Learn AI the way it's actually used at work.
Cyan is a 28-day program built around the tools, prompts, and workflows that ship real work. No fluff. No "AI is the future" preamble. Just the moves.

Issued to Maya R.
Practical AI · 28 days
"Replaced 4 tools with one prompt library."
A credential your manager will actually open.
Every Cyan certificate links to the workflows you built and the prompts you wrote. It's not a badge — it's a portfolio someone can audit in 30 seconds.
- Live links to the work you shipped
- Reviewer comments from your cohort lead
- Issued on a public verification page
Certificate of practice
Maya Rivers
Practical AI · Operations track
One workflow a day. That's it.
Each morning, a tight 15-minute lesson lands in your inbox. Each evening, you've built something you can actually use. By day 28 you have a personal AI playbook — not a stack of bookmarks.
Cohorts from teams at
Six stacks. One that fits the job in front of you.
ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity. Turn a blank page into a draft your editor accepts.
Midjourney, Flux, Photoshop AI. Ship visuals that don't look like everyone else's.
ElevenLabs, Descript, Runway. Make a 30-second cut that actually converts.
Cursor, Lovable, Replit. Ship the internal tool you've been waiting six months for.
n8n, Make, Zapier + LLMs. Replace the spreadsheet with a workflow that runs itself.
Custom GPTs, Notion AI, Gong. Cut response time without sounding like a bot.
Three small commitments, then you go live your life.
A 4-minute walkthrough lands at 7am. No video. No autoplay.
A 15-minute exercise with a real outcome — no toy examples.
Your cohort sees it. You see theirs. Real feedback by lunch.
People keep saying the same three things.
“I stopped reading newsletters and started shipping. Cyan is the only program that asked me to make something every day.”
“Day 14 paid for the whole program. I rebuilt our onboarding doc with one workflow and got 6 hours back a week.”
“The certificate links to my actual work. My team lead clicked through every link in the interview.”