The broken tool was not the problem. It was the signal.
Corey spent thirty years working in the Louisville machine shop his Pops founded in 1972. The work taught him precision, pressure, customer responsibility, and what it costs to carry a business alone.
After losing his Pops to ALS, a failed setup at the milling machine made the truth impossible to ignore. His hands were still at the machine, but his mind was in the inbox, the missed calls, the invoices, and the owner decisions nobody else could carry.
That moment became the turn toward Continuman: practical AI and automation for owners who are not short on work ethic, but are missing the systems that let the business breathe.
"Business owners are not drowning because they lack work ethic. They are drowning because nobody built them a system."
