A small, invite-only pilot for nurse-led AI literacy.
This initiative is the public face of a simple idea: keep the project small, keep the language clear, and let nurses shape what comes next. It is being tested with real clinical context in mind so the direction stays practical.
What this initiative is trying to do
The initiative exists to turn word-of-mouth attention into useful learning. Instead of trying to look bigger than it is, ThinkRN is using a focused pilot to learn what nurses actually want, how they describe their pain points, and what kind of AI teaching feels trustworthy.
Keep the pilot small
The project stays invite only so the message, workflows, and feedback loop can be tightened before wider distribution.
Listen to nurses first
Feedback from nurses and real clinical environments decides what stays, what changes, and what gets removed.
Explain AI in simple terms
Every page and learning touchpoint should make AI feel clearer, not more intimidating.
Measure what matters
Traffic, referral sources, time on page, and community votes help show whether the message is landing.
Feedback the pilot is looking for
The point is not to collect noise. The point is to collect clear signals from nurses about what matters most and what still feels unclear.
- What parts of AI feel most confusing or overhyped to nurses right now?
- Which nurse workflows need clearer teaching or safer guidance first?
- Does the current wording feel trustworthy, or does it still sound too “techy”?
- What should ThinkRN build next based on real clinical pain points?
What success looks like while Ray is away
If the pilot is working, the signs should be visible in simple website activity and simple nurse feedback. The goal is not hype. The goal is signal.
- More route visits coming from direct sharing and reposts
- Longer time on page on the main mission and proof pages
- Clearer feedback from nurses about what should be built next
- Stronger consistency between site language and bedside reality
Why the initiative stays invite only
Invite only does not mean closed off. It means careful. The project is intentionally limiting access while the wording, trust signals, and nurse feedback process are still being refined. That helps keep the quality bar high and the message consistent.