Every one of these is real CompassOps output, captured from real runs. Not mockups. This is the kind of thing it makes for you, in your voice, in minutes.
We floated a joke product to test it: a rock that says "ski bamboo," priced at $485. Most AI writes you glowing copy. CompassOps stopped us.
We asked it to build a partner-shop rental program. It built the program, saved it as a tool we can reuse, then wrote a ready-to-send pitch to a real shop.
One line in ("it's dumping today"). Out came the whole same-day push: a social post, a story, a text, an email, even a sandwich board. Ready to fire.
We asked for a week of social posts. It wrote a full week in the shop's actual voice, ready to schedule, in one pass. No blank screen, no staring at a calendar.
End-of-season inventory was piling up. Instead of just "put it on sale," it ranked plays that move stock and build goodwill at the same time, like a pass-the-poles trade-in. An operations brain, not just a copywriter.
A pre-season tune-up campaign: posts, an email, a counter sign, a flyer. It noticed the shop wasn't Booyah and wrote everything in that shop's own voice, not a generic one.
We asked for a binding-setup training doc. It built the job post and the training outline, but it refused to make up DIN and torque numbers. It sent us to the manufacturer's docs and a certified tech instead. Some things you don't guess.
We asked it to blast a cold, dusty email list. It said no, that would hurt our deliverability, and gave us a gentler re-engagement plan instead. Then it reused earlier work so nothing went to waste.
Notice the through-line. It knows what not to do. It won't sell a bad product, fake your voice, invent safety specs, or burn your list. That's the difference from AI that says yes to everything, and it's why the work is worth trusting.