BrewClaw for the Busy Parent
You are managing a household, a career, and at least two other humans' entire lives. BrewClaw is not here to judge. It is here to help.
“I have 47 browser tabs open, three unread school emails, and someone is asking what's for dinner. BrewClaw became the one assistant who actually helps me close some of those tabs.”
Parent of two, Texas
The chaos you know too well
The schedule juggle
Soccer practice, piano, dentist, half-days, teacher workdays, and that project deadline — all in your head.
Grocery that never stays done
You just went to the store and somehow you are out of everything again.
School communication overwhelm
Emails from three teachers, a permission slip form, and a sign-up for the bake sale all in one morning.
The dinner question
Every single day at 5:45 PM, someone asks. Every. Single. Day.
Appointment tetris
Getting four people to their doctors, dentists, and haircuts without missing anything is a part-time job.
No time for yourself
By the time everyone else's needs are handled, yours are at the bottom of a very long list.
Recommended First Agent
Meet Finn, your Family Planner
Finn is the agent most parents deploy first. It is built specifically for household coordination. Tell Finn your family's schedule, your kids' names and ages, your typical weekly routine, and your grocery patterns. From that point on, Finn has context. You just talk to it.
10 things you can do from day one
Ask "What does Emma have going on this week?" and get a full school schedule summary
"Add dentist appointment Tuesday 3 PM for Jake" and it is on the family calendar
"Remind me to pack soccer cleats tomorrow morning" at exactly the right time
"What should I make for dinner? We have chicken, broccoli, and rice" with step-by-step recipe
"Draft a note to Emma's teacher about her missing the field trip" in the right tone
"Add milk, eggs, cheese, and fruit to the grocery list" and get it ready to share
"What time does Maya's recital start?" from context you gave Finn last month
"Help me plan birthday party activities for 8 seven-year-olds"
"I have 15 minutes before school pickup, what can I get done?" for a realistic mini-to-do
"Write a quick thank-you message to Jake's coach" that sounds warm and genuine
See it in action
Real examples of how a conversation with Finn actually flows.
Morning madness
The dinner question
School communication
The grocery list
How to set up for maximum usefulness
When Finn first starts, tell it your family structure: how many kids, their names and ages, and school schedules
Give it a snapshot of your weekly rhythm: which days are busy, which are lighter
If you have a recurring grocery list, paste it once and say "this is our usual list"
Tell Finn about your meal preferences and any dietary restrictions upfront
Add the Skills Store's Calendar Sync skill to connect your actual calendar
Next up
BrewClaw for the Solopreneur