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Owned by Ivonne

By 2890 Alien Tech has BUILT NEW WORLDS with Flying Machines, Medical+ Software. Will YOU be one of AlienTech Billionaires? Harry Potter's AI Station

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3094 contributions to AI Automation Agency Hub
I can build the product. I freeze the moment I have to sell it
Hey everyone 👋 Started an AI automation agency in India a couple months back — learned mostly from US YouTube channels and how agencies operate there. Built a WhatsApp automation agent for real estate (instant lead qualification, property matching, site visit booking) — priced it at just ₹5,000/month (~$50), way cheaper than what I've seen locally. Went door-to-door to real estate consultants in my city. Got a lot of "we'll think about it," "too expensive," and "show us existing clients first." Pivoted to my personal network instead — landed one free-trial client who's actually 5x bigger than anyone I met cold. Also in talks with a used-tractor dealership getting 100+ WhatsApp inquiries a day. Here's my honest struggle: I'm confident in the building/product side — I'll happily spend hours perfecting the automation. But outreach is where I freeze. Just thinking about cold calls or walk-ins kills my confidence before I even start. Added pressure — I'm a fresh grad, and if I don't show real traction in the next 1-2 months, my parents want me to take a ₹10k job instead. I believe in this business. I just need to close 5 paying clients this month to prove it to myself (and them) — but I keep overthinking the "how" instead of just doing it. Would genuinely appreciate advice from people who've been through this exact wall — how did you push through the outreach fear in your early days? Any real, tactical advice welcome. Not looking for motivation quotes, just what actually worked for you. Thanks for reading this far 🙏
1 like • 1d
You freeze because you're thinking about YOU. It's about how you can help them. If you can't handle rejection (yes, there's plenty of it selling AI or anything) then you'd be better off finding a partner who can sell. You build. Or get a normal job, like other people. This is not get rich quick.
You can now run a solo creative agency with just 3 subscriptions
Imagine running a remote creative department for clients at $2K a month each. Land five of them and you're at $10K/month without ever hiring. What used to require a 6-person team and a heavy monthly budget (brand identity, product photography, static ads, commercials, the whole creative engine) now runs on Higgsfield, Claude, and Notion. In my latest video, I show you exactly how to wire it together, and stand up the system that lets you actually run multiple clients at once without things falling apart. A UGC spot that used to take a $500 shoot can be generated in minutes. Product reveals that needed a director and a crew take a few prompts. But here's where I want to be real with you. After this video drops, the stack isn't your edge. Anyone can copy it. Your edge is finding clients, closing them on retainer, and writing contracts that protect your margins. That's the real skill set and why this community and my Accelerator exists. Watch the full breakdown here → https://youtu.be/3BatQW63C8g
0 likes • Jun 9
@Scott Rippey Thanks for sharing your tech stack. Under $100 for subscriptions (excluding elevenlabs). I haven't used higgsfield, I'm using Dreamina, there are new many AI video generators these days. I would say, under $1k/mo.
Mom Had Breast Cancer. I Drowned in Medical Research. 💥
Mom's diagnosis hit hard. Wanted to understand everything. Started reading every medical paper, treatment guideline, clinical study I could find. Overwhelming. Hundreds of pages of dense medical jargon. Couldn't tell what mattered. THE RESEARCH OVERLOAD Downloaded 40+ papers from PubMed. Bookmarked another 30 articles. Printed some. Lost track of what I'd already read. Doctor appointments: "Have you read about treatment X?" No idea. Maybe? I'd read so much it blurred together. Couldn't remember which study said what. Couldn't compare findings across papers. Just drowning in information without understanding. THE SUMMARIZER I BUILT Every paper, report, treatment guide goes into folder. Workflow processes automatically. First pass extracts key information. Study type, sample size, main findings, limitations, author conclusions. Second pass generates plain-English summary. What did this study actually find? What are the important takeaways? What questions should I ask the doctor about this? Everything searchable. "What studies mention immunotherapy?" Instant answer. Creates comparison views. Multiple studies on same treatment side by side. Easier to see consensus versus outliers. THE INFORMED ADVOCACY Before: Drowning in research, couldn't retain it, felt helpless, couldn't advocate effectively. After: Summaries I could actually understand, questions prepared for appointments, felt like a partner in her care. One summary helped me ask about a treatment option her oncologist hadn't mentioned. Turned out to be a good fit for her situation. Mom is in remission now. Research didn't cure her. Doctors did. But being informed made me a better advocate during the scariest time of her life. The summarization struggles with highly technical papers. Some medical jargon too specialized. But captures enough to know if a paper is relevant. This is the workflow json i want to share
Mom Had Breast Cancer. I Drowned in Medical Research. 💥
0 likes • May 9
@Sarah Martinez Good on you for expanding options for your mom. Many doctors or health professionals will say that there's nothing much THEY can do. It's different for you. This is YOUR MOM. It's different when it's someone close to you. Great job on the summarizer. AI can make mistakes, you need to check carefully. I've seen posts on Linkedin where the owner of a beloved dog, turned to using AI and he found something to help his dog. Alphafold? That cost money though. Not everyone can do it. AI can help by searching for info which may not be obvious to us. Good luck for her care. Stay positive! ❤️🙏👗
Great Community: Supportive, Helpful, and Motivating
I have been a member of the group for about a year. This is my first post and I feel as though this is a true community. Thank you for including me.
0 likes • Apr 30
@Blake Moody Welcome Blake. Many people stay at level one and don't get involved! Do check out the Classroom and other resources! ✅💯🔥Keep going!
Which Model?
I am trying to finish a couple programs i have been working on and Codex has had the worst hallucinations lately. I need to switch but I don't know which one to use. Google Gemini has come out with a lot of cool features on their AI models, including anti-gravity, agent, and Canvas. They've got a lot more as well. I was wondering, of course, that Claude is good, but I heard the new Gemini is better. Which one should I use, Claude or Gemini and why?
1 like • Apr 28
Gemini is better for research and chats. For real work, Claude is the one. I tried Manus AI for a week and it was bad. Started off good then hallucinating etc. Stick to Claude.
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Ivonne Teoh
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@ivonne-teoh
AI SEO. How can AI find your business? Many businesses are INVISIBLE to their customers! Find out how to change this.

Active 9h ago
Joined Nov 22, 2024
Sydney, Australia
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