Launch strategy and execution partner for female founders with digital offers. Building her first AI-powered lead magnet quiz and a custom Kanban dashboard from her base in Bali.
The Launch Blind Spot Finder, a lead magnet quiz under her brand The Product Nomad by Chantal, published on Hostinger. Eleven questions, instant score, two minutes. Copy went first, then the build. The quiz feeds into Flodesk for the welcome sequence, with the legal pages and cookies set up around it. Her tone of voice lives inside Claude, so the copy actually sounds like her.
Alongside it, a personal dashboard she runs her week from: daily view with cycle phase, today's tarot, podcast of the week, and an ideas board that works like a Kanban for the campaigns and posts in her head. A small web app, sized for the way she actually works. Structured, with enough flexibility to push tasks across the week instead of being punished for not finishing them on the day they appeared.
Chantal's root system is the layer running underneath her launches, her lead magnet, and the way she organises her own week.
An AI-powered survey-style quiz, copy first, build second. Self-hosted on Hostinger, with the legal pages and cookies handled around it. The asset she always wanted to have for her own audience, finally on a domain she controls.
The quiz captures the email and feeds it into Flodesk. She is writing the welcome sequence herself and testing it end-to-end. Her audience, her words, her list.
Her brand and tone of voice are loaded into Claude, so the copywriting comes out sounding like her instead of generic AI. "It has my tone of voice, and I was with it, so that's totally fine."
The pages render properly on a phone the first time. After years of seeing client tools look great in a browser and break on mobile, the default mobile experience surprised her: "damn, it's even good on my phone."
Connected manually for now while she gets comfortable with the deploy script. Step by step, the tech side of "publishing my own page" became something she does, not something she waits for.
Notion, Asana, Trello: none of them fit. So she's building her own: a small web app with a visual weekly view, where ticking a task lets it disappear instead of staring back at her. Structure with the flexibility she actually needs.
"I could spend hours on it. It doesn't take that long. I think that's the crazy thing for me. If you really sit there for like one hour, it will be done most of the time. I'm only in the 1%, but it's actually so much fun. I'm so happy I joined."
Chantal, on what an hour of building actually feels like
"I love Claude Code for the individual things, not finding it all in one framework."
Chantal, on the shape of her root system
Chantal's system is hers. Yours will look nothing like it. That's the point.
Hear Chantal and the four other sprint graduates tell their stories at Girls Who Claude Code.