Every business has money leaking out of it. Most owners just learn to live with the drip.
I spent nearly $20,000 a year on bagged ice. For a while I just paid it — it's ice, what are you gonna do? Then I bought an ice maker for $2,000. Paid for itself in a month. Simple fix, massive impact.
That got me thinking: where else am I bleeding cash?
I started looking at every subscription, every service, every system I was paying for. Not to cut corners — to cut the fat.
### QuickBooks
Three accounts, $150/month. Built my own. Now I save the money and understand my books better than I ever did.
### CRM
$300/month from the usual suspects. Rebuilt the whole thing with Claude, a SendGrid account, and Twilio. Does everything the big guys do. Costs peanuts.
### Booking Engine
Captain Jack — my AI booking assistant — connects to my real-time calendar, knows FWC season rules, checks NOAA weather for your trip date. I don't babysit it. It just works.
### Customer Portal
If you've fished with us, you can log in, see every trip you've taken, check your gift card balance, or chat with Captain Jack about what's biting.
### Cart Abandonment
I can see when someone starts booking and stops. Same way Smith Optics nags me about the sunglasses in my cart. That's a follow-up I never had before. That's a leak I didn't even know existed.
None of this happened overnight. Late nights. Early mornings. Fitting sessions in before the boat left and after we got back. I was exhausted. Still am, some days.
But I own it now. Every system, every fix, every plugged hole — it's mine. I control it. When it breaks, I fix it.
AI hasn't made me millions. Not yet. But it's teaching me my business from the inside out. And it's giving me an advantage that no subscription can match: I know exactly where every dollar goes, and I decide which ones stay.
You don't need a developer. You don't need a team. You just need to start looking at your business the way I looked at that ice bill — and ask yourself what you're willing to keep paying for before you finally start fixing the leaks.
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