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AI Automation Society

419k members • Free

11 contributions to AI Automation Society
Who was your first automation client?
Who was your first automation client? How did you find them, and what did you automate first? Curious how others found their first paying customer. Did you pitch cold, use your network, or stumble into it?
0 likes • 43m
My boss for a freight broker company. I do operations and there's a lot of tedius Excel stuff. I basically just automated that. He loved it. I turned it into a web version so that it could be used by others and paid me for it. Now we're in talks of me doing four or five more workflows 🙌
Day 1 Newsletter build
Hi everyone. Built the newsletter automation. It is remarkable how fast one can build these things. I like how easy it was to connect the APIs and the Google Sheets document. The one thing I would improve for the next version would be the nano banana graphic. I thought it was a bit basic. Looking forward to completing the challenge! #AISChallenge
Day 1 Newsletter build
HOW TO SET YOUR PRICE (Without Underpricing)
Quick question for anyone selling a skill or service here — Are you pricing based on what feels "safe," or on what it actually costs your client to stay stuck without you? I ask because I made this mistake for months. Priced low because I was scared of hearing "no." Turns out low prices don't get you more yeses — they get you clients who never value the work. The shift: talk about their pain first. Let them feel the cost of doing nothing. THEN bring up your price — by then it feels small. Would love to hear how others here think about this. What's your pricing philosophy? Questions :- 1.any addons ? 1. 2. how you set price of your work ??
HOW TO SET YOUR PRICE (Without Underpricing)
1 like • 11h
I need to learn more about retainers, especially how long they typically last and what level of ongoing support they include. I can already see a potential problem with pricing too low. Suppose you get a lot of clients to say yes, and they genuinely value your work. At some point, especially as a solo operator, you hit a capacity wall. There is only so much maintenance, support, and follow-up work you can continue doing before it prevents you from taking on new clients and growing the business. It's a good problem to have, I suppose, when you're just starting out but you don't want to ruin your reputation by not following through on deals you already made. So you don't want to trap yourself
🚨 AI Isn't Waiting for Anyone.
A friend of mine in business recently shared something that really got me thinking. He told me a client canceled a project worth over $1,000. The reason? "Unfortunately, Claude has replaced you." Whether we like it or not, AI is changing the way businesses operate. But here's what I believe: AI isn't replacing people. It's replacing people who refuse to adapt. The opportunity today isn't to compete against AI. It's to learn how to use AI to become faster, more valuable, and more efficient. No matter your profession: ✅ Marketing ✅ Customer Support ✅ Sales ✅ Design ✅ CRM Management ✅ Automation ✅ Content Creation ✅ Programming There is an AI tool that can help you do your job better. The people who thrive over the next few years won't necessarily be the smartest... They'll be the ones willing to keep learning. I've been investing a lot of time into AI automation, GoHighLevel, CRM systems, voice AI, chatbots, and workflow automation, not because it's a trend, but because this is where businesses are heading. Don't wait until AI becomes your competition. Learn how to make it your greatest advantage. What AI tool has had the biggest impact on the way you work? 👇
2 likes • 11h
When I first told my boss about Claude, I felt like I gave away a big secret. Then I remembered Claude has a learning curve too and he's not going to want to learn all of that. He's going to want to delegate it to me. And he did. Never be afraid to move forward. Moving forward is your strength.
Two paths into AI work (which one is yours?)
Most YouTubers show you a single path into AI work: start an automation agency → take clients → sell automations. It works. I know because I built an AI automation agency and sold it. But it's not the only way in, and for a lot of you it's not even the best one. I made this video to break down the two real paths: The AI Career Opportunity Nobody is Talking About in 2026 Here's the quick version: Path A is the agency play. You go independent, take clients, build your own practice. Path B is the employment play. You become the most AI-fluent person in the room, and that's who companies want to hire or promote for AI work. If you're already employed, you become the obvious pick when an AI role opens. If you're looking to get hired, or move somewhere better, you walk in with real work instead of just claims. It's the less obvious path, but it's actually the more common one. The employment numbers (see the video) are shocking actually. Watch the full breakdown in the video. Then do one thing for me in the comments because I'm super curious: Tell me which path you are on. A, B, or both. And one line or so on why. I'll be reading these. Nate
Poll
1093 members have voted
0 likes • 1d
Mostly Path B for now but I'd like to turn my current employer into my first client. It's a very small company so I can't really move up much, but I they can be my proof to move forward with an eventual Path A.
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@kyle-rivelli-3957
Hi this is my bio

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Joined Jun 19, 2026
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Chicago, IL
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