Back to Use-cases

Product

Go from brainstorm to roadmap

The ideas are never the problem. You walk out of the workshop with eighty sticky notes, a Miro board that looks like a crime scene, and three Slack threads where people kept adding “oh, and what about—“. The problem is the second meeting: the one where someone has to turn all of that into themes, kill the duplicates, decide what actually matters, and put it in an order you can defend to leadership. That meeting is tedious, it’s political, and it keeps getting pushed — so the momentum from the good session quietly leaks away.

Skynet does the tedious part in one pass. Drop the whole mess in — sticky-note text, the Miro export, the Slack threads — and it groups the ideas into themes, collapses the overlap, and gives you something structured to react to instead of a wall to stare at. Because it routes across models, the genuinely hard reasoning — weighing impact against effort, sequencing dependencies — runs on the model best suited to it, automatically, on your one subscription.

How it gets from chaos to a roadmap

step 01

Dump everything in, unsorted

Paste the raw ideas — sticky notes, the board export, the relevant Slack threads. No tidying first. The agent reads the lot and starts finding the shape in it.

step 02

Cluster and dedupe

It groups the ideas into named themes and merges the ones that are really the same idea wearing different words — so “faster onboarding,” “reduce setup steps,” and “first-run is confusing” land in one theme, counted once.

step 03

Score and sequence

Each theme gets weighed on impact versus effort, and the agent proposes a sequence — what to do first, what depends on what, what to park. This is where multi-model routing earns its keep: the harder the reasoning, the better the model it reaches for.

step 04

Draft the rationale

You don’t just get a list — you get the argument. The agent drafts the why behind the order, so when leadership asks “why is this above that?” the answer is already written and grounded in your own scoring.

You build this from a plain-language prompt and run it on demand whenever a workshop ends — no code, no setup.

The result still belongs to you — the agent proposes the themes, the scores, and the sequence; you argue with it, move things, and decide. It just means you’re editing a real draft of the roadmap an hour after the workshop instead of scheduling the meeting where someone finally starts one.

Where this lands

The energy from a good session survives contact with the calendar. Instead of a photo that goes stale, you walk away with themes, a ranked backlog, and a roadmap whose ordering you can actually defend — built while the discussion is still fresh in everyone’s head.

Frequently asked questions

The industry’s most generous  AI app

We offer 10x more value than any mainstream AI provider

  1. 1. Register

    No Upfront payment required

  2. 2. Create new Chat

    Start chatting with our models

  3. 3. Get more things done

    Get things done with mini apps and agents