A sales pitch focuses on outcomes. It talks about results, speed, and transformation, usually without explaining the work. A system focuses on mechanics. It explains what you do, what tools you use, and what the process looks like over time.
A system also has boundaries. It tells you who it is not for. It tells you what it will not promise. It explains trade-offs.
When you read something, ask: can I describe the steps in plain language after reading it? If not, you may be looking at persuasion rather than instruction.
I built this approach around steps you can repeat: set up, draft, publish, improve, link, and maintain. That is the core. If you want a system, it should feel boring and clear. If it feels exciting and unclear, be careful.
This note explains the thinking behind the main system.
