Getting started
This tutorial walks you through setup and your first real tasks. Budget about 30 minutes. By the end, you'll have connected your AI assistant, built something real, and started applying it to your actual work.
Fair to ask. Here's the honest answer on the things people usually wonder about.
Connect Claude to Chrome
First, we'll get your AI assistant connected to your browser so it can help you work in the tools you already use.
Setup instructions
- Open Chrome and go to
claude.ai - Log in with your Blaney Group account (or create one if you haven't been set up yet)
- Install the Claude for Chrome extension from the Chrome Web Store
- Click the Claude extension icon in your toolbar and select "Connect"
- You should see a green checkmark — that means you're connected
Quick test
Open a new tab, go to any website, and click the Claude icon. Ask it: "What is this page about?" If it responds with a summary, you're set up correctly.
Build a spreadsheet together
Now let's do something useful. You're going to ask your assistant to build a spreadsheet in Google Docs — something you'd normally spend time on manually.
Watch what happens. The assistant will open Chrome, navigate to Google Sheets, create the spreadsheet, format it, and add sample data — all while you watch.
Claude is controlling your Chrome browser — clicking and typing the same way you would. Your Google account is already logged in through Chrome, so Claude doesn't need your password and never sees it. It's just using the browser on your behalf, like a very fast pair of hands.
You can ask it to adjust anything — add columns, change formatting, add formulas.
Try these follow-ups
"Add a column that counts how many tasks each person has." or "Color-code the status column — red for not started, yellow for in progress, green for done." or "Add a summary row at the top that shows total tasks by status."
The point of this exercise: you're learning the rhythm. Ask for what you want in plain English, review what it gives you, then refine. That's the whole workflow.
Describe your work
Now we're going to point the assistant at your actual job. Tell it what you do — be as specific or general as you want.
The assistant will come back with concrete suggestions tailored to your work. Some will be obvious, some might surprise you. Pick one that sounds useful and try it.
What to look for
The best use cases are tasks that are repetitive, time-consuming, or require pulling together information from multiple places. If the assistant suggests something and you think "I spend an hour on that every week," that's a winner.
Walk through a real SOP
This is where it gets real. Take an SOP or process you currently follow — something you do regularly — and paste it in.
The assistant will break down the SOP, identify which steps it can automate or assist with, and walk you through the rest. You'll end up actually completing the SOP together — faster than doing it alone.
Why this matters
This exercise shows you exactly where AI fits into your real workflow — not in theory, but in practice. The steps it can't do? Those are still yours. The steps it can do? That's free time back in your day.