Last month I turned a robot loose on the bars of Wisconsin to ask a single question: how much are you charging for Spotted Cow?
There was no business case for this. I run a brew bar. I visit bars. I already know what Spotted Cow costs. I built a conversational AI that could dial a bar, sit through the ringing, chat with whoever picked up, and log the number, purely because the idea made me laugh at my desk. (I saw someone do it for Guinness in Ireland and got inspired.)
That is the whole method of differentiating advantages in work, life, love, etc.,. But let me back up.
When I started with AI, I made one mental move that changed everything after it. I decided to treat it the way I treat Crimson Desert. I run multiple characters. I take the snackable missions. I grind the repetitive stuff without resenting it, because grinding is part of the game. I told myself I was going to enjoy every element of the journey, including the boring ones, and I stopped watching the meter. Nobody calculates the cost-per-hour of a game they love. (130 hours into Crimson Desert because my PS5 tells me, but I’ve got no clue how many I’ve put into Claude…far more, that’s for sure.)
Meanwhile, a lot of the smartest people I know were treating AI like a forklift. Efficiency. Career advantage. Prompts as productivity. They got exactly what they optimized for: slightly faster versions of the errands they already ran.
The side quests are where you find the sword.
While I was building a voice line to answer FAQ calls for the bar, the good idea arrived without an appointment: what if the calls went the other direction? A robot calls you, offers one cool beer fact to brighten your day, and wants nothing. No booking link. No survey. No strings.
Every call a business makes to you wants something back. A call that only gives might be the strangest call you get all year. It’s not quite the same as receiving a check in the mail, but it’s close! You would tell somebody about it. I cannot buy that with an ad budget, and no efficiency roadmap on earth would have produced it. Roadmaps improve the errands you already run.
I don’t believe anyone can treat this technology like a video game for six months and come out empty-handed. Play generates its own proof.
And this game does something no other game I own does. It patches itself while you sleep. Every few months (weeks? days? hours?!) the engine upgrades, and you can walk back through your old save files and watch them level up. Work I finished last winter runs better today than the day I shipped it. I’m not sure much else in my life works that way. The bar floor does not re-mop itself better each quarter.
The strange accounting of all this is that I went looking for fun and came back with an advantage. Every time I went looking for the advantage directly, I came back with a subscription and a headache…frustration..rage quitting.
So, one cool beer fact, no strings attached: New Glarus refuses to sell Spotted Cow outside Wisconsin, and bars across the border have been caught smuggling kegs of it. The beer’s best marketing is the state line.
Stay Positive & The Next Round Is On Me
