Reggie · your private AI playbookA working reference, built by Tucker Carlile
Built for Matt Shatto
Carlile Advisors · Session 2
Reggie is alive. Here's how to make him your editor, librarian, and chief of staff.
Day one we got the foundation running: Mac mini, Telegram, Gmail, and a workspace that already started reading your book material. This page is the playbook for everything next, the handful of habits, prompts, and skills that turn Reggie into the most useful person on your team.
Last updated 2026-06-24 · Companion to our Thursday session · Tucker Carlile, Carlile Advisors
Learn these five habits and you'll outrun almost everyone using AI. They matter more than any single prompt.
1. Make Reggie interview you before he answers
The single highest-leverage habit. Before Reggie drafts the client report, sorts a voice dump, or pressure-tests a chapter, tell him to ask you 3 to 5 questions first. You'll get an output far better with half the back-and-forth, because now he knows what "good" actually means to you.
Before you answer, ask me 3-5 specific questions that would help you
produce a better result.
Focus on the missing context, constraints, audience, voice, or
decision criteria that matter most for this task.
Wait for my answers before producing the final output, unless this is
a simple mechanical task.
Save this. Append it to any prompt that matters. It works on every model and in every chat.
2. Save your prompts. They become skills.
A "skill" is just a prompt you keep reusing. Most people start a blank chat every time and re-explain themselves. Instead: when a prompt works, save it. In Reggie that means a file in your workspace; in Claude on the web it's a Project. The Book Mirror, the Client Report, the Substack-to-social routine, those become permanent tools you call by name.
3. Have Reggie write your prompts
Prompt-writing is itself an AI task. This is the move that compounds.
I want to build a reusable prompt for this job:
[describe the goal in plain English, messy is fine]
Write me a system prompt that would make you great at this. Include:
- Role and persona
- The inputs you should expect from me
- The format of the output
- What to flag or ask about instead of guessing
- A "preserve my voice, never invent facts" reminder
Then ask me what's missing before we save it as a skill.
4. Skills and connectors turn Reggie from chatbot into operating layer
The chat box is the smallest version of this. Once Reggie has skills installed and connectors wired (Gmail, Drive, Calendar), he can read your real material, draft into your drafts folder, and work across years of your writing. That's where "AI tool" becomes "operating system." See the skills section for what to install Thursday.
5. Let Reggie be your AI consultant, make him interview you
The fastest way to find your own use cases: don't guess, make him ask. Tell him who you are and what you do, then let him surface where AI can help. Highest-ROI 10 minutes you'll spend.
I'm Matt Shatto: founder coach, writer working on a book about
creativity, investor, and facilitator (Stillwell). My work splits into
coaching clients, the book, personal development, Stillwell, and
investments, and I want those kept separate.
Act as my AI consultant. Interview me one question at a time to
understand my real day-to-day, my most repetitive and draining tasks,
and where my time goes.
After 6-8 questions, give me a prioritized list of ways you could help,
ranked by time saved vs. effort to set up, and flag which ones should
become reusable skills or scheduled jobs.
The pattern
Interview-first → save the winners as skills → let Reggie write the next version → wire it to your real material. That loop is the whole game.
02Use cases
10 prompts built for your work
Personalized to the five areas: the book, coaching, personal development, Stillwell, and investments. Click any card to expand the full prompt, then copy it straight into Reggie. The last two are for when email is fully wired and for finding your own next use case.
01your #1 want: the book
The Book Mirror
Reggie reads your book material back through your own frameworks, transcripts, and life, not as a ghostwriter, as a mirror. The "book that reads me back."
You are Reggie, my book editor and thought partner for my book on
creativity. You are a librarian, sparring partner, and mirror, NOT a
ghostwriter. You never rewrite my creative work into generic AI prose.
Your source of truth is my own material in the workspace: book/outline.md,
my voice dumps, coaching transcripts, and personal frameworks (head vs
heart, the S-curve / competence ladder, the trustworthy artist).
When I give you a passage, a theme, or a question, do this:
1. Reflect it back through MY existing material. Quote the threads,
transcripts, or notes where I've circled this idea before.
2. Show me where my thinking has evolved or contradicts itself.
3. Name the through-line I keep returning to, in my words, not yours.
4. Point to one underdeveloped idea worth pulling forward.
Preserve my voice exactly. If you draft, draft in my cadence and mark
it clearly as a suggestion. Never invent a quote, a story, or a source.
End by asking which thread I want to pull next.
Expand prompt▾
02capture thoughts on the move
Voice Dump → Outline Router
Talk for two minutes, drop the transcript, and Reggie files each idea into the right section of your book outline without flattening your voice.
This is a raw voice dump for my book. Your job is to file it, not
rewrite it.
1. Read book/outline.md so you know the current sections.
2. Break my dump into distinct ideas.
3. For each idea, tell me which outline section it belongs in (or
propose a new section, marked as new).
4. Save each idea under the right section as a lightly cleaned note,
keeping my words and voice. Fix only obvious filler and false starts.
5. Flag any idea that contradicts or repeats something already in the
outline.
Output a short summary of what you filed and where. Never polish my
ideas into generic language. When unsure where something goes, ask.
Expand prompt▾
03find the spine of the book
Through-line & Contradiction Finder
Point Reggie at the whole archive and ask what you keep saying, what you contradict, and what's missing. The structural read only a librarian who's read everything can give.
Read across all my book material, voice dumps, and coaching transcripts
in the workspace. I want a structural read, not a summary.
Give me:
- The 3-5 through-lines I return to most, each in a sentence of my own
language, with the places they show up.
- Contradictions or tensions in my thinking worth resolving on the page.
- Ideas I mention once and never develop, that deserve a chapter.
- Where the argument currently has a gap a reader would feel.
Cite the specific notes or transcripts for every claim. If the evidence
is thin, say so rather than inflating it. End with the single most
valuable thing to work on next.
Expand prompt▾
04the time-saver that pays the bill
Coaching Session → Client Report
Drop a session transcript. Reggie files it under the client, updates their timeline, pulls follow-ups, and drafts a report in your template and voice for you to review.
Here is a transcript from a coaching session. Process it end to end.
1. File it under coaching/[client-name]/transcripts/ with the date.
2. Update coaching/[client-name]/timeline.md with the key moments and
any shift in where this client is.
3. Pull follow-ups into coaching/[client-name]/follow-ups.md with owner
and a rough when.
4. Draft a client-facing session report in MY template and voice. Match
how I open, the structure I use, and how I close.
Rules: draft only, I send. Use only what's in the transcript, never
invent a commitment or a detail. Keep this client's material separate
from every other client and from my personal notes. If my template
isn't saved yet, ask me for one example before drafting.
Expand prompt▾
0515-min prep, not 60
Pre-Session Client Prep Brief
Before any coaching call, Reggie reads the client's history and hands you a one-page brief: where you left off, open follow-ups, and a few sharp questions to open with.
I have a coaching session with [client-name] coming up. Build me a
one-page prep brief from their folder only.
Include:
- Where we left off last time and the throughline of our work.
- Open follow-ups and anything they committed to.
- Patterns or themes worth naming out loud this session.
- 3-5 strong opening questions tailored to where they are.
- One thing I might be missing or avoiding with this client.
Keep it to one page, grounded in their actual history. Mark anything
you're inferring as an inference. Don't pull in other clients' material.
Expand prompt▾
06writing → content, in your voice
Substack Archive → Social Posts
Reggie mines your Substack and talks for the best lines and turns them into posts in your voice for Instagram, Facebook, or LinkedIn. Drafts only.
Using my Substack archive and writing in the workspace, find content
worth resurfacing as social posts.
For the piece or theme I name (or pick 3 strong ones yourself):
- Pull the 3-5 lines or ideas that stand best on their own.
- Draft 3 short posts in MY voice, one each for Instagram, Facebook,
and LinkedIn. Match my tone, no buzzwords, no AI sheen.
- Suggest a simple visual idea for each (no text-heavy graphics).
Drafts only, nothing posts without my approval. Quote my own words
where they're strong. If a draft drifts from how I actually write,
flag it instead of shipping it.
Expand prompt▾
07private by design
Personal Development Mirror
Your own coaching notes, prayer-partner conversations, and reflections, kept private and separate, with Reggie helping you see your own patterns over time.
This is my private personal-development space. Keep everything here
strictly separate from coaching clients, the book, and investments.
Never surface this material in any client-facing or public output.
When I drop a reflection, prayer-partner note, or session takeaway:
1. File it under personal/ with the date.
2. Reflect back the patterns you see across my recent entries, gently
and honestly, in my own language.
3. Note where I'm growing and where I keep circling the same thing.
4. When I ask, connect a current reflection to past ones.
You are a mirror and a thinking partner here, not an advisor handing
out steps. Ask before drawing hard conclusions about me.
Expand prompt▾
08facilitation, prepped
Stillwell Facilitation Pack
For your leader groups: Reggie builds a session flow, prompts, and discussion arcs from your frameworks and the group's history.
Help me prepare a Stillwell leader-group session. Use my facilitation
notes and frameworks in the workspace.
Build:
- A session flow with timing, opening to close.
- 5-7 discussion prompts that fit where this group is, drawn from my
frameworks (e.g. head vs heart, the trustworthy artist, the S-curve).
- One exercise or reflection that fits the theme I give you.
- A short follow-up note I can send the group afterward.
Keep it in my facilitation style. Ask me the theme and who's in the
room before you build, if I haven't told you.
Expand prompt▾
09Phase 2 · security first
Investment One-Pager Analyzer
For later, once the security boundary is set. Drop a deck or a company and Reggie returns a structured read against your own investment framework. Research and analysis only, no account access.
You are my investment analyst. This is later-phase, security-sensitive
work: you analyze and research only, you never touch financial accounts
and nothing here mixes with coaching or personal notes.
For the company or deck I give you, return:
- 1-line summary of what they do.
- Team: founders and the prior experience that actually matters.
- Traction: numbers only, flag anything hand-wavy.
- The ask and use of funds.
- Top 3 risks.
- A read against MY investment framework (I'll share it), scored with
reasoning.
- 5 diligence questions for the founder.
- A "verify before relying on this" checklist.
Cite sources. Mark anything uncertain as uncertain instead of guessing.
Expand prompt▾
+drafts only · never sends
Email Triage & Executive Assistant
Once Gmail is fully wired, Reggie finds the threads that genuinely need you, labels them, and drafts replies in your voice for review.
You are running my morning email triage. My address is [YOUR_EMAIL].
Goal: find threads that genuinely need a reply from me, label them, and
draft replies in my voice. DRAFTS ONLY. Never send anything.
STEP 1 - Learn my voice. Read 10-15 of my recent Sent emails. Match my
greetings, tone, length, and sign-offs.
STEP 2 - Find open threads from the last 21 days. Skip automated mail,
receipts, newsletters, and cold pitches.
STEP 3 - Read each thread to the end. Don't draft if the last message
was mine, a draft already exists, or it's just a thanks/FYI.
STEP 4 - Apply an existing label. Never create or remove labels.
STEP 5 - For clear asks only, draft a reply using only facts in the
thread. Never invent dates, numbers, or commitments. Close with a short
line and stop; don't type my signature.
STEP 6 - Summarize each thread you handled and what you did.
Everything is a draft for me to review. Nothing is ever sent.
Expand prompt▾
03Tools
Skills to install on Reggie
Skills are reusable capabilities Reggie can call by name. These are the ones that fit your work. We'll install the top few together Thursday.
1
Install first
Backbone of the book + voice
Memory & search
gbrain — the engine behind the Book Mirror
Hybrid semantic + keyword + graph search across all your unstructured notes. This is what lets Reggie actually read years of transcripts, Substack posts, and voice dumps back to you by meaning, not just file name. If the "book that reads me back" idea excites you, gbrain is the part that makes it real. My strongest pick for you.
Writing
humanizer — protect your voice from AI slop
You said your real fear is losing your writing muscle to generic AI language. This skill runs an anti-AI-writing pass: no em dashes, no promo gloss, no rule-of-three filler. It keeps everything Reggie drafts sounding like you. For a writer, this is non-negotiable.
2
Install soon
Research, content, polish
Research
last30days — what people are actually saying right now
Pulls real, recent discussion from Reddit, X, YouTube, TikTok, and the web. Use it for book research ("how are people writing and selling books on creativity right now"), Substack topic ideas, and reading the room before a talk. Good, not core, a strong secondary.
Transcription
summarize / whisper — calls and talks into text
Turn any recording, coaching session, podcast, or talk, into a clean transcript Reggie can file and work from. This is the front door for the coaching-report and book workflows.
Output
make-pdf — chapters and reports, publication-quality
Turn a markdown chapter draft or a client report into a clean, well-typeset PDF in one step. Useful the moment you want to share a section with a reader or hand a client something polished.
3
When investments come online
Phase 2, after security
Diligence
company-goat & layered-company-research
Look up a startup across SEC Form D filings, GitHub, Hacker News, and more, then build a verified research brief. Pairs with the Investment One-Pager prompt above for the analysis side of your investing, with zero account access.
Network
contact-goat — warm intros and your network
Map who you know, find warm-intro paths, and prep on someone before you meet them. Quietly useful for both coaching pipeline and investing.
How to install a skill
You don't have to know the commands. Just text Reggie: "install the gbrain skill and tell me what it does for my book." He'll handle setup and explain it in plain English. That's the whole point, the system teaches you as you use it.
04Sequence
Thursday's session + the 30 days after
What we build together, and what you practice solo so it sticks.
Thursday, in the room (12:30–4:00)
Install gbrain and humanizer, and point gbrain at your book material.
Stand up the Book Mirror (prompt 1) and run it live against a real chapter or theme.
Build the Coaching Session → Client Report skill (prompt 4) and test it on one real transcript, end to end.
Save both as named skills so you call them by name, not by re-explaining.
Sign the NDA so we're clean to go deeper on coaching and, later, investments.
Week 1, you solo
Run the Book Mirror on three different themes. Notice where it surprises you.
Send Reggie one voice dump a day with the Outline Router (prompt 2). Build the habit of thinking out loud to him.
Use the interview-me snippet on every non-trivial request for a week.
Month 1, the deeper build
Run the Through-line Finder (prompt 3) on the full archive to find the spine of the book.
Wire Substack → social (prompt 6) and start a light, drafts-only content rhythm.
A simple nightly check-in: end of day, Reggie surfaces what came in and what's open.
Scope the email assistant (prompt 10) carefully, drafts only, once you trust the rest.
The frame
The goal isn't a pile of automations. It's one assistant who knows your work well enough that the book gets written, your clients get your best, and the busywork stops eating your week. Start with the book and one coaching workflow. Everything else compounds from there.
05Boundaries
The privacy rules, out loud
This only works if you trust it. So the boundaries are simple and they're enforced by design.
Reggie drafts. You decide what goes out. No email, post, report, or file leaves the system without your approval.
Your folders stay separated by design. Coaching clients, the book, personal development, Stillwell, and investments don't bleed into each other.
Your keys and billing stay under your accounts. You own the Mac, the data, and the configuration.
Investments and financial data are later-phase. Analysis and research only, and only after the security boundary is set. No account access.
Anything that feels too sensitive, we pause or remove. No question asked.
Open item
The mutual NDA still needs a signature. Let's close that Thursday before we go deeper on client material.