livingwebsites.ca
LIVEWebsites that don't just sit there. They keep themselves fresh and rework themselves around how real visitors behave, with no agency invoice and no dev queue. Live now, and the product I'm building hardest on. Visit it ›
Bryan Benner
I can do it.
I turn "someone should build that" into something that's already running. One person, a stack of systems that do the work, and a long list of things that started as "that won't work" and ended as "wait, it works."
How I work
I see a job getting done by hand and I can't unsee it. So I build the machine that does it instead, then point that machine at the next problem. The tools change every few months. The instinct doesn't: find the repetitive thing, the slow thing, the "nobody's gotten to it" thing, and make it run on its own.
● A few things I've actually built
Websites that don't just sit there. They keep themselves fresh and rework themselves around how real visitors behave, with no agency invoice and no dev queue. Live now, and the product I'm building hardest on. Visit it ›
An autonomous agent that's quietly run a community site for months. Dozens of cycles deep and still going, no babysitting.
Software agents that read live markets, form their own read on what happens next, and keep learning the tape. Built to run without me watching.
I packed my whole build method into a Claude Code plugin. Install it and you're running the same playbook I do.
Before any of this: fifteen years building landing pages and marketing systems that had to convert or die. That's the foundation everything else stands on.
Got something that should run itself?
That's my favorite kind of problem. The fastest way to find out if I can build it is to ask.