It tracks open actions, pulls context from across your mail, calendar, docs and tasks, schedules and chases on your behalf — inside your own Google Workspace. Nothing is booked or committed operationally until you approve it, with a complete record of what was done.
Ops runs on follow-up, scheduling and reminders — tracking who owes what, nudging the stalled item, and keeping every thread moving. It's constant, and it's all on you.
The thread is in mail, the date is in the calendar, the detail is in a doc, the action is in a task list. Pulling it together for one decision burns valuable time you don't have.
An assistant that books a slot or commits to a vendor on its own can break trust and put the operation on the hook for the wrong thing — and a bad commitment ripples across the business.
It follows open actions, briefs you on what's moving and what's stalled, and schedules the chase-ups — one assistant you talk to in chat. Every outward step stays gated.
It pulls the thread, the date, the doc and the task into a single place, so you decide with the full picture in front of you instead of hunting across multiple independent tools.
It proposes; you approve in the chat thread. Only then is the meeting booked, the chase sent or the commitment made — and every decision is recorded in an immutable ledger.
You ask in chat — "chase the vendor on the SLA", "book the ops review", "what's stalled this week". It drafts the exact action and shows you.
Right there in the thread: "approve", or "push it to Thursday". You're never more than a word away from control over anything committed.
Only the approved action runs — the chase sends, the slot books, the task is set — and every decision performed is recorded.
Every email, every meeting, every commitment, every task waits for your approval before it happens — and every proposal and decision is recorded in an immutable ledger. You get the leverage of an always-on chief of staff with a complete record of what was done, and no risk of it committing the operation on its own.
Book a short exploratory session — we'll discuss where follow-through slips and where RAD Professional can take the most off your plate as the operational glue, then map a path that fits, in your own Google Workspace.