, we spoke earlier about the audience being more, like, you know, kind of wanting this emotional relationship, etcetera.
08:51Whereas a digital planner workbook for Notability, GoodNotes containing her save most systems as functional writable pages. So you can see it just bounce back pages. Exams exam season module.
09:02Price, $15. The logic. She's charging less than a paper planner already sitting on her desk in every photo, which her followers also buy.
09:10So what's why is it today purchase and not a someday purchase? Again, super important. Channel correction.
09:16Step six, the ladder. How are we gonna take this further? So free lead magnet.
09:20You can already use her 2,022 daily planner. Future upsell.
09:25And it's already con and then from this knowledge, like, you can start building more and more. Okay? And you can see how is it going to be a future upsell.
09:33And this is what happens. Okay? When we start to feed the right information and we take things step by step using a smart model like Fable.
09:41So now the next step is turning this into a document. Again, if it doesn't give you the document instantly, just ask for the document, and you get something like this. So the funding test, a product passes one test.
09:52Buying it must require no belief. The audience does not already halt. So then it kinda goes through how it validated the idea why the survivor survived, the attacks, and the answers.
10:02So you could just kinda go through all of that, and there's your final kind of document. Next up is a product passes when buying it requires no belief that the audience doesn't already hold. If you have to convince them of something first, that's not a product.
10:15That's a persuasion project, which is not what we want. Guess what? Enough and nobody hears about is a secret.
10:21Build on the first few documents in the audience's own language so it sells without sounding like marketing.
10:30Okay. So this is your sales engine, and this is where it starts to get really good. Okay?
10:35Because this is how people actually make money. So, essentially, for this, we're gonna have the same both the two documents we've already created. So we're gonna run carry on running this in the chat.
10:43And, essentially, what we're doing here is trying to get more of a kind of understanding on in terms of communications, uh, the way the audience interacts with you, the way people comment, the language they use. So, again, why buy?
10:55Why now? Rooted in real paints. Then we're gonna look at the funnel map, launch flow, etcetera, all in basically one prompt.
11:01So you can see right now, you are direct response strategist who respects the audience. You sell without making the account feel like a funnel. If you sound sales, sales, sell, you're not gonna sell.
11:10Okay? Especially with an account like this. If you're trying to build a real audience, you can't just sell.
11:14So what I got here was trying to get as many kind of shots of the audience interacting, her comment, uh, her captions as well. This gives you real information.
11:24Again, you can use competitors, etcetera, etcetera. You can go in different places like Reddit, wherever you want, anywhere that's gonna kind give you this information to help you build this. Now, essentially, at this point, you can see screenshots of real comments, exact words, how often they currently post.
11:37So you can feed this information right there. And what you'll be able to get from this is the sales engine. So these new screenshot screenshots upgrade the evidence base, and I'm using it.
11:47The study schedule posted the strongest one. We've seen 1,265 likes.
11:50The three course selling angles. So angle a, b, c. Boom.
11:54You know, the night before the exam sorted for when you for when your days don't fit the template, the funnel map. Okay.
12:00So reach one carousel, reel, carousel, story series, carousel.
12:05You know, if you want me to go deeper into kind of the content creation system, etcetera, let me know in the comments. The launch sequence, you know, if you were to launch this new product, and you could see how they've written it. Hi.
12:15I have news for two years. You'd be like, look at that.
12:18Come on.
12:21Uh, I deserve a like for that. The DM workflow. Again, if you want me to make a video about DM workflows where it's like these automations where it's actually changed a lot from kind of just using ManyChat and just these simple automations.
12:32It's a lot more complex now. I could definitely make a video of that in the future. But, essentially, this is giving you that float.
12:38So trigger word system, comment, etcetera. Hi, bestie. Here it is.
12:41The chaos free student system, everything you keep saving on an actual writable page. Boom. The email outline, deliver, trust, sell.
12:49The selling rhythm. The grid stays a friend. Rule one, sell one sell per this is beautiful information, by the way.
12:56Too many times I see people sell, sell, sell, sell, and then everything goes to downhill. You know, you don't wanna do that. Turn this into a document.
13:04I've got my sales engine right here. All my information, the chaos free student is then teaching me, telling me how I'm gonna create content in terms of the way we speak. That is going to fuel when I create emails.
13:17It's gonna fuel when I create content, reels, carousels, anything. Okay?
13:21This is incredible information, and it's tied to what I'm selling, to the business I'm building. This is irreplaceable information right here.
13:30Okay? It wouldn't have been possible without the first two steps. Okay?
13:34We're still getting to that business headquarters where everything comes together.
13:41Okay. So now this is super important because you might be thinking, is just a few screenshots enough? Well, the answer is no.
13:47Public data can get us this far. Your edge is what's not public. Okay?
13:53So what's in your head, frameworks, results, opinions is a raw material that you need to take your business from the first three steps from a five out of 10 to 10 out of 10. Okay? This simple step.
14:05Knowledge brain. Yeah? Your best material, believe it or not, is trapped in your brain.
14:09This gets it out on purpose. For me, once a week, I start my day with no AI. I love Claude, believe it or not, but I use my notepad and pen, and I'm just there with myself, you know, digesting information, digesting my thoughts because that's what makes me unique and what makes Claude have a real kind of knowledge about what I want it to achieve.
14:29So, essentially, your knowledge bring here. What you need is your niche audience offer, etcetera, twenty minutes of honest answers, real numbers where you have them, and, essentially, we'll start to do this interview. Okay?
14:39So I'm gonna press x out of this and show you. So where is it?
14:44Okay. So here it is. You are a ghostwriter and strategist preparing to write for me the next year.
14:48Before you write a word, you need everything in my head on paper. And, essentially, we'll start to build this interview for you. So your first question, your grid says the to do list that actually works, the study schedule for your different types, which tells me you have a method.
15:01Walk me through this actual system. Okay? When you sit on a Sunday night or a chaotic Tuesday morning, what are your actually steps?
15:07What are actual steps? Now, of course, I'm not this person, so I just kind of made up some stuff using another Claude chat. But, essentially, this builds something really deep and important for your business.
15:17Okay? And, again, it will keep asking these questions which are incredibly vital.
15:22Okay? Now, again, as I said here, I believe it was the next one maybe, I said, you know, that's enough. Last question.
15:29But for you personally, I would literally take, like, thirty minutes and just spend this time answering the questions. You will be so happy because remember, we're building a system that you won't need to really touch. You might need to do some maintenance, you know, in a month, in two months, but this is the basis.
15:43And the more you give, the more accurate and unique your content will be. Okay. Your knowledge brain is written.
15:49Okay? Four documents is thinking. So now, essentially, we'll have our knowledge brain.
15:55So now we've got our four documents. Right? Knowledge brain, audience brain, offer brain, sales engine.
16:00What's next, Alex? Well, you need to put this infrastructure together.
16:07Okay? So it runs without you. Every chat already knows the business.
16:11You never re explain anything again. How are we going to do that, Alex? Well, what we're going to do now is build this business headquarters.
16:17A document in a chat when the chat ends, a project runs every day. This is simple.
16:25So to build a project, you literally go to projects. So I'm just gonna put in Robin. I'm gonna create projects, and you can see right here.
16:31So, essentially, once you go here, what you want to do is we're gonna build this headquarters where it's gonna have all the information we that we've just created. So, essentially, you will put all these documents, which are always available in your chat.
16:45You simply press this button, and you'll see all the files that you have, and you can just kind of download them and add them to the chat. And, essentially, you can see right here, create a core project named Robinverse Business HQ. Copy section a of the project here into project field.
16:57So, essentially, what you'll get here is project kit right here, and then you want to follow the instructions. So, essentially, put in the instructions, put your kind of files, etcetera, anything in here which is going to be super useful for you.
17:12And essentially, this will allow you to, anytime you want, use this project, open a new chat, and you have all this context. Okay?
17:20And this is so important for when you're running a business. Now something I've mentioned, and these instructions are built for weak models. Okay?
17:28So if you want to carry on using Fable, using this business headquarters for Fable, just make a tweak. And you know what? I'll probably share it.
17:35Make a tweak for this saying that this is for Fable. And, obviously but these particular ones are built for the weaker models. Okay?
17:42So I'm designing, creating all of this with Fable, understanding that this project will probably run on Sonnet, on Opus, on something else.
17:51Okay? So the fable has built this architecture, this framework, this this brain.
17:59So now with your project, this is where a place where the business lives. And, again, we can take skills as you can see from anything. You can create skills from anything, you know, the audience want, check any draft against who follows you, fire from any chat, no project needed, built once by Fable run by any model forever.
18:15If want me to make more videos about skills going deeper into that for content creation, etcetera, let me know. Now with your project, a place where the business lives. So open a chat inside that project, and everything is loaded.
18:25So it's brain it knows everything you've just worked on. All the documents are there, and it reads them before you you know, it gives you that output.
18:34Okay? So any model behaves like it knows the business. So it's even if it's a worker, if it's a manager, you know, Opus, Sonnet, it will know its purpose.
18:43It's read the manual before starting the job. This is extremely important. Okay?
18:47So, essentially, today, we've gone through this journey. The business now exists. You've built your audience brain.
18:53You've built the offer, the sales engine, the knowledge brain, the business headquarters. This is where everything starts to take flight and go to the next level. If you want me to dive deeper into, you know, the automating sales engine, how emails can work, how content can take this further, you know, all the different elements.
19:09Again, just let me know in the comments. And if you want to be part of a video like this in the future, drop me your Instagram or YouTube handle, you know, share some information about your situation, and I will put you in my list and hopefully feature you at some point. If you've enjoyed this video, please be sure to like and subscribe, and let me know in the comments if there's anything you want me to dive deeper into.
19:28Be sure to check out one of these two videos right here to take your game to another level. Be sure to check my description as I have my free resources and some exciting stuff coming out in the future. My name is Alex.
19:39Let's create smarter.
The Hook

The bait, then the rug-pull.

The opening claim doubles as the whole argument: Claude's most expensive model isn't a content generator, it's a one-time architect -- used once to build five documents that any cheaper model can run forever after.

Frameworks

Named ideas worth stealing.

00:58list

The 5 Brains

  1. Audience Brain
  2. The Offer
  3. Sales Engine
  4. Knowledge Brain
  5. Business HQ

The video's whole roadmap: five sequential documents that together turn one social account into a running business.

Steal forany creator turning an existing audience into a productized offer
07:14model

Offer validation (3 Directions / Zero New Belief / Price Logic / The Ladder)

  1. 3 directions (one per behavior)
  2. zero new belief test
  3. price logic
  4. the ladder (lead magnet to upsell)

A four-step filter for killing weak offer ideas until one survives, then pricing and laddering it.

Steal forvalidating a new digital product idea before building it
10:42list

Sales Engine components (3 Angles / Funnel Map / Launch Flow / The Rhythm)

  1. 3 selling angles
  2. funnel map
  3. launch flow
  4. the rhythm (posting cadence)

A lightweight content-only sales system built from real audience language instead of ad copy.

Steal forplanning a launch sequence on an organic account with no ad budget
CTA Breakdown

How they asked for the click.

VERBAL ASK
19:28subscribe
If you've enjoyed this video, please be sure to like and subscribe... check my description as I have my free resources and some exciting stuff coming out in the future.

Low-pressure ask paired with a pointer to his free resource vault rather than a hard product pitch inside the video.

FROM THE DESCRIPTION
OTHER LINKSAlso linked in the description.
Storyboard

Visual structure at a glance.

open
hookopen00:00
roadmap
promiseroadmap00:58
brain 1 title
valuebrain 1 title02:15
brain 3 title
valuebrain 3 title10:27
brain 5 title
valuebrain 5 title16:21
outro
ctaoutro19:28
Frame Gallery

Visual moments.

Watch next

More from this channel + related breakdowns.

11:49
Maria Wendt · Tutorial

How To Make Your First $500 Selling Digital Products

A creator who says she's done almost $14M in digital-product sales draws out the exact three-post sequence — one $97 offer, three Reels, two Stories, one carousel — that gets a total beginner to their first $500.

September 10th 2025
Chat about this