Frabo OS · Cheat Sheet
The Adam Cheat Sheet
Adam is the AI operator that runs your business — and you command him in plain language, by voice or chat. Here’s what to say to get the most out of him: ask about your money, see what he discovered, get work done, and send him home (or back to work) whenever you want.
Ask about your money
Adam answers from your real, connected data — never invented numbers. Connect your bank and accounts for the sharpest answers.
“How much is in my account?”— Your current cash across connected accounts.“What's my cash runway?”— How many months you can operate at your current burn.“What did I spend the most on this month?”— Your top spending categories, ranked.“What's my profit this month?”— Revenue minus costs, grounded in your books.“Any money I can recover?”— Duplicate charges, price drops, and subscriptions worth cancelling.
See what Adam found
Adam works in the background and surfaces what matters. Ask him what he did while you were away.
“What have you discovered?”— Adam's latest findings across money, growth, and operations.“What did you find while I was away?”— The overnight brief — what changed and what needs you.“What should I focus on today?”— His single highest-leverage move, with the reason.“Brief me on the business.”— The ruthless State of the Business — one hard call plus the radar.
Get things done
Ask Adam to prepare work and he sets it up for your one-tap approval. Anything that moves money always asks you to confirm first.
“Reconcile my accounts.”— Matches transactions and stages anything that needs your sign-off.“Prepare me for my meeting tomorrow about Q2.”— A grounded executive briefing from your real numbers.“Draft this month's investor update.”— A CEO-voice draft you can review, edit, and send.“Forecast my cash for the next 90 days.”— A grounded projection with the risks called out.
Control Adam — and your costs
You are always in control. Adam runs on demand: send him home to stop spending, bring him back with a word. Interactive chat and voice always work either way.
“Stand down.”— Stops all background work on your account — Adam only acts when you’re here.“Turn off automation for my account.”— Same as “stand down” — pauses autonomous work, saves your AI budget.“Back to work.”— Turns background automation back on so Adam works between visits.“Turn automation back on.”— Resumes overnight money scouts, forecasts, and drafts.
Tune how Adam advises you
Adam adapts his lens to how you run — the advice changes, never the facts.
“Be more conservative with my money.”— Shifts his recommendations toward caution and runway.“Focus on growth.”— Biases his moves toward revenue and expansion.“Keep it short.”— Adam answers in a sentence or two until you ask for the full breakdown.
Get the best out of Adam
- Connect your bank and accounts — the more real data Adam has, the sharper (and more honest) every answer is.
- Talk to him like a person. “How are we doing?” works as well as a precise question.
- Ask for more when you want it: end with “give me the full breakdown” and Adam expands.
- Use voice. Say “Hey Adam” and just talk — he replies out loud.
- If Adam is missing data, he says so instead of guessing. Fill the gap and re-ask.
- Watch for his confirm prompts — anything that touches money waits for your yes.
Frequently asked
How do I turn Adam’s automation off to save money?
Just tell him “stand down” or “turn off automation for my account.” He stops all background work immediately and only acts when you’re present, which stops that spend. Say “back to work” to turn it on again. Your live chat and voice keep working the whole time.
Can I command Adam by voice?
Yes. Say “Hey Adam” and speak naturally — ask about your money, ask what he found, or tell him to stand down. He replies out loud.
Will Adam ever spend or move money on its own?
No. Adam works only from your real data and requires your explicit confirmation before any money moves. Reversible work is undoable, and everything is logged.
Do I have to memorize exact commands?
No — Adam understands natural language. This cheat sheet is a starting point, not a syntax. Ask however feels natural.