Creative Ideation
Early-stage work has a bad ratio. You spend two days generating directions, present three, and the client picks one — which means most of the effort was scaffolding you threw away. Worse, under deadline the three directions tend to converge, because they all came from the same head on the same afternoon. Real range takes time you have not been paid for.
Skynet widens the front end. Grounded in the brief, the client’s existing brand, and their competitive context, it proposes distinct territories — not finished designs, but articulated directions with a rationale you can argue with. The judgment about which one has legs is entirely yours. What changes is that you start from six real options instead of one and a deadline.
How it works
Ground it in the brief
The agent works from the approved brief, the client’s current brand, and whatever reference material exists. Directions come out of the actual constraints rather than generic taste.
Ask for range, not variations
Instruct it to push apart, not converge. Several territories that genuinely disagree with each other — different emotional register, different visual strategy — each with a written rationale tied back to the brief.
Pull references and build the board
For directions worth exploring, the agent gathers reference material and assembles the mood board, so the part of ideation that is really search and collection stops eating your afternoon.
Cut, then go deeper
You kill the ones that do not work — most of them — and ask it to develop the survivors. Skynet remembers what you rejected and why, so the next round does not walk back into it.
Build it from a prompt
Ask for territories, not deliverables.
The point is not that the agent has taste. It does not. The point is that it can do the searching, collecting, and articulating fast enough that you spend your time on the part only you can do: knowing which direction is right for this client, and why.