Free for the first 10 shops.
You're one I'd want.
You're good at running your shop. It's the posts, the customer emails, the review replies, the product descriptions, the stuff that eats your nights. CompassOps does all of it for you, in your shop's voice, in minutes. And I want you to have it free.
I'm in, let's goFree. Setup takes about an hour, start right now.
I'm only setting up 10 shops to start.
What it actually does
You talk to it like a helper, in plain words. No commands, no learning curve. It already knows your shop, so everything sounds like you. No generic AI slop.
Get the word out. A week of social posts, customer emails, newsletters, sale and promo announcements.
Take care of customers. Review replies (good and bad), review requests, follow-ups, abandoned-cart nudges.
Sell your stuff. Product descriptions that sell, back-in-stock alerts, website copy.
Think it through. An operations brain, not just a writer. A slow season, a pricing call, moving old stock.
Build you a tool. Something you do over and over? It builds a custom fix in minutes.
Run your week. SOPs and your whole weekly routine, done in one pass.
And it's not just for you. Anyone in the shop, your marketing person, your bench tech, the rental counter, can use it for their own work. One tool, the whole crew, all in your shop's voice.
See it work (for real)
Real, unedited. The first is from running it on my own shop, Booyah.
I said "build me a rental program." It built one, then wrote the pitch.
I asked CompassOps to build a bamboo pole rental program for Booyah. It asked a few sharp questions, built the whole thing, saved it as a tool I can reuse, then wrote a ready-to-send pitch to a real shop I had in mind:
"Hi Dorian, I run Booyah Bamboo, a small Idaho shop building bamboo ski poles by hand. We're rolling out a try-before-you-buy program with partner shops. We ship you a starter fleet, 25 pairs, free. You rent them at your counter and keep the fee. Every renter gets a Booyah card, and if they buy, 100% of their rental fee comes off the price."
"It's dumping today." A promo for every channel, in about a minute.
One line in, and it wrote the whole same-day push for a ski shop, social post, story, text, email, even a sandwich board, ready to fire:
It's dumping. We're open. [your offer]. If your skis aren't ready, today's your shot to fix that before the weekend. Walk in. We're here till [closing time].
Why I'm doing this. I'm David, from Booyah Bamboo. You know me from the bamboo ski poles. Here's the thing: I run Booyah's whole back-office on CompassOps now, the posts, the emails, all of it, in Booyah's voice. I built it because I was tired of marketing eating my nights and sounding like a robot. It works, and now I want a handful of shop owners I actually trust to be the first to use it. You're one of the few I thought of.
The straight talk
- It's free. No catch, no card. All I ask is that you're honest with me about what works and what doesn't, and let me share your wins as I grow this. Down the road, if you love it, an intro to another business owner or two who'd want it, a fellow shop, your supplier, your bookkeeper, whoever. That's it.
- You'll need your own Claude account ($20/month). In plain English: Claude is an AI you talk to, like ChatGPT. CompassOps runs inside it and makes it about your shop. The $20 is your own Claude, not a fee to me, and it's what keeps CompassOps free of any monthly bill from us.
- Setup takes about an hour, once. Mostly making that account and installing. After that, using it takes minutes. I'll walk you through every step with a simple guide and screenshots, and I'm one reply away if you get stuck.
- Nothing posts or sends on its own. It writes and prepares. You always review and hit send.
On AI and the environment, honestly: training these models takes real energy, and yes, new ones keep getting trained. I won't pretend it's green. But one small shop using this to write an email uses about as much as a few web searches. And it replaces a stack of always-on software and printed mailers. It's not nothing. It's just far less than the headlines suggest.