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16 contributions to AI Automation Society
🚀 Quick Question for AI Builders & Automators
I’m currently working on AI automation systems for businesses, things like AI receptionists, chat/voice agents, and workflow automation that actually replace manual work. Curious to know:👉 What’s one business task you’d love to automate but haven’t figured out the best approach for yet? Could be lead handling, support, follow-ups, scheduling, reporting, anything. Always interested in exchanging ideas and learning what real problems people are facing in automation right now. 🤝
2 likes • 23d
@Chris Carr Absolutely. Retention and engagement are where long-term growth really comes from.
1 like • 23d
@Jared Orr That’s a great move. Content distribution is one of the easiest and highest-ROI areas to automate without sacrificing quality.
💡 Everyone wants complex systems, but no one wants to build clean ones.
Most automations don’t fail because the idea was bad…They fail because the foundation was messy. I’ve learned to build in layers, small, modular pieces that connect, swap, and scale without breaking. No bloated workflows. No over-engineering. Just clean, functional architecture that works, even when one piece fails. Because real automation isn’t about “adding more AI.”It’s about making sure the system survives when things go wrong. ⚙️ Keep it modular. Keep it simple. Keep it bulletproof. What’s one thing you always include in your automation builds to keep them stable?👇
The best AI systems aren’t the flashiest, they’re the ones that never break.
Lately, I’ve been thinking about how most AI systems, agencies fail, not because the tech isn’t good enough, but because the systems around them aren’t solid. The best automations I’ve seen (and built) aren’t the most complex ones. They’re the ones designed with reliability in mind:→ clear logic→ good error handling→ clean data flow→ and enough flexibility to evolve without breaking. Too many builders obsess over making things “smarter” instead of making them simpler and stronger AI doesn’t need to be fancy, it needs to be dependable. Curious to hear from others: What’s one principle you always follow when designing reliable AI workflows?
1 like • Nov '25
@Kenneth Khamphiphone That’s a brilliant approach, modular and lean systems make scaling and customization so much easier. It’s clear you think in frameworks rather than just tasks.
0 likes • Nov '25
@Marty Englander Absolutely agree, resilience beats novelty every time. Building for failure is what makes systems truly dependable.
Wants to land first client?
Hey everyone 👋 I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the very first client. The one that shifts everything from “theory” to “real.” It’s wild how much pressure we put on that first win, right? Whether you're freelancing, consulting, building an agency, or launching a service, that first client feels like proof that it’s all possible. In my case, landing my first client taught me a few things: ✅ It’s never about being 100% ready, It’s about showing up and offering value with what you already know. ✅ People buy clarity and confidence. If you can clearly explain how you solve a specific problem, that stands out more than being “perfect.” ✅ It usually comes from conversations, not cold strategies. My first client didn’t come from fancy funnels or ads. 💡 My biggest takeaway? Don’t overcomplicate it. Focus on solving a real problem for one Business. That’s where the momentum begins. Now I want to hear from you: 🧠 How did YOU land your first client? - Was it a cold DM? - A referral? - A lucky break? - Something totally unexpected? Drop your story below, and if you're still chasing that first client, feel free to share where you're at. We’ve all been there, and someone here might be able to help you move forward 🚀 Looking forward to hearing your stories 👇
2 likes • Oct '25
@Muskan Ahlawat yup. That's how you do it. Find the pain problem and then pitch your solution.
1 like • Oct '25
@Naru Singh that is correct Naru. I agree with you 💯
Just tell me what you need
I’ve been deep in building AI voice agents — and at this point, I’ve created full-blown assistants and AI receptionists that can handle everything from phone calls and scheduling to complex workflows with no human involvement. Here’s my process, every time: 1-Visualize the entire experience — how the voice agent should behave, respond, and adapt in real-time. 2- Map the system — outlining the logic, connections, integrations, and decision points. 3- Build and deploy — using tool n8n and various voice AI platforms to bring it all to life. What starts as an idea quickly becomes a working system — fast, modular, and scalable. Curious to hear how others approach this: When you read your client’s requirements, what’s the first thing you do? Do you visualize, prototype, write it out, or jump straight into building? Would love to hear your process.
0 likes • Oct '25
@Kevin troy Lumandas Love that — sounds like a solid flow. Visualizing and prototyping early really smooths out the n8n build later. 👌 Thanks for sharing.
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Usman Ali
4
20points to level up
@usman-ali-4029
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Active 23d ago
Joined Aug 29, 2025
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