Client Workspace · How We Set It Up
A visual walkthrough of how Storystak AI structures a client workspace. Every engagement is a self-contained universe with its own read-only Vault, its own team workspace, and its own governance — but they all obey the same rules, so Claude behaves predictably no matter which client it's working inside.
Click any small info dot for the mechanics behind that piece.
A workspace root sits at the top. Client engagements branch from it as siblings — the same scaffold every time, at whatever stage of maturity that engagement happens to be in. The brand-colored top stripe is swapped per client; the structure underneath never changes.
Every Vault is the client's canonical reference — the one place Claude trusts for facts about
that brand. Each Vault ships with its own skills/ and plugins/
capability libraries, so brand-specific tooling travels with the engagement instead of
living in a global pile.
Claude pulls voice, audience personas, positioning, validated copy, and brand tokens directly from the Vault — not from training memory or cross-client assumptions.
Two-layer protection: CLAUDE.md instructions plus storage-level permissions. Even if a user insists, Claude won't edit a Vault file unless the verified workspace owner is the user.
Vault edits from anyone other than the owner get appended to Shared/Reports/_Vault-updates.md as Pending. The owner reviews the queue and applies changes manually.
Each Vault carries its own skills/ and plugins/ libraries. Trigger language propagates to three places — the file frontmatter, the folder INDEX.md, and the client's CLAUDE.md "Available Vault Capabilities" section.
Confident, plain-spoken, and operator-to-operator. The brand sounds like a sharp growth lead explaining how things actually work — not a salesperson and not a brand poet. The voice is calm and declarative: short truths stated as fact, then a clear explanation of what they do about it. It avoids hype words, avoids jargon for its own sake, and never oversells. Confidence comes from specificity and from numbers, not from adjectives.
Use: growth engine, growth systems, engineer, scale, DTC, paid media, performance creative, customer acquisition, CAC, ROAS, LTV, retention, founder-led, data-driven, roadmap, hands-on, extension of your team.
Avoid: synergy, cutting-edge, world-class, revolutionary, disrupt, ninja/rockstar/guru, vague "unlock your potential," unbacked superlatives, heavy exclamation points.
Warm, momentum-oriented, low-pressure. The recurring family: "Let's Grow Together," "Book a Free Strategy Call," "Let's Get To Work." Invitational and specific — no countdown urgency.
Turn First Orders Into Repeat Revenue
Most brands spend everything on the first sale and nothing on the second. Lifecycle marketing is how you change that — turning one-time buyers into a revenue base that compounds.
Acquisition gets you customers. Retention is what makes them profitable.
As CAC keeps rising, the brands that scale aren't the ones spending more to acquire — they're the ones keeping the customers they already paid for.
That's what lifecycle marketing does. Email, SMS, and retention flows that bring customers back, raise LTV, and grow revenue without adding a dollar of ad spend.
We build that system in four steps:
Your best growth channel isn't a new platform. It's the customers you already have.
We build the lifecycle systems that turn first orders into repeat revenue — no extra ad spend required.
Let's grow together.
| Voice rule | Where it shows up |
|---|---|
| Contrast statement | "Acquisition gets you customers. Retention is what makes them profitable." |
| Plain truth, then the fix | "Most brands spend everything on the first sale…" |
| Named, ordered steps | Map → Build → Test → Scale |
| Outcome-anchored vocabulary | CAC, LTV, ad spend, repeat purchase |
| CTA voice | "Let's grow together." |
| No hype / no fake urgency | Zero superlatives throughout |