What is the toolbox?

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Overview

Step 3 of the CorZen Project Intake Process is Your Toolbox. After defining your project mission, this step asks you to tell CorZen which tools you currently have access to. CorZen uses your toolbox to tailor every strategy, recommendation, and task card specifically to the software stack you actually work with — rather than suggesting workflows that depend on tools you don’t own or haven’t learned yet. The personalized project plan also accounts for your experience level with the tools, allocating more time to tasks for which you have less experience and less time for tasks that use tools for which you are advanced.

How It Works

The Toolbox screen displays a curated list of popular tools organized by category. Each tool starts in an unselected state. To add a tool to your toolbox, simply click it. When selected, a tool expands into a row with two dropdown menus:

DropdownWhat to select
Free / PaidWhether you’re on the free tier of this tool or a paid subscription. This affects which features CorZen can assume are available to you.
Experience LevelHow comfortable you are with this tool; Beginner, Intermediate, or Advanced. CorZen uses this to calibrate the timeline of the workflows and tactics it recommends.

Note

To deselect a tool, click it again. Unselected tools appear as plain text with no dropdowns.

Free vs. Paid: What It Means for Each Tool

When you select a tool, specifying whether you’re on a free or paid plan for that tool matters because many tools restrict advanced features such as API access, automations, higher usage limits, or team collaboration to paying subscribers. CorZen will only build plans around the capabilities your tier actually includes.

SettingFree tierPaid tier
CorZen uses…Only publicly available or free-tier features of the toolFull feature set, including API access, advanced automations, higher limits, and premium integrations
Example (ChatGPT)Default model access, limited message quotaAdvanced model access, extended context windows, API access for automation
Example (Canva)Basic templates and exportsBrand kit, background remover, premium templates, team sharing
Example (HubSpot)Free CRM, limited email sendsMarketing Hub automation, sequences, advanced reporting

Note

If you’re unsure which tier you’re on for a particular tool, choose Free to be safe. You can always update your toolbox later.

Experience Level: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced

The experience level dropdown tells CorZen how fluent you are with each tool. This is used to determine how detailed or prescriptive the guidance should be for each one. There is not one single definition of Beginner vs Intermediate vs Advanced. Choose the level you believe is correct for your current experience level. The following table offers a general guideline on choosing between experience levels.

LevelWho it’s forHow CorZen responds
BeginnerYou’ve heard of or occasionally used the tool but don’t have a consistent workflow with it yet.CorZen provides more time for tasks that use this tool, and recommends simpler use cases that don’t require deep configuration.
IntermediateYou use this tool regularly and can navigate its core features without looking things up.CorZen recommends practical workflows and integrations, assumes basic setup is already done, and focuses on how to apply the tool to your specific project goals.
AdvancedYou have deep expertise — you’ve built custom workflows, use APIs, or have configured the tool extensively.CorZen recommends sophisticated automations, multi-tool integrations, and advanced strategies that leverage the tool’s full capability.

Tip

Be honest about your experience level. Selecting Advanced when you’re still learning can result in recommendations that feel overwhelming or require skills you haven’t built yet.

Tool Categories & Available Tools

The Toolbox organizes all tools into six categories. Below is the complete list visible in the current version of the Toolbox step, along with example Free/Paid and experience selections as seen during the intake walkthrough.

AI

General-purpose AI assistants and large language model tools used for writing, research, ideation, and content generation.

ToolFree / PaidExperience Levels
ChatGPT / OpenAIFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
ClaudeFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
GeminiFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
Nano Banana ProFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
Veo3Free or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced

AI Agents

Automation and workflow orchestration tools that connect apps, trigger actions, and run multi-step processes with or without code.

ToolFree / PaidExperience Level (example)
GitHub CoPilotFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
Make.comFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
n8nFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
Relay.appFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
ZapierFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced

Sales

Tools used for prospecting, CRM management, outreach, and sales process automation.

ToolFree / PaidExperience Level (example)
HubSpotFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
LinkedIn APIFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
LinkedIn NavigatorFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
NotionFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
Reddit APIFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced

Marketing

Tools for email marketing, content distribution, paid advertising, and audience engagement.

ToolFree / PaidExperience Level (example)
BeehiivFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
ConvertKitFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
Google AdsFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
HubSpotFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
MailchimpFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
Meta AdsFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
NotionFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced

Design

Visual design and creative tools used for graphics, UI mockups, and brand assets.

ToolFree / PaidExperience Level (example)
Adobe SuiteFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
CanvaFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
FigmaFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced

Dev

Developer tools used for code hosting, backend infrastructure, payments, and deployment.

ToolFree / PaidExperience Level (example)
GitHubFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
NotionFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
StripeFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
SupabaseFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced
VercelFree or PaidBeginner / Intermediate/ Advanced

Step-by-Step: Completing Your Toolbox

  • Arrive at Step 3. After completing Steps 1 and 2, the Project Intake Process bar advances to “Step 3: Your Toolbox.” You’ll see your Project Mission displayed at the top as a reminder of the context your toolbox should serve.
  • Browse the categories. Scroll through all six categories — AI, AI Agents, Sales, Marketing, Design, and Dev — to see the full list of available tools before making selections.
  • Click a tool to select it. When you click a tool name, it becomes highlighted and two dropdowns appear: one for Free/Paid and one for Experience Level.
  • Set Free or Paid. Choose the tier that matches your current subscription for that tool. When in doubt, select Free.
  • Set your experience level. Choose Beginner, Intermediate, or Advanced based on how confidently you use the tool day-to-day.
  • Repeat for all tools you use. Work through each category and select every tool that is part of your current stack. You are not required to select tools you don’t use.
  • Proceed to the next step. Once you’ve selected your tools, click Continue to continue the intake process. CorZen will immediately begin incorporating your toolbox into its plan generation.

Tip

You don’t have to select every tool in a category — only the ones you actually have access to and intend to use for this project.

FAQs

The current toolbox covers the most common tools in each category. If your tool isn’t listed, choose ‘Add Other Tool’ at the bottom of the toolbox and indicate your subscription type (Free or Paid) and experience level.

Yes, it can affect the quality of the recommendations. If you select Paid but are actually on a free plan, CorZen may suggest features or integrations you don’t have access to. If you select Free but have a paid plan, you may miss out on more powerful workflows CorZen could build for you. When unsure, choose the ‘Free’ option.

The AI category covers general-purpose language model assistants you interact with directly (like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini). The AI Agents category covers automation and orchestration platforms (like Make.com, Zapier, n8n, and Relay.app) that connect tools together and run multi-step workflows automatically.

Some tools like Notion span multiple use cases — it can serve as a sales wiki, marketing content calendar, and dev documentation hub. Each instance in a different category is independent, so you can set different experience levels per use case if needed, or simply select it once in your primary category. Tools that appear in multiple categories will automatically self-select when you choose them for the first category, saving you from choosing the same tool multiple times.

CorZen builds your plan around the tools you’ve selected. However, if certain gaps in your toolbox would significantly limit the quality of your strategy, CorZen may surface suggestions for tools to consider adding — particularly if your project goals require capabilities not covered by your current stack. In general, any tool recommended by CorZen that is not in your current Toolbox will have a free version that can fulfill the task in your plan. CorZen will not recommend or require you to purchase any tools to achieve your goals.