User
Write something
🔒 Q&A w/ Nate is happening in 6 days
Pinned
ANNOUNCING: What's working in AI in 2026 (real projects, real revenue)
Quick news. We're doing our first virtual event, and the rule is simple: every person on stage has to show their actual work. The actual projects they're selling. The actual outreach they're using to land clients. The actual numbers behind it. No theory. No tutorials. Just what's working in 2026, taught by the people doing it. Waitlist's open. Get on it before tickets go live: -> What's working in AI in 2026 (real projects, real revenue) PS: Annual members of AIS+ get in for free. We will be announcing discounts for monthly members. If you’ve been thinking about joining AIS+, it’s a good time.
Pinned
🚀New Video: Every Level of Claude Explained in 21 Minutes
I've spent over 400 hours inside Claude, and I'm breaking down exactly what separates someone stuck on level 1 from someone running five parallel sessions while they sleep, with the cheat codes to jump between each stage. Hope you enjoy!
Pinned
Cape Town AI Mastermind: Behind the Scenes
In February, I spent a week in Cape Town, SA with some of the top AI entrepreneurs in the space for a mastermind. We had hundreds of community members join us. I met some amazing people and left feeling so energized and inspired. Which is why I've been uploading almost daily lately, haha! Anyways, just dropped a behind the scenes vlog if you're interested in checking it out. AIS is planning on doing big events and meetups regularly, so if this trip looked like fun, stay tuned for events in the future!
Day 1: My Personal AI OS is Live - Claude Code + AIS-OS Fully Connected
Day 1 - built something I've been wanting to set up for a while. Got my personal AI Operating System running on Claude Code today. The AIS-OS kit from Nate's masterclass. Took a few hours to get through it properly but it's live now. Here's what it can actually do at this point: Connected my Gmail and Google Drive so it can pull live data without me pasting anything. Set up Playwright browser automation so it can interact with the web on my behalf. Built a /post-to-skool skill that lets me generate and publish posts directly from my terminal. Filled out all my context files so it knows my business, my ICP, my voice, and my 90-day goal. The Four Cs framework made this click for me. Context first. Then connections. Capabilities on top of that. Cadence last. I was tempted to jump ahead but the dependency order matters. What surprised me most: having everything in one place that knows my actual business context changes how I think. Instead of opening six tabs, my first move is now to ask the AIOS. That's the shift Nate talks about and I felt it today. Still no clients. That's the next problem to solve. But the foundation is there now.
0
0
Day 1: My Personal AI OS is Live - Claude Code + AIS-OS Fully Connected
The blind leading the blind
I've realized that in this space it feels like the blind leading the blind. The post below from a Redditor, followed by a bunch of "helpful tips," makes me believe that most of the advice out there is not good. --- I've been building AI automation systems for months now. 6 working systems. Good engagement on Reddit. People ask for demos. But I haven't crossed the line from "looks cool" to "here's my money." --- Here are a few of the so called helpful tips: "Don't do Upwork or Fiverr, it's way too saturated now." "Reach out through platforms like LinkedIn, Instagram, email, etc." "Sorry to say but Upwork and Fiverr are a race to the bottom." If you have ever tried cold outreach, you know how hard it is. I've read plenty of stories of people being in this space for 6 months with zero results. It's more common than people think, it might even be the norm. So when I read comments like those, I roll my eyes because they're making it harder for people who are already struggling. I'm not saying don't do cold outreach. A lot of people make it work. But saying Upwork sucks is like saying don't go to Barcelona because there are too many tourists. Two things can be true at the same time. Yes, Upwork is competitive. But there are also clients there who will pay well. And people will always try to get the best price, whether that's on Upwork or LinkedIn. That's human nature. Upwork is actually easier in one important way. It solves the hardest problem, which is not knowing what to sell. The person going there already knows they have a problem and needs someone to fix it. That's where you come in. But it's not as simple as pitching and hoping for the best. You need to understand how to negotiate and close. That skill is far more valuable than knowing how to automate or use AI. Upwork works well for me. I have a system and get daily leads. Not every lead works out, but I'd rather pitch 10 times and miss 10 opportunities than not pitch at all. Because not pitching guarantees nothing will change.
1-30 of 16,765
AI Automation Society
skool.com/ai-automation-society
Learn to get paid for AI solutions, regardless of your background.
Leaderboard (30-day)
Powered by