The Eight Eras of AI Adoption — A Knowledge Entrepreneur’s Evolution Map
Original Insight
“This is an eye-opener for me. I’m living in the moment and not aware of this stepwise evolution that’s been happening.” — Don Back, responding to Lou’s Eight Eras framework, April 2, 2026
“Everything you thought you had to learn, you don’t need to anymore. Good news is, it’s gonna all be done for you. All you have to do is learn how to create this text file.” — Lou, describing what eras 6+ unlock
The Framework
Lou built a visual framework with Claude that maps the evolution of how knowledge entrepreneurs have interacted with AI from roughly 2021 to the present. The eras are not defined by what the technology can do — they are defined by the mental model and workflow of the user. The same model can be used at Era 2 or Era 6 depending on how the person is operating.
This distinction matters enormously for teaching: you cannot accelerate someone by throwing Era 6 capabilities at an Era 2 mindset. The eras are a developmental progression, not a features checklist.
Era 1 — Observer
Descriptor: Willing to experiment; “advanced Google” user mode. The person is aware of AI and curious, but their interaction is essentially query-response. They treat AI as a smarter search engine. The mental model is: I ask, it answers. There is no conversation, no context-building, no iteration. The output quality is bounded by the quality of the question, but the user doesn’t yet know that.
Characteristic behavior: asking individual questions, using ChatGPT or similar as a one-off tool, amazed by individual outputs but not yet integrating it into a workflow.
Era 2 — Prompt Crafter
Descriptor: Prompt engineering, prompt packs, “better questions get better answers.” The person has discovered that output quality scales with prompt quality and has started investing in that craft. They learn about role-setting, context-injection, instruction formatting. They may buy or collect prompt packs. They approach AI as a system to optimize via better inputs.
Characteristic behavior: building a library of favorite prompts, learning prompt engineering principles, starting to use AI in a workflow but still at the single-prompt level.
Era 3 — Framework Builder
Descriptor: Mega-prompts, meta-prompting, building reusable instructions. The person moves from individual prompts to structured frameworks — mega-prompts that cover entire workflows, meta-prompts that guide the AI’s approach before giving a task, templates that standardize recurring outputs. The mental model shifts from “one good question” to “one good instruction architecture.”
Characteristic behavior: creating multi-section prompts, building templates for recurring tasks (writing, analysis, client communications), experimenting with system prompts for specific use cases.
Era 4 — Platform Builder
Descriptor: Custom GPTs, Claude Projects, RAG pipelines, knowledge bases. The person moves from prompts to infrastructure. They build custom AI interfaces (Custom GPTs, Claude Projects) that carry persistent context and instructions. They start connecting AI to data sources (RAG, uploaded documents, structured knowledge bases). The mental model shifts from “I configure this conversation” to “I configure a system.”
Characteristic behavior: building custom GPTs or Claude Projects for specific use cases, uploading reference documents, creating RAG pipelines, starting to think about AI as infrastructure rather than a tool.
Era 5 — Context Curator
Descriptor: High-judgment advisory, strategic analysis, the AI as thinking partner. The person has stopped building one-off tools and started curating a coherent context environment — an internalized context hub (ICH), a personal ontology, a set of grounding documents that orient every AI interaction toward their worldview and frameworks. The AI’s outputs start to reflect the curator’s perspective, not generic training data. The mental model: I am the editorial intelligence; AI is the production intelligence.
Characteristic behavior: maintaining a personal ICH, grounding AI in domain-specific frameworks before every session, using AI for strategic analysis rather than content generation, beginning to extract their own cognitive fingerprint.
Era 6 — Strategic Delegator
Descriptor: Skills, agents, workflow orchestration — judgment in text files. The person no longer manually configures most AI interactions. They have encoded their judgment into reusable skills (SKILL.md files), built agent pipelines that handle complex multi-step tasks, and orchestrated workflows that run without per-task intervention. The mental model: I codify my way of thinking once, and the system applies it indefinitely.
This is the era where the deepest leverage activates. The person is not working harder or prompting better — they are operating at a different abstraction layer. The emergent competitive moat (as Lou described in April 2026) is in this era: not better prompting, but transferring expertise and judgment into reusable skills and micro-applications.
Characteristic behavior: building SKILL.md files for recurring work, using Claude Code for system-level work, building micro-apps to replace SaaS friction points, asking AI to watch their work and codify the pattern.
Beyond Era 6 — The Emerging Frontier
The April 2 session acknowledged that the evolution continues beyond the six named eras. The emerging frontier (visible at the session’s edge) involves:
- Ambient intelligence — skills embedded in every folder, making entire knowledge bases AI-navigable without explicit invocation (see Insight - Ambient Intelligence — Build a Skill in Every Folder to Make Your Entire Knowledge Base Alive)
- Multi-agent orchestration — networks of agents that collaborate on complex tasks, with the human operating as strategic director
- Authority architecture — building the GEO/knowledge graph infrastructure that makes judgment findable by AI engines, not just usable by humans
The names for these eras were not finalized in session; the pattern is clear even if the vocabulary isn’t settled.
Where Most People Are in 2026
The group consensus from April 2: most business users (coaches, consultants, entrepreneurs) are somewhere between Eras 3–5. Many people who describe themselves as “using AI” are in Era 2. The portion of the mastermind group itself that has reached Era 6 is small but growing.
Kasimir’s observation: people are either chasing every new model, or so overwhelmed by the pace that they’ve checked out entirely. Consistency through the progression — picking a primary platform and building depth — is what compounds.
Bally’s field report: she ran a skills session for her clients and discovered none of them were on Claude yet. Jamie confirmed: “From my impression, people are really not beyond trying to figure out how to prompt well.” This ground-level calibration is essential for anyone who teaches AI to avoid the expert bubble problem (see Insight - Teach One Era Ahead of Your Audience, Not Eight).
Why the Framework Exists
Lou built this for two specific purposes:
1. Audience calibration. When you live at Era 6, you default to teaching from Era 6. Your audience is likely in Era 2–4. The gap between where you are and where they are is the source of the “curse of the expert” — you teach complexity when they need orientation. The eight eras map gives teachers a diagnostic: figure out where your audience is, then teach one era ahead, not eight.
2. Self-placement as a strategic asset. Knowing where you are in the progression changes how you allocate learning time. If you’re in Era 3, obsessing over agent architecture is premature. If you’re solidly in Era 5, the obvious next investment is skills-as-judgment (Era 6). The map converts the overwhelming pace of AI change into a personally actionable progression.
Practical Application for PowerUp Clients
The Era Self-Assessment:
Answer each of these with Yes/Mostly Yes/No:
| Checkpoint | Era |
|---|---|
| I use AI for at least one recurring work task | Era 1+ |
| I maintain a library of prompts I’ve refined over time | Era 2+ |
| I’ve built at least one multi-section framework or template | Era 3+ |
| I have a Custom GPT or Claude Project with persistent instructions | Era 4+ |
| I maintain an ICH or similar grounding document for my AI interactions | Era 5+ |
| I have at least one SKILL.md file that encodes a recurring workflow | Era 6 |
Teaching application: Before any AI presentation or workshop, run this diagnostic on your expected audience. Then design your content around the “one era ahead” principle — give them the arc, place them on the map, and offer one concrete next step forward from where they are.
Coaching prompt: “Which era are you in right now — and what would it take to move one era forward in the next 30 days? What’s the smallest concrete thing you’d have to build or change?”
Connection to the Broader Vault
The Eight Eras framework is the developmental spine that many vault insights presuppose. When Insight - Codify Your Judgment Into Skills, Not Just Prompts talks about skills, it is describing Era 6 practice. When Insight - EigenThinking — Turn Your Cognitive Fingerprint Into Intellectual Property describes cognitive fingerprint extraction, it is an Era 5–6 practice. When Insight - You Are Becoming an Answer Provider, Not Just a Website describes the authority destination, it is describing what Eras 6+ produce over time.
The eras map makes those insights developmentally sequenced, not randomly scattered. It answers the question a new mastermind member or coaching client will always ask: where do I start, and what comes next?
Evolution Across Sessions
This framework was first surfaced visually in the April 2, 2026 session as a presentation asset Lou built for Amy’s group. The teaching principle it generates (Insight - Teach One Era Ahead of Your Audience, Not Eight) was extracted immediately and given its own page. This page captures the framework itself — the era names, their observable characteristics, and the progression logic — which had no dedicated home until now. Future sessions should test and refine the era names beyond Era 6 as the frontier continues to advance.