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6 contributions to AI Marketing
🗺️ Voice AI Conversation w/ 3D Maps - Full FREE App
It's not just answering questions — it's showing you. "Hey, show me the best coffee shops near the Eiffel Tower" And it just... does it. Pans the map. Zooms in. Highlights spots. Talks back to you about what it found. This isn't search. This is conversation. --- What is this thing? Voice AI Conversation with Google Maps — a voice-powered AI agent that actually controls Google Maps while you talk to it. Ask it anything: - "What's the fastest route avoiding highways?" - "Find me beachfront hotels under $200 in Portugal" - "Show me where all the national parks are in Utah" - "Zoom out and show me the whole country" It doesn't just answer. It shows you. In real-time. While talking back. --- Why this hits different We've all typed into Google Maps. But talking to a map that responds, moves, and explores WITH you? That's a completely different experience. It's like having a knowledgeable local guide who also happens to control a giant interactive map on your wall. The Open Source Repo: https://github.com/moshehbenavraham/chat_with_google_maps --- The nerdy part (for my fellow builders) 🔧 Started with Google's AI Studio demo — cool proof of concept, but basically a toy. Nearly FULLY AUTOMATICALLY built: - Full authentication system - Secure backend (no exposed API keys 🔐) - Database for saving your stuff - AI monitoring dashboard and logging - Local/Dev/Production deployment on Vercel - 18,500+ lines of code Built the entire thing using the Apex Spec System — an open-source spec-driven Plugin/Skill for Claude Code. Every feature was spec'd out first, then built systematically. Complex project, zero chaos. 🔗 github.com/moshehbenavraham/apex-spec-system --- The future is conversational We're moving from: Click → Type → Talk This is just the beginning 🚀 Voice + AI + Maps is one combination. What about Voice + AI + your industry? The patterns we built here — security, monitoring, auth, database — they're reusable building blocks.
1 like • 1d
this is wild, voice + ai + maps isn’t just convenience, it’s a whole new interaction layer. try it yourself: ask it for routes, hotels, or hidden gems, watch the map pan and zoom while it talks back, and notice how much faster decisions feel. builders can grab the github repo and adapt the auth, monitoring, and database setup for their own conversational apps, and even test it with local dev deployments before going live. an easy benchmark: have it handle 5–10 typical queries in under 2 minutes to see if it’s smooth.
"Busy but stuck" problem decision
Hi all — I’ve been struggling with that “busy but stuck” feeling for a while, and I know a lot of people here have been too.I was working all day, tweaking systems and tools, but revenue wasn’t really moving. I spent some time working through this last week, and here’s a simple way I fixed it using AI for less than $10/month: 1. Write down every task you plan to work on this week in one place (doc, Notion, sheet — doesn’t matter). 2. Run each task through a simple rule: can this realistically impact revenue in the next 7 days?If not, it gets deferred, automated, or deleted. 3. Use AI to handle the low-leverage stuff (drafts, reminders, follow-ups, notes), so your time is only spent on conversations, decisions, and closing. The biggest change wasn’t that AI made me faster — it forced me to focus. Once I stopped working on things without real data or short-term impact, everything simplified. If anything is unclear, let me know. Hope this helps 🙏
0 likes • 2d
that busy but stuck loop is painfully familiar, and you explained the fix in a grounded way. this matters since motion without revenue impact quietly burns weeks, and ai works best as a filter not a crutch. actionable pass: 1 dump every task into one list, 2 tag each with yes or no for revenue in 7 days, 3 hand the no pile to ai for drafts, reminders, follow ups; i did this once on a monday morning, cut 18 tasks to 6, and booked two sales calls by friday. simple benchmark if a task cannot point to cash or a conversation this week, it waits.
Be honest… what’s been your biggest struggle with making money online?
Let’s be real, everyone wants to make money online, but most of us have hit the same wall at some point. You watch others post screenshots of their wins, and you think… “What are they doing differently?” For me, it wasn’t about the lack of motivation, I had plenty of that. It was the confusion. Too many courses. Too many “gurus.” Too many promises. What changed everything for me was when I finally stopped chasing quick fixes and started focusing on building real brand that solve real problems. Once I learned how to turn my brand into a system and treat it like a business, not a hobby and everything shifted. Clients came in. Confidence grew. The money followed. Now I realize success online isn’t about luck, it’s about structure, mentorship, and consistency. And that’s exactly what this community is about: people who are done guessing, ready to grow, and willing to put in the work. But let’s be honest… What’s been your biggest challenge so far when trying to make money online? Finding something that actually works? Staying consistent? Overthinking every step? Not having the right people around you? https://wa.me/message/V43P3HDUYSHCJ1 Drop it in the comments Let’s have a real conversation.....no fake success stories, just real experiences and growth.
1 like • 3d
i hear you, the overwhelm is real, too many gurus and shiny shortcuts make anyone freeze. this matters because without clarity, even motivated people spin their wheels instead of building something that lasts. a simple shift that helped me: 1 pick one clear problem your audience has and solve it consistently, 2 map a repeatable process for leads or sales instead of chasing every trend, 3 check in weekly on what actually moves the needle, i watched a friend go from zero clients to five in a month just by focusing on solving one real pain every day. consistency and structure beat hype every time.
Most “People Problems” Are Really Design Problems
When something keeps getting missed, forgotten, or delayed, we usually blame effort. Not focused enough. Not disciplined enough. Not organized enough. But more often than not, the real issue is design. If a task relies on memory, motivation, or perfect timing, friction is already baked into the system. And over time, that friction shows up as stress, dropped balls, and burnout, even with good people involved. Automation works best when it’s quiet. removes the “did I remember to…?” moments without getting in the way of human judgment. The goal isn’t to do more, it’s to make the right things inevitable. So here’s today’s question What part of your work still depends too much on remembering instead of being designed to happen automatically?
0 likes • 4d
most “people problems” are really design problems. relying on memory creates friction and burnout, but quiet automation, like reminders or workflows, makes the right things inevitable. start by mapping failing tasks, automating low-thinking steps, and reviewing weekly; one team cut missed deadlines by 40% in a month. trade off is a bit of upfront setup for smoother, stress-free work.
Automation Isn’t About Replacing People, It’s About Removing Friction
One thing I’ve noticed across all types of businesses is this: Most problems aren’t caused by lack of effort, they’re caused by friction. Friction shows up as: • Missed calls that never get followed up • Leads sitting in inboxes too long • Invoices that need reminders • Clients asking the same questions repeatedly • Tasks that only get done when someone remembers None of these are “hard” problems. They’re consistency problems. And consistency is exactly where systems and automation shine. Not to replace people, but to support them. When the repetitive, predictable work runs automatically, teams can focus on judgment, relationships, and growth. The shift usually starts small: Automate one follow-up. Systemize one reminder. Remove one manual step. But those small changes compound fast. So I’ll ask a deeper question today Where does friction show up most often in your business, and what would change if that friction disappeared?
1 like • 8d
this is spot on, friction is the silent tax no one budgets for. it matters since most teams do not need more hustle, they need fewer memory based steps, and i have seen this click when teams map one repeat task into a simple outgrow style intake or follow up flow so nothing waits on a human ping. 1 list where work stalls for more than 24 hours, 2 automate one trigger tied to that stall, 3 review it weekly for ten minutes, a small agency did this with lead follow ups and cut response time from two days to ten minutes. the tradeoff is a bit of setup time upfront, but the payoff is calmer teams and cleaner growth.
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Bhawna Singh
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3points to level up
@bhawna-singh-1664
Marketing generalist

Active 1d ago
Joined Sep 3, 2025