Download a working automation JSON
Can AI answer engines cite your site?
Outreach scripts that get replies
Find the 3 workflows costing you sleep
200+ prompts, ready to ship
12-month posting plan in 60 sec
Brand voice doc in 4 steps
Runway / Pika / Sora / Veo formats
Pick your role and your goal. Get a recommended stack grouped by category — chat, content, CRM, automation glue — with a plain-English n8n suggestion for wiring it together.
Preview 3 tools free. Enter your email to unlock the full stack doc.
Founder, marketing, sales, ops, agency, dev.
From saving time to building internal agents.
A plain-English automation to wire it together.
Daily thinking partner — drafts, decisions, first-pass research.
Wire your CRM, inbox, and forms together without hiring an engineer.
One place for leads, follow-up, and booking — non-negotiable past 10 leads/week.
Every tool in your Solo Founderstack, plus the specialized add-on for "Save time on repetitive tasks" and an n8n glue suggestion that wires it together.
Build the rest of your system
6 roles × 5 goals · 24 base tool picks. Everything runs in your browser.
Why this builder exists
Every founder I talk to on a discovery call has the same problem in a different shape: a graveyard of AI tool subscriptions they signed up for after a LinkedIn post, half of which they haven't opened in a month. New AI tools ship every week and almost none of them are built to work together — you end up doing more manual copy-pasting between tools than the tools ever saved you.
This builder skips the "best tools of 2026" noise and starts from two questions that actually determine what you need: who you are day-to-day, and what you're trying to fix. A solo founder trying to save time on repetitive tasks needs a completely different first move than an agency owner trying to scale outbound — even though both might land on similar underlying tools.
The categories are deliberately generic (chat/reasoning, automation glue, CRM/pipeline) rather than one hard-coded brand name per slot, because the specific tool matters less than having each category covered. Swap in whatever you already pay for if it fits the category — the goal is coverage, not vendor lock-in.
The n8n glue suggestion is the part most stacks skip entirely. Tools without a connection layer between them stay manual forever. If the stack you get back makes sense but the wiring feels like a project on its own, that's exactly what a discovery call is for — I'll map the actual automation on a whiteboard with you.
Waseem, building from Bali · info@skynetjoe.com
Quick answers
Listicles rank tools in isolation. This maps a stack to your actual role and goal — a solo founder trying to save time on repetitive tasks needs a different combination than an agency owner trying to scale outbound. The recommendations are grouped by category (chat, automation glue, CRM, scheduling) so you know what each tool is actually for, not just that it's popular.
Most AI tool stacks fail not because the individual tools are bad, but because nothing connects them — a lead comes in, a human has to manually copy it into three different places. The glue suggestion is a plain-English description of the automation that would wire your specific stack together, built around n8n as the connector.
No. Treat it as a starting shortlist, not a mandate. If you already have a CRM you like, keep it — swap in the recommended category, not necessarily the exact tool name. The point is coverage: chat/reasoning, content or outreach, a system of record, and something gluing it together.
The preview (top 3 tools) is free with no email. The full doc — every category plus the goal-specific add-on and the n8n glue suggestion — unlocks with an email so I can follow up if you want help actually wiring it.