You can extract Fable 5's intelligence out of the model before it's gone... and i'm going to teach you the 5 workflows that do it, with every prompt ready to paste
because tomorrow Fable 5 leaves your subscription
it moves to pay-per-token credits, and if you're on a normal Claude plan, that arithmetic means one thing: it's gone for good
so today is the last flat-rate day for the smartest model available, and the way it's being spent is mostly wrong
the lists going around say build a website, ship a few demo apps, generate a month of content
every one of those fails the only test that should rank your day
the test is below, then the five moves that pass it
[VISUAL: hero, the irreversibility filter as a decision tree]
if you want the full training on getting real business output from models like this, and turning that output into income, that's what the real time AI ops community is for: weeklyaiops.com
the one test you need to run
one question sorts everything you could do today: can a cheaper model redo this tomorrow?
a website, a demo app, a batch of posts... Opus, the everyday Claude model that stays in your plan, rebuilds any of those next week for nothing
spending the final hours of a frontier model on work a mid-tier model handles is like hiring a surgeon to take blood pressure lol
what a cheaper model can't redo tomorrow is anything that requires fable-level judgment to create but only ordinary intelligence to use
- a standard written down
- a roadmap already reasoned through
- a knowledge vault already distilled
- a skill that fires on its own
those keep their full value after the model behind them is out of reach
the pattern is old: the most copied training dataset of the llama era was built by pulling 52,000 answers out of a frontier model and training a small open one on them, total generation cost under $500
that frontier model got retired... the teacher is dead, everything trained on it still runs
so the strategy for today is extraction, not conversation
make fable write down everything it knows about your business before it leaves
if you're starting from zero with this model, the full course covers the setup groundwork:
https://x.com/EXM7777/status/2072694856795955630
now the five moves
1. plant fable's judgment in your workspace

the highest-value artifact a frontier model leaves behind is a standard... an answer helps you once, a standard upgrades every answer that comes after it
your CLAUDE.md, your skills, your learnings files, your memory setup: this is the layer every future model reads before it touches your work
today, fable writes that layer at a level opus can follow but could never author
run this in every project you care about:
1read this entire project and how i work in it23then rewrite my CLAUDE.md as the operating manual a less capable model would need to work here at your level:45> the conventions i follow and the ones you'd add6> the mistakes a weaker model will make in this codebase, named, with the rule that prevents each7> the quality bar per deliverable, written as checkable criteria, not adjectives8> what to do when uncertain: the exact escalation rules910then propose the 3 skills that would save me the most hours, and write them in full
the criteria line is the point
a cheaper model can't invent a quality bar, but it applies a written one fine
next up: pointing that same judgment at the business itself instead of the workspace
2. the consultant audit

fable's verified edge is judgment on hard, messy problems: on the hardest coding benchmark tier it scores more than double the next model, and the gap widens as difficulty rises
so give it the hardest messy problem you own: your business
open a session with access to your projects, your numbers, whatever context you can feed it, and run:
1act as the consultant i can't afford23audit everything: projects, offers, workflows, pricing, where my time goes45deliver a roadmap i can execute with a less capable model:67> ranked moves, highest expected return first8> per move: why, the exact steps, what done looks like, what a weaker model needs to be told to execute it9> the three things i should stop doing, with the reasoning written out in full
the deliverable rule carries the value: the reasoning gets written down today, while the model that can produce it is flat-rate
tomorrow opus doesn't need to be brilliant, it needs to follow a brilliant document
and a roadmap is only as good as the knowledge underneath it, which is move three
3. the second brain run

research is where the extraction runs deepest: long multi-step synthesis is fable's widest measured lead over every other model
so spend a slice of today on volume: deep research runs on your niche, your competitors, your customers' problems, the methods you keep meaning to study
then mine every run into an Obsidian vault, the free note app where each note links to related notes, one insight per note
the vault becomes the context every future session reads
full walkthrough of that mining system here:
https://x.com/EXM7777/status/2073045719020343705
don't summarize into one long report... atomize
a hundred linked one-insight notes get retrieved and reused, a 40-page report gets stored and forgotten
the first three moves bank judgment
the fourth spends the thing you actually lose tomorrow: unattended hours
4. fire the goals

fable's signature capability is holding one job for hours without losing the plot
that endurance is exactly what stops being flat-rate tomorrow, so today it goes to work
two commands in Claude Code, the terminal app the model runs in:
/goal sets a finish line instead of a prompt: you describe what done looks like, and the model keeps working turn after turn while a second, smaller model checks the condition after every turn and only stops the run when it's met
dynamic workflows are the scale layer: the model writes an orchestration script for your task, and that script runs dozens of subagents in the background, in parallel, cross-checking each other's findings while your session stays free
the combination is the move: a /goal holds the finish line, the workflow does the fan-out
1/goal every module in this repo has a test file, the full test suite passes with the complete green run pasted in this chat, and a migration-notes.md documents every change... or stop after 25 turns and paste the failures
two rules make this safe instead of expensive:
demand pasted proof in the finish line: the judge model reads only the conversation, it can't run your tests or open your files, so the condition asks for the green run pasted, never promised
cap every run: turns or wall-clock, written into the condition, one unattended loop without a cap billed $6,000 by morning
and mind the meter: fable burns weekly limits roughly twice as fast as opus, and only half your weekly limit applies to it in the first place
pick the two or three goals with the most locked-up value, not ten
loops, goals, and 25 ready workflows to steal from:
https://x.com/EXM7777/status/2073432521954697653
everything so far extracts what fable knows
the last move extracts how it thinks, automatically, for the rest of the day
5. the skill that documents how fable thinks

every time fable cracks a hard problem today, its approach evaporates when the session ends
this move installs a recorder
create the file \.claude/skills/extract-approach/SKILL.md\:

then wire it into CLAUDE.md so it fires without being asked:
1## learning law2after every non-trivial solved problem, run the extract-approach skill before moving on3a solution without its learnings note is unfinished work
now spend the rest of the day working fable hard on your real backlog: the gnarly bug, the architecture decision you've been circling
every solve leaves a note behind, and the notes are the distillate: fable's reasoning, sitting in your repo, readable by every model that comes after
this is the compounding move, and it's also the one to install FIRST if you only have an hour... it converts all your remaining fable time into permanent assets automatically
[VISUAL: the five moves as a system map, what each one leaves behind after july 7]
after tomorrow
this exact situation will repeat
the pattern of the last year: a frontier model appears, gets re-priced, gets pulled, sometimes comes back, eventually retires
one major model was removed with no notice, resurrected after the backlash, then retired anyway six months later
outputs you don't save while you have access can't be reconstructed once it's gone
every teacher leaves... what you extracted is what you keep
so keep this playbook
the next time a frontier window opens, you won't spend it on demo apps
quick recap
the test: can a cheaper model redo this tomorrow... if yes, skip it
1. workspace: fable rewrites CLAUDE.md + skills as checkable standards
2. audit: fable the consultant writes the roadmap, opus executes it later
3. second brain: deep research runs, mined into an atomized Obsidian vault
4. goals: /goal + dynamic workflows on your highest-value backlog, pasted proof + hard caps
5. recorder: the extract-approach skill, wired into CLAUDE.md, one learnings note per solved problem
order if time is short: 5 first, then 4 (it runs alone), then 1, 2, 3
the training, the skills library, and the weekly guides that go with this live at weeklyaiops.com





