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Joe Casabona

What SNL gets right


Joe Casabona

I help solopreneurs replace manual tasks with a reliable system so they can take time off worry-free.

I was watching Noah Kahan, the SNL musical guest over the weekend, when I came to a realization about why I've had a pretty big resurgence in my interest in the show lately.

Yes — part of it is the 50th anniversary last year and the increased media coverage around the show. Part of it is the sketches are available on YouTube and Peacock+, and easier to watch.

But it's more than that. And it wasn't until I watched the last few musical guests (something I usually skip) that I realized why. On SNL, you're really doing it. It's live. You need the talent. You need the skill. And you need the confidence to excel, and be willing to mess up.

I know I've been talking about AI a lot lately. Seems like everyone in our space has. But it's against this backdrop that I was thinking about SNL. Noah Kahan sang live and it was impressive. So did Olivia Rodrigo. It's a requirement for the show, and the one time someone didn't, they were universally panned for it.

The sheer force of effort needed to do a single show is amazing too. You basically have a week to write and rehearse the entire thing, with some changes coming during the final dress. You need to be prepared.

Then there are people who are too scared, or lazy, to make any decision without the help of AI. "Well I'm not good at this — Claude is better," or "I've trained it in my voice so it's OK." This is how one gets worse, not better. By not practicing something, you'll never get good at it. By not continuing to do something, you'll get worse.

Couple this with a fantastic article I read called The task is not the job, and you'll see why I'm finding even more inspiration in what SNL is doing. People still want human interaction. They want human relationships, and they want human experiences.

As solopreneurs, we're better positioned than many to offer these. We can tell people, "when you hire my company, you get me." But I also understand that many turn to AI because they don't feel they have the time to do everything.

So what can you do?

You use AI and automations for process stuff — your planned, repeatable tasks that can run in the background as automated systems. You don't have to do them, freeing up your time to do the work that truly matters.

An example from SNL could be the structure of the show: cold open, monologue, usually a pre-taped sketch, etc. They don't need to start from scratch every week, so they can focus on writing that fits the format. It's also the dozens (or maybe hundreds) of processes they have for costumes, makeup, set design, and everything behind the scenes that we don't see.

I feel like we've lost the thread on this. And much like we're better positioned for deeply connective work, we're more susceptible to losing our businesses to AI. Not because people replace us with Claude, but because we let what makes us truly valuable atrophy.

I've been thinking of a way to combat this. Just a few years ago, the main problem was, "I don't know what I can automate." Today, it's "everything seems automateable, from emailing clients to creating video." In other words, the problem is distinguishing what in our process should be automated.

So I'm working on a new cohort called Automation Foundations. It's designed to help you automate the planned, repeatable stuff so you can focus on connecting with your customers, and solving their problems in a way a glorified word calculator can't.

If you're interested, click the button below to join the waitlist. As soon as I have more info, I'll send it your way.

My latest from around the web:

STREAMLINED SOLOPRENEUR

Why Your Solopreneur Business Feels Overwhelming (and how to fix it)

The most overwhelming room in my house is the sunroom. Three small kids, all their toys, total chaos. One day, I was sitting in there feeling overstimulated and realized it would take about five minutes to clean it up. So we did — and suddenly it was a great place to hang out again.

A lot of solopreneur businesses are like that sunroom. They’re not broken. They don’t need a massive overhaul. They need a quick sweep — a reset of your time, your tasks, and your tools.

That’s exactly what I walk through in this episode.

YOUTUBE

Why Solopreneurs Should Pick Just 3 Tasks Per Day

video preview

I've been teasing my new app, the Daily Three Task Journal, a lot. So I finally made a video walking through this methodology and how the app works

Joe Casabona
The Streamlined Solopreneur
streamlinedsolopreneur.com

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Joe Casabona

You started your business for freedom, not to be chained to your desk (or your email client). I help solopreneurs take the time off they deserve through powerful, reliable systems. It starts with learning how you spend your time. Get my free process on how to do that here:

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