Ex-Amazon AI Chief: 59-minute step-by-step tutorial on how to build your second brain with AI
Every morning, Alli Miller wakes up to an AI agent that has already been working for her for several hours — scanning emails, preparing meeting briefs, tracking industry news, and even suggesting what to wear. She runs 36 proactive workflows powered by roughly 100 sub-agents, and claims productivity gains ranging from 2x to 10x depending on the task. The question isn't whether AI can boost your output; it's whether you're willing to spend an hour today to unlock exponential gains for the next year. And if you don't, what will the gap look like between you and the version of yourself who did?
Punti chiave
Start by creating three foundational context documents: a personal constitution (your core values and how you work), a 2026 goals document (annual, quarterly, or weekly objectives), and a core business strategy document (what you do, who you serve, and why past initiatives failed). These files take one hour to build and become the memory layer that makes every AI interaction smarter and more personalized.
Automate recurring tasks by scheduling AI workflows to run while you sleep. If you ask the same question every morning — competitor research, email urgency ranking, meeting prep — that task should be scheduled, not manually triggered. Tools like Claude Co-work and Claude Code let you set proactive agents that deliver results to your inbox before you wake up.
Don't treat AI as an intern or assistant — treat it as a teammate with PhD-level intelligence and access to the entire internet. The productivity gap between super users and those who fail comes down to mindset: high-agency users leverage AI to challenge and augment their thinking, while passive users over-rely and lose critical thinking authority.
Build modular skills (brand voice, anti-AI language, client prep templates) that can be reused across projects and migrated between AI platforms. Skills are like tools in a toolbox: Claude can use pre-built ones or create new ones on demand by asking you questions and turning your answers into repeatable workflows.
The ability to discern what is good — not the ability to create from scratch — will become the most valuable skill in the AI age. Knowing whether an ad, contract, or strategy is right requires domain expertise and cannot be outsourced to AI. Pair younger AI-native workers with experienced strategists to combine speed with judgment.
In breve
Building a second brain with AI is not about prompt engineering or technical wizardry — it's about complaining to Claude, letting it ask you questions, and spending one focused hour creating context files that will automate workflows, delegate tasks, and multiply your productivity by 2x to 10x over the next twelve months.
The Morning Briefing: How Alli's AI Agent Works While She Sleeps
Alli runs 36 proactive workflows and roughly 100 agents that deliver daily briefings, ranked emails, and meeting prep before she wakes up.
Every Friday morning, Alli receives a recap of urgent emails she hasn't responded to, ranked by urgency, with drafted replies and delegation options. Every single morning, she wakes up to a full industry news briefing, social events in her city, and meeting kickoffs — all prepared by an AI agent that has been working for hours. The system connects to Gmail, Google Calendar, Fireflies, Granola, and other tools via API, pulling data and delivering it as scheduled emails sorted into folders. The key insight: if you're doing the same task every day — asking AI for competitor research, checking the weather, prepping for client calls — you should schedule it, not manually trigger it. Tools like Claude Co-work and Claude Code allow you to set proactive agents that run on autopilot. The shift from reactive prompting to proactive automation is where 2x productivity becomes 10x productivity.
Three Foundational Context Files Everyone Should Build First
Personal constitution, 2026 goals, and core business strategy documents take one hour to create and unlock exponentially smarter AI interactions.
Personal Constitution Document your core values, work style, and decision-making principles. Include things like «I value entrepreneurship and high agency at all times» or «I want family dinners once a week.» This file stays constant and helps AI understand who you are at your core, not just what you did last week.
2026 Goals Document Break out annual, quarterly, monthly, or weekly goals. Include new habits you want to build, habits you want to kick, and specific inputs or outputs you want to manage (e.g., run twice a week, travel 30% less, launch a podcast). Update this regularly so AI can align every task to your actual priorities.
Core Business Strategy Document Describe what your business does, who you serve, who you don't serve, and your value proposition. Add context that isn't on your website — like «we tried to launch a podcast for three years and here's why it didn't work» — so AI understands the decisions behind your strategy, not just the polished public version.
Live Build: Creating a Morning Brief with Claude in Under 10 Minutes
Alli demonstrates how to build a proactive morning briefing by complaining to Claude and letting it ask questions.
Alli uses voice input to tell Claude: «I feel really stressed every single morning and I want you to make me a morning brief. Pull research related to my industry — I'm an executive at Apple TV. Summarize the top three stories that will impress my bosses. Pull the most insane AI stories and write them using the words 'game changer' and 'wild' every other word. Pull the weather and tell me what to wear. I'm in San Francisco. Add three fun events happening in the next 4 days.» Claude responds by asking what time she wants the brief delivered and how (Word doc, markdown, PDF). She answers 6:00 a.m. and Word doc. Claude then spins up a progress report, creates a skill, schedules the workflow, and delivers a sample document. The entire process — from complaint to working prototype — takes under 10 minutes. The key: complaining to Claude in natural language is the best first step. All humans know how to complain, and Claude knows how to turn complaints into solutions.
Skills: The Modular Tools That Make AI 10x Smarter
The Four Models Framework: Microtasker, Companion, Delegate, Teammate
AI can be a microtasker, companion, delegate, or teammate — the best users treat it as a first-class teammate.
Claude vs. ChatGPT: Why Alli Switched and What It Means for You
Alli moved from ChatGPT to Claude because of tone, empathy, and voice mimicry — but the real shift is treating AI as an operating system.
Two years ago, Alli used ChatGPT 99% of the time. Today, she uses Claude Code 99% of the time. The switch wasn't about technical precision or agentic capabilities — it was about tone, personality, and the ability to mimic voice with less prompting. Users report that Claude «gets me» and requires fewer follow-up clarifications. But Alli emphasizes flexibility: every person should test ChatGPT (via Codex), Claude (via Claude Code and Co-work), and Gemini, especially their agentic versions. Memory and context files are easy to migrate between platforms, so switching costs are low. The bigger mindset shift is treating AI not as a tool, but as an operating system for your business. If you pick one platform and commit to building context files, skills, and workflows, you'll be one week ahead of your competition. That's enough.
From Hourly Billing to Output-Based Pay: How AI Changes Team Economics
Teams should pay for output, not hours, because AI compresses tasks from two days to one hour without reducing value.
From Hourly Billing to Output-Based Pay: How AI Changes Team Economics
Alli and Marina both recently switched their teams from hourly to output-based compensation. A task that used to take two days can now be done in one hour, but the value delivered to the client hasn't changed. Charging by the hour in an AI-augmented world punishes productivity. Instead, pay for the video, the campaign, the deliverable — and set a minimum quality bar. This shift rewards high-agency team members who use AI to multiply output and penalizes passive reliance.
The Biggest Risk: Over-Reliance Without Critical Thinking
Entrepreneurs who blindly trust AI bury their businesses; super users who maintain agency and judgment 10x theirs.
“The difference between those two groups was not expertise. One group decided to take the lazier route and over rely on these systems and say, 'See, I can offload everything.' And the other group thought from a growth mindset: How can I use it to challenge me? How can I use it to grow? How can I use it as a supportive mechanism and an augmentor layer and an accelerant to my business? The difference that I see in enterprises even down to the department — a super user and someone who's falling years behind — is mindset.”
What Happens in 12 Months: Self-Learning Models and Agent-to-Agent Communication
AI will self-learn from environmental triggers and agents will talk to each other, creating hypercustomized experiences and proxy communication.
Alli predicts that within 12 months, AI models will begin true self-learning — updating their own weights and capabilities based on environmental feedback, not just human prompts. For example, if Claude monitors your hiring decisions and notices you chose the New York candidate over Nashville, it will infer that you currently favor high-risk, high-payoff decisions and update its internal model accordingly. This mirrors how humans learn by paying attention to context. The second shift: agent-to-agent communication. Alli already sees people emailing her with «Hey, Alli's agent» because they know her proactive workflows will read it first. Her Instagram DMs include messages addressed to «AI Alli.» In the next year, your agent will meet someone else's agent, negotiate meeting times, draft collaboration proposals, and report back with recommendations. Every website, blog post, and landing page will become hypercustomized in real time — a «market of one.» The danger: if everything is proxy-to-proxy, personal relationships become even more critical to avoid a lonely, disembodied existence.
The One-Year Gap: What Separates Those Who Build and Those Who Don't
Persone
Glossario
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