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Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 4 weeks agoYour "3 AM Ideas" deserve a better home than a Sticky Note
We all have them: The “genius” ideas that hit us in the shower, the car, or at 3:00 AM.
But by the time we sit down at our desks, they’ve turned into a messy pile of half-finished notes.
The difference between a “dreamer” and a “doer” isn’t talent, it’s structure.
Most professionals and business owners have folders full of random thoughts they…
Tolu Ojewunmi and Kerain Shah1 CommentI’ve found the real blocker isn’t lack of ideas, it’s friction at the starting line. Turning something vague into something structured used to take disproportionate effort.
The key shift is exactly what you said: stop overvaluing polish at the beginning. Clarity comes after movement, not before it.
Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 5 weeks agoWhy "Going Solo" is the Slowest Way to Win
You can learn AI alone in a dark room,
Or, you can learn it here surrounded by people who have already solved the problems you’re facing today.
The AI world moves fast.
Every morning there’s a new tool, a new “hack,” or a new update.
If you’re trying to keep up by yourself while also running a business or managing a career, it’s only a…
View more commentsThis my email, qirk@live.com. I’d be glad to receive information or lessons on AI rather than doing it all alone in my dark room
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done! ✅
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Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 5 weeks agoThe "Second Brain" Audit
Your brain is for having ideas, not storing them.
If you’re still trying to remember your to-do list, your best ideas are already dying!
In 2026, “Information Overload” is the default setting.
We are bombarded with emails, meeting transcripts, voice notes, and “saved for later” articles. Most people treat their digital life like a junk drawer, they…
Most people aren’t overwhelmed because they have too much to do, they’re overwhelmed because everything feels equally important.
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Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 5 weeks agoStop "Chatting" and Start "Operating"
If you’re only using AI to ask questions, you’re using a Ferrari to drive to your mailbox!
Most professionals and business owners treat AI like a smarter version of Google.
They ask it a question, get an answer, and then go back to doing the manual work themselves.
In the Simply Agile world, we don’t want a “Chatbot.” We want a Workflow.
The real…
That shift from asking for information to demanding actual deliverables is exactly how you start buying back your time. It’s way too easy to fall into the trap of treating AI like a glorified search engine instead of a real execution workflow.
A lot of people are still stuck in “assistive mode” with AI, when the real value is in “execution mode.”
The moment you start thinking in terms of outputs instead of answers, everything changes, speed, quality, and even how you structure your work.
Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 5 weeks agoYou don’t need a Developer.
You just need a Problem to solve.
In 2026, “I don’t know how to code” is no longer an excuse for having a messy business process.
We’ve all had that moment where we thought: “If I just had a simple app to track these orders/calculate these quotes/onboard these new hires, my life would be so much easier.“
But in the past, that meant hiring a…
View more commentsThis is such a practical reminder. A lot of people are still thinking the only path to fixing a broken process is hiring a full dev team, when in many cases the real starting point is just getting clear on the problem first.
What I like here is how it shifts people from “I can’t build this” to “maybe I can solve this faster than I… Read moreThe barrier is no longer technical skill, it’s clarity of thinking. If you can clearly define the problem, you’re already halfway to the solution.
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Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 5 weeks agoThe Monday Morning "Cheat Code"
Don’t start your Monday by “checking” your email.
Start it by telling your email what to do.
Most people walk into the office (or open their laptop) on Monday morning and immediately go into “defense mode“.
They react to the loudest notification, the angriest email, or the messiest spreadsheet.
By 11:00 AM, they’re already exhausted.
In the Simply…
View more commentsThis is a smart shift. Most people start Monday by handing control of their day to their inbox, then wonder why they feel behind before lunch.
I like this because it puts intention first. When you decide the priority before the noise starts, the whole week feels a lot less chaotic.Most people underestimate how much damage reactive work does to their week. Starting with clarity and intent changes everything.
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Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 6 weeks agoThe "Professionalism" Button
Ever received an email so frustrating you had to walk away from your keyboard before you said something you’d regret?
We’ve all been there:
A client changes their mind for the tenth time.
A vendor misses a deadline.
A colleague sends a “per my last email” nudge.
In the heat of the moment, your first draft is usually… honest. But “honest”…
Staying professional in difficult moments is not always easy, especially when emotions are high and deadlines are at stake. Framing AI as an “executive filter” is a smart way to protect both relationships and outcomes.
This is so real. Sometimes the hardest part is not knowing what to say, it is knowing too well what you want to say and realizing you definitely should not send that version.
I like this because it treats AI like a buffer, not a replacement for judgment. A good response can protect the relationship, keep the message clear, and still help you… Read more
Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 7 weeks agoThe "Fear of Following Up"
Most opportunities don’t die because of a “No”.
They die because of the “Follow-up” you were too afraid to send.
Whether you are waiting on a client to sign a contract, a boss to approve your raise, or a recruiter to get back to you, the “waiting game” is the most stressful part of professional life.
We don’t want to sound “desperate”. We don’t…
Most people underestimate how much opportunity is lost in silence, not rejection. Following up is less about pressure and more about clarity and momentum.
There’s possibility the follow up mail May come
back with rejection “management decided to freeze the position due to blah,blah,blah”
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Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 7 weeks agoThe "Resume Needle" in the Haystack
Whether you’re looking for the perfect candidate or trying to be the perfect candidate, the biggest enemy isn’t the competition. It’s the “Pile”.
If you’re a manager or a business owner, you don’t have time to read 100 resumes. Most of them are fluff anyway.
If you’re a professional looking for a new role, you’re tired of sending 100…
AI helps, but only if the input is honest and intentional. A well-tailored story will always outperform a keyword-stuffed document.
Nelson Ingle posted an update in the community
AI 7 weeks agoTurning "Feedback" into a Win (Without the Stress).
Nothing ruins a workday faster than a notification that someone is unhappy with your work.
Whether it’s a 1-star review on your business page or a “high-priority” complaint email from a difficult client, the reaction is always the same: Your heart sinks, your blood pressure rises, and you spend the next two hours drafting an angry defense.
But…
Most people don’t struggle with solving problems, they struggle with managing their emotions when the problem shows up as criticism. Separating emotion from response is a real advantage.
Also true that how you handle a complaint often matters more than the complaint itself. That’s where trust is either built or lost.1
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