A good workshop does not start with a slide about AI. The people in the room have already seen enough slides. They need to see whether the method can touch their work without turning into theatre.

The Domanski.AI Founding Workshop is built for that moment. Leadership and department heads are in the room. The work is real. The prototype uses material the team recognises. The questions are practical because the stakes are practical.

// Public terms

Founding Workshop from R40,000. The workshop fee credits toward Role Installs booked within 14 days.

What ships in the room

The workshop surfaces the highest-leverage workflows, then builds one working prototype around the clearest seat. That prototype is not meant to solve the whole business. It is meant to make the install path visible.

In a creative agency, that path might sit with an account director rewriting client feedback, a producer building repetitive decks, a brand lead checking tone, or a studio manager stitching together operational reports. The room decides by reacting to the work, not by voting on a list.

What it refuses to be

It is not a generic training day. It is not a readiness assessment. It is not a tour of tools. The workshop has one job: show the team what an agent can do inside one operator's workflow, and what evidence would make that operator trust it.

That is why the evidence gate matters. A prototype that only performs when the input is clean teaches the room very little. A prototype that refuses weak input teaches them where the method earns trust.

Why Mack Brands and LiquidGold matter

The first two public case studies show the workshop in two different rooms: Mack Brands on-site, LiquidGold remote. The point is not that every workshop produces the same agent. The point is that the same method finds the first useful seat in different working conditions.

At Mack Brands, the proof sat in a distributor-deck workflow and the way the evidence gate behaved in the room. At LiquidGold, the proof sat in a remote Facebook Ads Planner that had to respect a sensitive category from the first prompt.

The buyer's real question

The useful question is not, "Can AI help this agency?" It can probably help every agency somewhere. The useful question is, "Which operator should get the first install, and what would prove it worked?"

That is what the workshop is designed to answer. If the answer is clear, the Role Install follows. If it is not clear, the workshop has still done its job by stopping the business from buying noise.