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The thinking

The thinking, not the resume.

Most AI consultancies sell strategy. Workshops, roadmaps, frameworks, decks that explain how the future is changing and what your organisation should do about it. This is not that. The work begins when somebody sits down on a Tuesday and builds the thing.

The boring thing is the work.

A business that has been running for ten years already knows what the boring thing is. The owner can name it inside thirty seconds. The boxes nobody scans. The follow-up nobody sends. The spreadsheet that runs the place but lives in one person's head. The thing isn't hidden. The thing is just nobody's job, until it is. Most of what gets sold as "AI for small business" is shaped around the seller, not the buyer. A useful conversation starts the other way around: recognise the actual week, then propose something small enough to ship and judge in a fortnight.

Build it. Show it. Let it run.

The strongest reason to hire anybody is a thing they made that's still working. Not a logo wall, not a testimonial slide, not a capability deck. BiasFeed has been publishing on its own for months. Sunshine sits at sunshine.okavyx.ai answering yard questions for whoever types in an address. The YouTube channel posts shorts on a schedule I haven't had to babysit. If a build doesn't survive its first month of real use, it didn't deserve to be made.

Who is behind this.

Okavyx is run by Steve Ogilvie. Twenty-seven years in enterprise IT across strategy, infrastructure, and cybersecurity, including delivering an ISO 27001 certification. Two years deep inside production AI on top of that. Long enough to recognise a bad project from across the room, recent enough to have shipped with AI rather than just talked about it. The /work page is what the thinking turns into. LinkedIn is here if you want the full background.

Your turn

Recognise the boring thing?

Most people can name it inside thirty seconds. Tell me yours.