Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Poppy AI Academy

2.3k members • Free

Claude Code Kickstart

543 members • Free

AI Bits and Pieces

567 members • Free

AI Automation Agency Hub

302.8k members • Free

AI Automation Society

293.7k members • Free

11 contributions to AI Bits and Pieces
So you want to be a AI solopreneur? Here's my 2 cents
TL;DR: Build an AI solo business by solving one painful problem with one clear outcome. Don’t sell AI tools — sell time saved, revenue gained, or chaos eliminated.Start manually, systemize it, then automate it.Niche by specific pain, not industry.Charge for value, not hours.Keep your offer simple.Get fast proof with your first few clients. AI is just leverage. Clear thinking and practical execution are the real business. Most people start backwards. They think:“I need a logo.”“I need a website.”“I need the perfect offer.”“I need to master every AI tool.” You don’t. You need one painful problem, one clear outcome, and one person willing to pay to remove friction from their life. I didn’t start with a full ecosystem. I started with conversations. Step 1: Sell the outcome, not the AIClients don’t care about GPT, automations, agents, or workflows.They care about: - Saving time - Making more money - Reducing errors - Eliminating chaos AI is just the engine under the hood. Sell the result. Step 2: Start manual before you automateThis is where most AI builders fail.They try to automate something they’ve never delivered manually. If you can’t solve the problem with: - A clear process - A repeatable checklist - A simple workflow You’re not ready to automate it. First deliver manually.Then systemize.Then automate.Then optimize margins. Step 3: Niche down by pain, not by industry“AI for real estate” is weak positioning.“AI system that automatically follows up with every lead within 2 minutes and books appointments” is strong positioning. Specific pain > broad market. Step 4: Charge for transformation, not for tools. You are not selling: - Chatbots - Automations - Integrations You are selling: - Time recovered - Revenue unlocked - Headcount avoided If your system saves a business $5,000/month, you should not be charging $300. Step 5: Keep it simple at the beginning One offer one problem, one ICP. Scale complexity later. Simplicity scales better than ambition.
1 like • Feb 14
I received 70$ to test out Opus 4.6, anybody else had this? I wonder how one gets more of those freebies...
1 like • 26d
I fell to the dark side of the pro max plan...🤑
🎉 500 Member Milestone — WOW! 🎉
We just crossed the 500-member mark here at AI Bits & Pieces. Wow! When I started this community, I simply felt that AI was becoming something bigger than tools or trends. It felt like true a shift in the way we would interact with technology — and I wanted to create a place where people could learn, explore, and apply it in a thoughtful way. What makes this milestone meaningful isn’t just the number. It’s the people. We have members who are: - Just beginning their AI journey - Deepening their prompting fluency - Building real systems and automations - Applying AI inside established businesses That range matters. It creates perspective. It creates better conversations. It creates learning in both directions. To everyone who has contributed, asked questions, shared insight, encouraged others, or quietly followed along — thank you. Your presence shapes this space. We’re going to continue refining the classroom, adding live sessions, and building clearer paths for each stage of the AI journey. I’m grateful you’re here. Thank you, @Michael Wacht
🎉 500 Member Milestone — WOW! 🎉
2 likes • Feb 12
Congrats my friend!
1 like • Feb 14
@Michael Wacht I thought about starting a community, you lead by ewxample ;)
OMG an open source free AI agent that can do ANYTHING
Most people think AI is just for answering questions. But the real game is automation. I've been experimenting with Moltbot, and it goes way beyond chat: It integrates with your actual workflow. Email monitoring, system checks, file management — it plugs into your real tools and handles the operational noise so you don't have to. It's a multiplier for your output. Not replacing you. Amplifying you. The repetitive stuff gets handled, so you spend time on what actually matters — the decisions, the creative work, the strategy. It gets smarter as you work together. Feedback loops. Corrections. Learnings. It adapts to how you work instead of forcing you into its mold. The efficiency gains are real. If you're running projects, managing multiple commitments, or just drowning in admin work, this shifts the math. Measurably. The future isn't about AI doing everything. It's about AI handling the friction so you can move faster. If you're curious how this works in practice, or want to explore what's possible in your own workflow, let's talk about it. What's your experience been with AI tools?
OMG an open source free AI agent that can do ANYTHING
1 like • Jan 27
@Michael Wacht Exactly! Clawd was clever but not smart lol
1 like • Jan 31
@Katie Branley TLDR: OpenClaw is powerful but risky. 99% of people don't need it. If you use it: (1) Start with an isolated system/VPS, (2) Give read-only access first (emails, files), (3) Never allow full account control, (4) Learn security practices before exposing personal data. Stay informed through communities like AI Bits and Pieces for safe implementation. Let me tell you Open Claw is no joke. Yeah they changed their name again so now it's Open Claw but really this is a tool like you say that is cool but what is Open Claw really? It's just a piece of code when you think of it. With great power comes great responsibility like Uncle Ben said and this is no exception. If you do use this device software, be aware of the risks and here's how to do the best possible decision Do you really need it? That is one question. Do you really need to have this? The answer is for 99% of people, no. But everyone will try and find reasons to have it and it's fine. It's open source. Everybody can have a piece of it. But if you do expose your information to this, you need to be aware of where it goes, how it travels and keep it safe and secret. There are techniques to do that but it is not well known. You have to look for them and follow procedures to have a secure system. The best way to have a system which is clean is to start by running Open Claw on an isolated computer or a virtual private server (VPS). From there, you can simply say you can build an assistant that does things for you but not your accounts for now. Once you're comfortable with it and you learn how you can deal with the security flaws that you may open without knowing, then you can give it access to read-only your files. For instance read-only emails. You cannot delete and you cannot send. You can only draft and read. That would be the first step logically. Then you can have it respond automatically once you have it down to a very good example of your voice and your decisions but I wouldn't recommend it. In the end I believe that keeping yourself up to date with those communities like AI Bits and Pieces is the best option for you to have the latest information by real people for real people.
If you laugh, leave a like 😂
Everybody experienced this once or twice 😅
If you laugh,  leave a like 😂
1 like • Jan 26
@Judith Vanegas #Guilty
0 likes • Jan 26
@Hatem G thanks!
1-10 of 11
Simon Cousineau
4
82points to level up
@simon-cousineau-6158
Entrepreneur, AI enthousiast and determined to succeed.

Active 2d ago
Joined Dec 15, 2025
INFP
Powered by