One honest conversation about your work.
Spark asks what you actually do all day, what eats your time, and what you love enough to protect. Then it writes you a personal report about what AI can genuinely take off your plate, and what it cannot. Free. No card. About ten minutes.

Most AI advice starts with the tool. Spark starts with your life.
Courses hand you homework. Feeds hand you hype. Neither one knows what your Tuesday looks like. Spark opens with the only question that matters: what do you actually do all day? You talk about your real work for a few minutes, the way you would with a sharp friend who happens to know AI cold.
Then it writes your report.
Where AI hands you hours back. The tasks eating your week that a model can genuinely carry today.
Openings you had not thought to look for. Places where the skills you already have are suddenly worth more.
A straight answer about what AI will not do. The parts of your work that stay yours, and why that is good news.
Spark is not here to hand your work to a machine. If you write, you keep writing. If you teach, you keep teaching. Spark finds the parts you never wanted anyway, and gives you those hours back.