CPH/May 1, 2026
Layer Three · Freedom 2 All

Software stops being an asset.
It becomes a disposable utility.

At Layer 3 (Freedom 2 All), every CPH employee has Claude Code (or Cursor, Replit Agent, Lovable) on their machine and the literacy to use it. They stop asking, “Is there a tool for this?” and start asking, “What's the app I need for the next thirty minutes?” Then they build it, use it, discard it.

A · Ad-hoc needs

Built for the moment, then discarded.

A specific task — one shipment, one quarter, one board pack. Written, used, retired.

EX 01

The single-shipment dashboard.

A logistics coordinator builds a one-off dashboard for a single big shipment week — ETAs from four carriers, customs status, pending docs. Throws it away after the containers land.

build time · ~ 40 min
EX 02

The trader's margin calculator.

A senior trader builds a private margin tool reflecting her hedging style — not the corporate one. Rules in English; Claude Code writes the logic. Used for a quarter, retired when the strategy changes.

build time · ~ 1 afternoon
EX 04

The board-pack proofreader.

A finance analyst writes a one-time agent that reads draft board packs, flags inconsistencies in numbers across pages, and verifies every chart reconciles to the source data. Used once. Discarded.

build time · ~ 90 min
B · Active agents

Always-on. Watching, drafting, alerting.

Lives on a schedule. Wakes itself up, does the work, emails the human only when it matters.

EX 03

The regulatory alert agent.

The QHSE lead spins up an agent that watches Indonesian, Polish, and EU regulators each morning, cross-references active CPH shipments, and emails her only when something matters.

build time · ~ 2 hours · always-on
EX 05

The tender-response co-pilot.

A KAM facing a 200-page public-tender deadline spins up an agent that reads the tender, drafts the response from CPH's past wins, and flags every clause where our standard terms diverge.

build time · ~ 3 hours · used until bid lands
EX 06

The principal-quarterly auto-pack.

An agency manager builds an agent that, every Friday, pulls volumes, margins, and pipeline from Dynamics, drafts the principal's quarterly review deck, and emails it for review.

build time · ~ 1 day · used weekly
Case Study · Active Agents in Action

One marketer  ·  five agents  ·  one dashboard.

A single CPH marketer spins up five always-on agents. Information flows forward (amber) — scout to copy to design to publish to analyse. Analytics broadcasts back (violet) to make every agent better with each cycle.

MARKETER · DASHBOARD Human in the loop WATCHES · APPROVES · TUNES 01 Market Scout SCRAPES · NEWS · COMPETITORS 02 Copywriter DRAFTS · ANGLES · HOOKS 03 Ad / Post Designer VISUALS · LAYOUT · BRAND 04 Ad Scheduler PUBLISH · CHANNELS · CADENCE 05 Analytics LEARNS · FEEDBACK · TUNE FORWARD FLOW FEEDBACK FROM ANALYTICS
  1. 01

    Market Scout

    Watches the chemical-distribution press, competitor announcements, regulator feeds and LinkedIn / X chatter every morning. Surfaces the three signals worth acting on this week.

  2. 02

    Copywriter

    Reads the Scout's signals and drafts angles, hooks, and short-form copy in CPH voice. Always offers three variants — bold, classic, technical — for the marketer to choose.

  3. 03

    Ad / Post Designer

    Turns the chosen copy into on-brand visuals — LinkedIn carousels, X posts, sales-pitch one-pagers. Reuses CPH's brand kit; never invents off-palette work.

  4. 04

    Ad Scheduler

    Publishes to LinkedIn, X, and the partner microsite at the right cadence per audience. Knows which channel wakes up at which hour for which buyer geography.

  5. 05

    Analytics

    Tracks likes, views, dwell-time, click-through, and reply quality. Tells the Scout which topics actually resonated, the Copywriter which hooks worked, the Designer which formats clicked, the Scheduler when to post next.

The marketer never types a post. They watch the dashboard, approve direction, and let the loop tighten itself.