18 Comments
User's avatar
Nelly Lund's avatar

Charlie and Walid together mais j’adore!! 😍

Charlie Hills's avatar

bahhhh oui ma reine 😌

Walid Boulanouar's avatar

Sabahudin made this happen and connected us appreciate it Nelly more coming soon

Sabahudin Murtic 🎁's avatar

ok ok, now you forget about me :P ccc

Nelly Lund's avatar

🤣🤣 I think we don’t know each other though. But that can be solved 😅

Sabahudin Murtic 🎁's avatar

ohhh, now I amdecriminalised here LOL - lets change that

Bill Heilmann's avatar

Hey Charlie, this is really good stuff you share I really appreciate you and your teams content. What do you suggest for me a 68-year-old dude with an executive career coaching platform? My concern is I start going into these little hobbies. I call them tech hobbies and I go on these rabbit holes and they end up playing and destroying things and getting frustrated and I don’t get focused back on selling and getting new clients. Any suggestions?

Charlie Hills's avatar

Appreciate it, Bill. My honest advice is to set a strict time limit for yourself. 30 minutes max for any new tool or workflow. If you don't see a clear path to clients or revenue within that window, close the tab.

Your energy is better spent on conversations with prospects than configuring tech. Pick one AI tool, learn it well enough to save time on content or outreach, then get back to selling. The tech should serve the coaching, not replace the work of finding clients.

Walid Boulanouar's avatar

This is gold guys more coming soon 😍

Sabahudin Murtic 🎁's avatar

FIRE GUDE RIGHT HEEEREEEEE

ToxSec's avatar

this was a great article! bookmarks this. i feel like a second read and referring people here is appropriate. nice article!

Charlie Hills's avatar

Thank you. Share it with anyone who would get value from it. That means a lot :)

ToxSec's avatar

absolutely!

Pawel Jozefiak's avatar

The 48+ skills point is where I landed too, though it took about eight months to get there. The thing I didn't expect: most of the skills you build are used once and then abandoned. The ones that stick are the ones that solve problems you hit weekly.

What changed the system for me was adding a self-extension mechanism - agent detects a capability gap, creates a new skill file, that skill persists across sessions. The skills that compound are always the boring ones. Scheduling, error logging, memory rollover. Not the flashy demos.

Charlie Hills's avatar

This is a great addition.

You are right, the skills that compound are the boring operational ones.

Appreciate you sharing your experience here.

Matthieu's avatar

Article trés interessant. Je cherche à me construire un OS tournant autour de CLaude code. Quelle formation / youtube conseillez vous de regarder pour me guider dans la pratique ?

Charlie Hills's avatar

Merci Matthieu !

For Claude Code, I recommend starting with the official Anthropic documentation and guides on claude.ai. YouTube has some good tutorials, but the best way to learn is to practise directly.

Matthieu's avatar

Thanks Charlie for your answer.