Ink and watercolor illustration of a fox in a colorful scarf holding a lantern over a dark national map, its golden light revealing scattered hidden figures connected by glowing distance rings.

What a Bride in Tulsa Needed

A friend called with a problem. He runs a national association of wedding DJs with members spread across every state. He wanted to add a feature so that the public could search his site for members. As it was, a bride planning a wedding in Tulsa couldn’t find a DJ in Tulsa. The membership list existed, but it lived in a database behind the office door.

He’d been quoted two weeks programming time just to add this one small feature.

I described the situation to my AI assistant and pointed it at the existing site. It analyzed the membership database and built a searchable public directory on top of it. It took exactly one WordPress plug-in to do it.

Fill in a ZIP code, pick a radius, and the thing runs real distance math against 33,000 ZIP codes to return every DJ within 50 miles, sorted by distance. Filter by state, by genre, by DJ type. Each result pulls up a full card — logo, location, badges, a YouTube reel, contact links.

It took me longer to update the domain name settings for his new search site than it took my assistant to write the whole project.

I’m a writing teacher. All I did was describe what a bride in Tulsa would need, and my assistant built it.

Want to set up your own AI assistant? Check out my OpenClaw courses.

Similar Posts