The Vault Method
A guided manual system for learning how to turn useful knowledge into a small product.
- 31 practical product files
- Niche, vault, lesson, offer, and launch templates
- Beginner-friendly Obsidian workflow
- One focused AI outline prompt
Obsidian product-building system / 73 real files
Choose the guided $29 Method or use seven AI Engines to turn scattered expertise into a structured offer, product, landing page, and launch plan.
A smaller way to start
Your useful knowledge is probably scattered across notes, messages, bookmarks, and things you learned the hard way.
The Vault Method helps you choose one useful result, organize it clearly, add practical templates, and package a first version someone else can follow.
Choose your build path
Both paths help you create a focused Obsidian product. Choose how much AI structure you want around the work.
A guided manual system for learning how to turn useful knowledge into a small product.
Seven structured AI Engines for building the product, offer, launch kit, and landing-page handoff.
The difference: Level 01 teaches the process. Level 02 turns it into a reusable AI-assisted operating system.
Inside the AI Vault Engine
The system carries approved information forward, marks missing evidence, and keeps every output connected to the real product.
Inside The Vault Method
Start at the top. Finish with a structured product, an offer draft, content hooks, and a delivery plan.
Learn why buyers pay for a useful path, not hidden secrets or information volume.
Define the niche, buyer, promise, method name, and scope of the first version.
Use a ready folder skeleton, lesson format, templates, examples, and a premium polish checklist.
Draft the page, price the first version, create short-form content, deliver manually, and improve from feedback.
Real files, not mockups
These previews use the actual text included in the product.
Answer quickly. Do not overthink.
01 What do people ask you for help with?
02 What have you figured out the hard way?
03 Who would benefit from this?
This vault helps [person] get [result] without [pain].
By the end, you should have:
Your Vault Name/
├── 00 Start Here/
├── 01 The Problem/
├── 02 The Method/
├── 03 Templates/
├── 04 Examples/
└── 05 Launch or Next Steps/
“Your notes are not random. They are your first digital product.”
“Do not sell secrets. Sell structure.”
Includes comment and DM calls to action for the first content batch.
The working method
Pick the system that fits
Both are one-time purchases delivered as Obsidian-ready Markdown. Checkout remains disabled in this private design preview.
Learn the product-building method with practical lessons, worksheets, templates, and launch tools.
One-time purchase
Stripe checkout will be connected before launch.
Use seven controlled AI workflows to build the vault, lessons, templates, offer, launch kit, and landing-page handoff.
One-time purchase
Stripe checkout will be connected before launch.
Neither product guarantees sales or income. They provide the structure; you supply the expertise, judgment, proof, and distribution.
Before you buy
No. It is a compact Obsidian product-building system made from written lessons, worksheets, templates, examples, swipe files, and checklists.
No large audience is required to start. You do need to post, talk to potential buyers, and learn what they actually want.
Start with the Niche Picker Worksheet. It helps you identify what people ask you about, what you learned the hard way, and what useful result you can explain.
No. The method is designed around simple folders, Markdown notes, templates, and a clear build order.
Level 01 teaches the manual product-building process. Level 02 provides seven reusable AI Engines, shared inputs, approval gates, quality audits, and a complete worked example.
No. Choose Level 01 if you want the simpler manual path. Choose Level 02 if you want the complete AI-assisted operating system.
It is model-agnostic. You can use the prompts with a capable general AI or coding agent. Results still require your review, facts, and judgment.
No. It helps you build and package a sellable product. Sales depend on the usefulness of your offer, your execution, and your distribution.