Some AI questions cannot be asked in a room: the acquisition you are weighing, the function you are considering restructuring, the board conversation you need to be ready for. Group formats, however good, dilute attention across the cohort and constrain candour to what a leader will say in company. Sometimes the right format is one leader, one agenda, and expert attention with nowhere else to be.
That is the focus session: a private half-day between a CEO or owner and AI Faculty experts, aimed entirely at your specific situation, in confidence.
What does a focus session cover?
Whatever your agenda demands, prepared for in advance: pressure-testing an AI investment thesis, mapping your operation for automation candidates, preparing for a board or investor conversation, working a build-versus-buy decision with someone who has done both, or simply calibrating your personal AI judgment with hands-on guidance nobody is watching. You set the agenda in a pre-session brief; the faculty arrives having done homework on it.
Who facilitates?
Founding faculty matched to your agenda: strategy and disruption questions draw Jim Harris; implementation and automation questions draw Scott Wilson; platform and pricing questions draw Dr. Ruhai Wu.
How does confidentiality work?
Sessions run under NDA as standard; the format exists precisely for the questions you cannot workshop publicly, and it is treated accordingly.
How does this relate to the other programs?
Focus sessions slot anywhere: standalone, as preparation before bringing an executive workshop to your team, or as the private complement to mastermind membership. Delivery is in person or virtual.
How do you book one?
Start with the application form and mark it as a focus session inquiry, including a sentence on your agenda; scheduling and investment details follow directly.
Frequently asked questions
Can I bring a colleague?
The format is built for one decision-maker, but a second seat (a co-founder, a board chair) can be accommodated where it serves your agenda; say so in the inquiry.
How far ahead should I book?
Faculty calendars are the constraint; inquire when the need is visible rather than urgent, though urgent inquiries are welcome to try.
Is a single half-day really enough?
For a well-framed agenda, yes, and the pre-session brief is what frames it; sprawling agendas get told honestly that they are two sessions.