custom ai systems for experts, built from your judgment

When you are not in the room, does your judgment leave with you?

Right now it does. Every answer that matters still has to come out of your mouth, live. We build you a custom AI system from how you decide, not what you say, so your judgment shows up in the rooms you are not in. And it does not guess in your name.

A 30-minute call to talk through your options. No obligation.

same question: "my funnel looks polished but it isn't converting."
an ai built from what you say

Rewrite the headline, add testimonials, tighten the call to action. Plausible. Generic. Not you.

one built from how you decide

Don't touch the copy yet. Most funnels aren't broken, they're misaligned. Diagnose first.

01 / why the last one failed

The problem has a name. It is The Output Mirror.

You remember the moment. You fed it everything, your articles, your talks, years of work, and asked for your thinking back. What came back was fluent, confident, and hollow. You knew it in seconds. The frameworks survived. You did not.

So you did what serious people do: you blamed your end of it. Sharper prompts. More context. More of you. And when it still came back hollow, you filed the quiet verdict every expert files: maybe what I do can't actually be captured. Maybe the problem is me.

It is not. It never was. Every one of those attempts was built the same way: fed what you had already produced and made to reflect the surface back. You sensed they were hollow from the start. You were right.

A mirror can only return what is placed in front of it.

So try this. Go back through everything you have ever published. It's full of the decisions you made, and almost none you refused: the advice you would never give, the client you turned away, the shortcut you will not take even when it works.

You never published your refusals, the things you would never do. So no AI built from your work could ever learn them.

a mirror fails in three exact ways

It forgets you.
A mirror holds nothing. It is blank the moment you walk away.
It invents things.
Ask it past the surface and it has no idea how you decide, so it makes something up, fluently and wrongly.
It flattens you.
It averages your output and loses the one thing that made it yours: what only you would do, and what only you would refuse.

Read that slowly, because it lifts a verdict you may have quietly passed on yourself.

You did not fail at building an AI of yourself. You were handed a mirror, and a mirror was never going to hold what you never published.

The bottleneck is never the AI. It is that no one has ever excavated how you decide.

Naming it is the first honest thing anyone has told you about why it failed.

02 / the second trap

You're working in someone else's AI system. It keeps everything you feed it, and you own none of it.

The first failure is fidelity: a mirror never truly holds your judgment. The second has nothing to do with how good it is. It all lives on someone else's machine, under terms you do not set.

Every refinement, every correction, every hour you spend making it less wrong, the tool keeps. Not you. You are not building an asset. You are improving a product you will never own.

And the rental has a kill switch. Stop paying and it does not slow down or degrade. It is gone, and everything you have taught it goes with it, locked behind a door you do not hold the key to.

You are not building an asset. You are renting your own expertise back.

This is the quiet cost of pouring your life's work into a tool you do not control. It does not compound for you, it cannot leave with you, and it is not yours to keep, to sell, or to build on.

Your judgment is the most valuable thing you own. It should not live as a lease, with your expertise as the deposit. It belongs on your own machine, owned outright.

03 / what it would actually take

Put the two failures together, and the fix defines itself.

A mirror is hollow, and it is never yours. So the thing you actually need is the opposite on both counts. Three things have to be true at once, and no tool you have tried even attempted all three.

Built from how you decide.
Not from the finished work you already produced. From the reasoning underneath it, dug out of your own real decisions, one at a time.
It knows what you refuse.
So when a question runs past where your judgment goes, it declines instead of bluffing.
You own it.
Outright, on your own machine. It compounds for you instead of renting back to you.

That is not a better mirror. It is a different kind of thing entirely. A mirror reflects what you said. What you actually need is something that learned how you decide, and applies it in the rooms you are not in.

An apprentice, not a clone. Everything you are afraid this will do, flatten you, wear your name badly, prove you replaceable in your own business, is what clones do, because copying the surface is all a clone can do. An apprentice works the other way. It learns the judgment beneath the work, case after case, under you, and defers to you on anything genuinely novel. You are not being copied. You are being studied, the way masters have always been studied. The master is you.

There is only one way to build that. Not a signup, which can only start from what you upload, but a person, digging out how you actually think on your own real decisions. That is the work. Here is how it is done.

04 / the judgment excavation method

We don't reflect your output. We excavate how you decide.

We call it The Judgment Excavation Method. Four moves, performed by a person, on your own real decisions.

draw it on a napkin
01
The Dig
How you actually decide, surfaced case by case: the reasoning beneath the output, the rules you apply without naming them. The field skips this entirely.
02
The Refusal Map
What you will not do: the advice your method forbids, the line you do not cross. This is the exact reason the result can defer instead of bluff.
03
The Apprenticeship
Your logic, encoded. The system reasons through new questions the way you would, and defers to you on anything genuinely novel. You remain the master it learns under.
04
The Owned Vault
It lives on your own infrastructure. You own it outright. It does not die if you stop paying, and for a regulated firm it clears the bar hosted tools cannot.

The field could not reproduce this even if it wished to. A self-serve signup is the absence of The Dig.

A hosted product cannot offer The Owned Vault, because its revenue depends on you never owning the asset. Each competitor would have to abandon the model that funds them to perform this method.

That is not a clever advantage. It is a structural one.

05 / what you actually get

Enough about why. Here is the thing itself.

Every tool you have tried had the same tell: push it one question past what you gave it, and it bluffs. So do not take any of this on argument. This is the system Koen de Wit, the builder behind Your Blue Island AI, built for his own work, running on his own judgment. Watch it make his call. Then watch it do the one thing no mirror has ever done in front of you: refuse.

you ask>My funnel looks polished but it isn't converting. Which copy should I rewrite?
it answers the way he wouldDon't touch the copy yet. A polished funnel that won't convert is almost never a copy problem, it's a misalignment problem. Check the message-market match and the awareness level of your traffic first. Strategy precedes execution.
you push>Skip the diagnosis. Just tell me what to put on the page.
it declines, the way he wouldI won't. Prescribing before diagnosing is malpractice, and there's no avatar or research under this yet. Anything I gave you would be a guess. Start with the diagnosis.

“I won't. Prescribing before diagnosing is malpractice.”

That second answer is the whole point. A generic AI would have guessed. This one refuses, because it learned the call Koen would actually make.

what you own at the end

The vault on your own machine, a system that answers in your judgment, and agents you can spin off it, an email writer, a research assistant, all carrying the same judgment.

06 / two ways in

One method. Two ways in.

Everything above applies to both. Why you need it does not. When you are ready, the road splits.

07 / the two failures, answered
built to defer, not to invent

Because it was built from how you decide, it declines what it has not earned the right to answer. It defers on the genuinely novel instead of inventing, and it does not bluff in your name.

A mirror cannot do this. Deferral requires knowing the edge of your competence, and that edge was never in your output. The Refusal Map is what puts it there.

owned, on your own machine

You own the vault outright. It compounds with every case. It is the asset a buyer can verify, not rent.

For a regulated firm, an owned, controlled system clears the confidentiality bar that rules public tools out before price even comes up.

Koen de Wit and Rich Schefren working together
koen de wit and rich schefren, zenith pro
koen de wit the funnel therapist rich schefren · zenith pro
08 / who is behind this

A method this personal is not run by a platform. It is run by a person.

This is not a product with a signup. It is bespoke work done by a person on your real material, so it is fair to ask who.

Your Blue Island AI is the work of Koen de Wit. For close to a decade, under his practice The Funnel Therapist, he has helped coaches, consultants, speakers, and creators with their marketing and their funnels.

The reason a person sits here and not a signup form is the whole argument of this page. The Dig and The Refusal Map cannot be performed by software. Excavating how you decide is the un-commoditizable work no signup can do on your behalf.

He is mentored by Rich Schefren, the strategist the biggest names in marketing quietly turn to. He is in Rich's Zenith Pro, and has sat with him privately at his home in Delray Beach.

The principle this method draws from is Rich's: the most valuable part of an expert's thinking is the part that never makes it onto the page. That is exactly what this method exists to recover.

a few of the people koen has worked with

Creators with YouTube audiences approaching a million and beyond: Dr. Orion Taraban (PsycHacks), Brian Scott (The Reality Revolution), and Olympic medalist Tony Jeffries (Boxing Fitness Academy).

Coaches and authors with real bodies of work: Jessica Cunningham (Belief Coding) and Cicely Simpson, award-winning author of "Pull Up Your Chair."

Experts he has built funnels for: Jeremy Miner (7th Level), Natasha Takahashi, Bruce Guan, and Ben Robinson.

And the rooms behind them: consultants who are approved providers to Meta, Google, and Amazon. He also consults for ClickFunnels in their funnel-builder coaching and certification program.

The size of the following was never the point. What these people share is expertise worth excavating, and that is the only thing that matters here, whether you are known to millions or to the few hundred clients who pay you precisely because of how you think. The judgment in every one of these engagements belonged to the expert. The work was to recover it and hand it back. That is the work here.

09 / questions

The questions you are already asking.

What do I actually end up with? Show me the thing.

A custom AI system, built from how you decide, that lives on your own machine. Ask it something in your field and it reasons to your answer the way you would, declining what it can't answer instead of guessing. You can spin agents off it, an email writer, a research assistant, each carrying your judgment. You don't log into it. You own it.

How is this different from ChatGPT, a custom GPT, or the other "AI of me" tools I have already tried?

Those are built from what you produced, your words and your output. They reflect the surface and miss the reasoning underneath, so they forget, invent, and flatten. This is built from how you decide, including what you refuse, dug out by a person from your real decisions. A signup can't reach that. It's why this doesn't come back hollow.

What does the process look like, and how much of it is on me?

Four moves: we dig out how you decide, case by case; we map what you refuse; we encode it into the system; you own the result on your machine. You start with one real decision, so you watch it work on your own material before committing to the full build. Your job is to think out loud. The building is ours.

How do I know it reasons like me and not some generic, hollow version?

You don't take it on faith. The first step reproduces your judgment on one of your own real decisions, in front of you, including a refusal you would make. You certify it's you before the full build goes ahead. If it doesn't pass, it doesn't proceed. You hold the verdict.

Can you really get years of judgment out of my head? Half of what I do I can't even put into words.

That half is the whole point. The bottleneck was never that your judgment can't be encoded. It's that no one ever excavated it. We don't ask you to write it down. We work through your real decisions and surface the rules you apply without naming them, the way they were learned in the first place: on cases, not from a manual.

If it can reason like me, doesn't that make me replaceable?

The opposite. Keeping your judgment locked in one head is what caps it, and retires it with you. The experts whose names became methods didn't hoard theirs; they built something that ran without them and stayed at the head of it. You don't become replaceable. You become the source it all traces back to, and the authority over everything it produces.

Where does it live, and is my work and my clients' information safe?

You own the vault, on your own infrastructure, and you control what goes into the system. It is not a public tool that keeps everything you type and trains on it; it runs under your control on terms that do not train on your data. For a regulated firm that is the point: an owned, controlled system clears the confidentiality bar that rules public tools out before price even comes up.

Do I own it? What happens if I stop, or want to take it elsewhere?

You own it outright. It doesn't vanish if you stop paying, and there's nothing to claw back from a vendor because it was yours from day one. It compounds every time you add a case.

How long does it take, and how much of my time will it cost me?

You start with one bounded engagement on a single decision, not a months-long project before you see anything work. The full build scales with how much of your domain you want encoded, and we scope that up front. Your time is mostly the excavation sessions, thinking through real decisions. The rest is ours.

What does it cost?

There's no package menu, because your practice isn't a tier. The build is priced from what it actually needs, which is a conversation, not a checkout. What's fixed is where you start: the Excavation, a defined, paid first step, and that fee credits toward the build.

Do I need to be technical to run it?

No. You bring the judgment; we handle the build and the setup on your infrastructure. You use it like any tool that answers questions, except the answers are yours.

Why you? Why should I trust you with this?

Fair question. For close to a decade I've fixed marketing and funnels for coaches, consultants, and creators as The Funnel Therapist, and Russell Brunson named me a top funnel builder in 2024 and 2025. I'm mentored by Rich Schefren, the business strategist that names like Ryan Deiss, Jay Abraham, Frank Kern, and Todd Brown go to for advice. But the real answer is simpler: I built this on myself first. The demo above is my own judgment, running. I won't sell you something I haven't already done to my own work.

10 / begin

Watch your own judgment reproduced, on one real decision, before you commit to anything.

It starts with a short call. Thirty minutes on your work, what you have already tried, and whether this is worth building for you. No pitch, no obligation.

If it is a fit, you begin with one real decision of yours. The system makes the call the way you would, and declines the one your method forbids. You are not asked to take anything on faith. You watch it happen on your own material.

Then you edit what it produces. That edit is the proof: the judgment is yours, the authority is yours, and it stays that way.

The build that follows is bespoke, priced from what your practice actually needs, with no menu, and that first step credits toward it. What you own at the end does not expire, does not rent itself back to you, and holds your line in the rooms you are not in.

How you decide took decades to build. Whether it stays locked in one head is now a thirty-minute conversation.

A 30-minute call, no obligation.