Over four weeks we’ll take you from zero to a working personal operating system: a set of instructions, commands, agents and connections that handle the repetitive parts of your work so you can focus on the decisions that matter.
Each week includes a 60-minute briefing and demo session, a 60-minute Q&A and walkthrough session, written course materials, hands-on exercises, a dedicated Slack channel, and an accountability tracker.
Week 1: Get Started, Get Your First Win
Get Claude Code running on your machine and do something useful with it.
- What is agentic working and why it changes how we work
- Setup: choosing between terminal, desktop app and IDE
- Getting your local files together so Claude can actually work with them
By end of week: Claude Code is installed, you’ve had your first real conversation with it, and you’ve seen it read and write files on your machine.
Week 2: Context, Commands and Agents
Teach Claude who you are and how you work, then build reusable commands so you never type the same prompt twice.
- CLAUDE.md and instruction files: teaching Claude your preferences, context and guardrails
- Slash commands, skills and sub-agents: building repeatable workflows
- Context engineering: how to structure your files so Claude gets smarter over time
By end of week: Claude knows your product, your users and your preferences. You have reusable commands and a working sub-agent.
Week 3: Connections and Your Personal Operating System
Connect Claude to the rest of your tool stack and design the system that works for you.
- MCPs: connecting Claude to Granola, Notion, Miro, Google Drive, Slack and more
- Hooks and automation: triggering actions without lifting a finger
- Designing your personal operating system: what to automate, what to keep human
By end of week: You have a working personal operating system that plugs into your day-to-day work.
Week 4: Building with Claude Code
You’ve been using Claude Code for documents and workflows. Now we go further: using it to build scripts, prototypes and internal tools.
- Writing and running local scripts: automating data pulls, file processing, report generation
- Prototyping: from idea to working demo (and when to use Lovable or v0 instead)
- Deploying: getting your build in front of real users
By end of week: You’ve built and deployed something real. You understand the full loop from idea to working software.