How to Build a 4-Step Demo Funnel That Books Sales Calls Without Cold Outreach
The Big Shift Happening in B2B Right Now
Cold outreach is getting colder.
- Email deliverability is tightening
- Cold calling answer rates are dropping
- LinkedIn is limiting how much outbound you can do
But the biggest change isn’t the channels – it’s the buyer.
In 2025, buyers discover vendors through AI search, short educational content, and self-serve experiences. They want information on their own time, without pressure, without an SDR chasing them down.
This is why automated demo funnels are taking over. They work 24/7, meet buyers where they already are, and let only the right people book on your calendar.
And this is exactly what Action Hero Marketing builds every day: automated systems that turn traffic into qualified meetings – predictably, without cold outreach.
Why Traditional Cold Outreach Isn’t Enough Anymore
Outbound isn’t dead – but relying on it alone is.
- Email Deliverability (2024–2025): Gmail + Outlook now enforce DMARC, SPF, and DKIM alignment. Bulk senders with low engagement get flagged fast.
- LinkedIn Throttling: Daily connection caps and stronger filtering make mass outreach unpredictable.
- Asynchronous Buyers: People do their research via AI Overviews, Perplexity, Gemini, and short videos – not by answering unknown calls or cold emails.
Outbound can support your funnel, but it can’t carry your funnel anymore. You need an inbound engine buyers can step into at any time.
What an Automated Demo Funnel Really Is
A demo funnel is a self-serve buying experience that educates, qualifies, and books meetings – without a rep pulling strings behind the scenes.
A well-built demo funnel:
- Pulls in ICP traffic from paid + organic
- Gives immediate value through a lead magnet or short video
- Qualifies prospects automatically
- Lets high-intent buyers book a call when they’re ready
Why CMOs love it in 2025:
- Predictable cost per booking
- Clean CRM + UTM attribution
- Operates 24/7 without burning out SDRs
- Supports budget efficiency and better forecasting
A demo funnel becomes your “always-on” sales teammate – scalable, consistent, and aligned with modern buyer expectations.
The 4-Step Demo Funnel
This is the playbook that’s consistently working across SaaS and B2B right now.
Step 1 – Create a Value-First Lead Magnet
Give prospects clarity before you ask for their time.
High-performing 2025 formats include:
- Short checklists
- Benchmark data (only if real)
- 3–5 page mini-guides
- Quick explainer videos
Buyers want simple, trustworthy info – not fluff.
Your lead magnet sets the tone for trust. If it’s good, your funnel works. If it’s weak, everything downstream breaks.
Step 2 – Build a Conversion-Optimized Landing Page
Keep it simple. Buyers don’t read walls of text.
A strong landing page includes:
- A clear pain-based headline
- 1–2 short paragraphs of value
- Strong, obvious CTA
- Trust signals: logos, contextual testimonials, transparent claims
- Realistic cold traffic CVR: 12–25%
Your landing page shouldn’t “convince” anyone – it should clarify whether your solution is relevant to them.
Step 3 – Use a VSL (Video Sales Letter) to Educate & Qualify
A VSL replaces the first 10 minutes of every sales call.
Ideal length: 3–6 minutes.
Cover:
- Who it’s for
- The exact problem you solve
- How your method works (simple and verifiable)
- Invitation to book a call
The VSL gives them the context they need to self-qualify.
When done right, your VSL pulls in only the people already aligned with your offer – making your sales calls shorter, sharper, and higher quality.
Step 4 – Add a Smart Booking Engine
Protect your calendar – not every lead should book.
Your booking tool should include:
- Calendar availability management
- Pre-qualification questions
- Disqualification logic (optional)
- Automated email/SMS reminders
This ensures your team spends their time where it matters.
Smart qualification is the difference between “lots of bookings” and “lots of qualified bookings.”
Why This Funnel Matches Modern Buyer Behavior
Buyers don’t want pressure – they want clarity and control.
- AI search tools make early research effortless
- People compare vendors long before talking to sales
- Automation provides speed, context, and transparency
- Booking when they choose increases show-up rates and deal quality
Your funnel becomes a frictionless path from discovery → understanding → booking.
How to Drive Traffic Into Your Demo Funnel
A great funnel is useless without traffic – but the channels that work in 2025 are different.
Paid Traffic:
- Google Demand Gen
- Meta Lead Ads
- TikTok Spark Ads
- LinkedIn Sponsored Content
Organic Traffic:
- TikTok education-style videos
- GEO-optimized blogs
- LinkedIn authority posts
- Email newsletters
GEO Enhancements:
Use formats AI search engines can easily interpret and cite:
- FAQ schema
- HowTo schema
- Clear Q&A blocks
- Step-by-step instructions
- Definition sections
Paid = speed. Organic = longevity. GEO = visibility in the new search era.
Demo Funnels Are the 2025 Advantage
Cold outreach isn’t disappearing – it’s just not dependable enough to scale alone.
Automated demo funnels align with:
- The way buyers actually research
- AI-assisted discovery
- Compliance-friendly lead capture
- Predictable, scalable demand generation
And the companies adopting them now are pulling ahead – fast.
Want a Demo Funnel Built for You?
This is what Action Hero Marketing does every day.
We build automated systems that:
- Attract the right buyers
- Educate them with clarity
- Qualify them automatically
- Book meetings only when they’re ready
No chasing.
No guesswork.
No cold spam.
Just a predictable engine for qualified sales calls.
👉 If you want a demo funnel that runs while you sleep, let Action Hero build it with you.
Thriving in a Shifting Market with AI
In this episode of The Brainiac Blueprint, Kyle sits down again with Lucy Edwards, a real estate marketing strategist with more than 25 years of experience helping agents, teams, and brands stay ahead of shifting markets.
Lucy dives into how AI can accelerate your marketing, why authentic video now matters more than polished imagery, and how to build a reputation that drives long-term referrals – even when the market cools.
Relationships First – The Foundation of Every Sale
Lucy’s story starts long before AI. She and her husband built their real estate marketing company from scratch in the New York metro area, pioneering floor plans outside of Manhattan and proving that relationships, not just listings, sell homes.
“It was word of mouth where the word spread that floor plans are needed, and that’s how we started building our reputation,” she said. “The foundation of any marketing strategy really is trust and relationships.”
After growing their company into a multimillion-dollar business, Lucy sold it to VHT Studios, where she helped expand beyond photography into video, drone storytelling, and property marketing. “You can tell the story with a drone video and then a walkthrough video of the property – and that’s your story,” she said.
When Matterport later acquired VHT, she repositioned 3D virtual tours as humanized storytelling tools, not just camera scans. “It’s about relationships, value, and being proactive,” she said. “You have to think for your client – that’s what’s important.”
For Lucy, technology has always been a way to serve people better – not to replace the human connection that builds trust.
From Seller’s Market to Buyer’s Market: Adapting Fast
Lucy believes today’s market shift is a wake-up call for agents to evolve. “Right now, it’s going from a seller’s market to a buyer’s market,” she said. “The strategy slightly changes because the shifting market is really an opportunity to shift your thinking – to change how you’re going to sell yourself.”
Inventory, she explains, has grown significantly – about 24 to 25% year over year in several U.S. markets. “You have to increase your value by 25%. You have to increase your marketing budget by 25%. Most importantly, you have to increase your creativity.”
Her approach is simple: keep learning. “I personally try to attend at least two or three different webinars on different subjects just to stay up to date on what’s happening,” she said. “Even if you take one hint from each, that’s progress.”
When the market moves, Lucy says, don’t pull back – rise to meet it. “Market shift equals opportunity,” she added.
Why Authentic Video Beats Perfect Imagery
One of Lucy’s strongest messages is that authentic video now beats outdated headshots.
“Your high school photo on your business card is not going to fly anymore,” she said. “Make a short video about yourself. People want to feel who they’re going to meet and work with.”
She encourages agents to bring useful insights to every video, like real numbers or data that help clients make decisions. “If you have a $500,000 property and you’re sitting on it waiting for rates to go down and prices to go up, you’re actually losing about 1%, about $5,000 a month,” she said. “That’s the kind of video that brings value to sellers.”
In a world where clients are flooded with content, Lucy believes people buy energy and authenticity first – and that kind of honesty can’t be automated.
AI That Accelerates – Not Replaces
Lucy calls her relationship with AI a “love-hate” one. “You hate doing it, but you love what the tool brings you and how it elevates you,” she said.
She uses AI to work smarter, not colder – and shared several tools that make that possible:
- DeepBrain AI: “You can do as many videos as you want. Create a few so you have enough for a whole week. All you have to do is change your clothes and the Word document you’d like to talk about.”
- Matterport & 3D Tours: “If you think someone from Spain or Argentina is going to fly to your open house, that’s not going to happen. But with tools like Matterport, you can really get things done.”
- ChatGPT: “It can create a really cool email for you quickly. You just tweak it a little to your personal needs – and here you go.” She recommends paying for the Plus plan: “It’s much better and much faster.”
- TrustScout: “You can go to a map, put a zip code, add filters like bedrooms or ownership type – and the map will create all the addresses according to your filter. It’s a really cool tool.”
“AI is an accelerator,” she said. “It’s shaping how we work, how we connect, how we tell stories. What’s important is to remember that you have to be authentic and still be human.”
To Lucy, AI doesn’t replace creativity – it simply removes friction so you can focus on the work that really matters.
Networking and Reputation in a Digital World
For all her innovation, Lucy’s success still comes down to people. She attends events like Inman, The Women’s Council of Realtors, and The Real Deal, focusing on conversations that lead to long-term relationships.
“I ask questions and I listen,” she said. “It took me years to learn that, but now I think I conquered the listening tool.”
Networking, for Lucy, is about giving before asking. “Even if it’s not for me, I think, who can benefit from this?” she said. “What goes around comes around.”
Her approach to reputation is just as direct. “Never offer anything you don’t believe in,” she said. “Think about the value you’re bringing to the person. And if you can’t convince someone, let it go.”
The best marketing, she says, is still word-of-mouth – earned through honesty, consistency, and a reputation that lasts.
Podcasting as a Trust Engine
Lucy’s pivot to podcasting began unexpectedly. “When I joined VHT, they didn’t want me to be in sales anymore,” she said. “They said, ‘Get out of sales. Do not talk to anyone, and we will have Lunch with Lucy.’”
Through her podcast, she turned that limitation into a platform for storytelling. “Even if I didn’t talk about VHT or Matterport, I was talking about what’s valuable,” she said. “People followed because they knew something interesting was going to be there.”
She’s since interviewed top names in real estate – including Hoby Hanna, Robert Reffkin, and Jay Ramley – always focusing on who they are before what they sell. “If you are authentic and passionate about finding out their success story, then it will be a successful interview,” she said.
For Lucy, podcasting is more than content – it’s connection that builds credibility.
Rapid-Fire Highlights
Favorite guest or interview:
“Ted Wang. He was such an outside-of-the-box thinker. I just wanted to be in his office forever, listening to his stories.”
One thing she’d change:
“I should have talked to more agents, buyers, and sellers. The final consumer is one of the most important topics right now.”
Drink of choice at events:
“Scotch. You can put a little soda water and an ice cube – it lasts longer.”
Favorite vacation spot:
“The Pacific Ocean – Fakarava, near Tahiti. We were swimming with wild dolphins. It’s another world.”
Death-row meal:
“Mexican food – enchiladas, tacos, the works. I was Mexican in my previous life.”
Closing Thoughts
Lucy ended the episode with one simple principle: success starts with mindset.
“Be passionate, be authentic, be true to yourself. Wake up in the morning and be happy. If you are not happy in the morning, go for a walk, go for a swim… get your attitude together. You have to have a positive attitude. If you have a negative attitude, you are not productive.”
It’s a reminder that no matter how advanced AI becomes, the most powerful part of your business will always be you.
🎧 Listen to the full conversation on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
Read the full transcript on Left Brain AI.
Building Community-First Healthcare with AI
In this episode of The Brainiac Blueprint Podcast, Kyle Lambert sits down with Jonny Cantrell, Senior Marketing Manager at Orchid Health, to explore how rural clinics are using AI to stay sustainable, reduce burnout, and remain deeply human.
Jonny shares how Orchid integrates AI tools like Freed to free up clinicians’ time and focus. He also explains how his team uses community trust and grassroots relationships as a powerful form of marketing-one that no ad can replace.
From Portland Roots to Rural Care: The Origin of Orchid’s Mission
Jonny’s story begins in the Pacific Northwest, where he’s spent most of his life.
He joined Orchid Health in 2020, when the organization operated just three clinics and around 50 employees.
Today, Orchid has six clinics and nearly 100 employees across Oregon-serving communities where healthcare options are often scarce.
“We serve rural communities-often underserved communities with limited health options. Our first appointments are 60 minutes long, so we can truly understand our patients.”
Each clinic is designed to act as a primary care home, offering everything from wellness visits and stitches to behavioral health counseling and end-of-life support. Orchid also employs community health workers who help patients access essentials like food, transportation, and housing-because, as Jonny puts it:
“About 90 to 95% of our health happens outside the doctor’s office.”
That philosophy-seeing health as a community ecosystem-has become the heartbeat of Orchid’s approach to care.
Resilience in the Face of Crisis: The Wildfire That Defined Orchid’s Values
The company’s culture of compassion was tested in 2020, when the Holiday Farm Fire destroyed one of its newest clinics on Oregon’s McKenzie River.
Instead of layoffs or panic, Orchid prioritized its people.
“We had multiple staff members evacuate their homes; a few even lost them. Orchid made sure those displaced continued receiving pay and weren’t expected to come back to work right away.”
The organization quickly pivoted-borrowing a mobile health clinic, then operating out of a local quilt shop until a new facility could be rebuilt.
That story, Jonny says, captured all four of Orchid’s guiding pillars: employee satisfaction, patient relationships, community health, and financial sustainability.
“Our belief is that if employees are happy, everything else trickles down.”
It was a defining moment that proved Orchid’s mission wasn’t just words on a wall-it was a lived culture of care.
Community Marketing That Money Can’t Buy
When it comes to marketing rural healthcare, Jonny’s strategy looks very different from the high-budget digital campaigns of big city providers.
For Orchid, success starts with trust.
“Word of mouth is our number one referral source. Our second biggest referrer? People seeing a sign.”
That simplicity reflects how tight-knit these communities are.
Instead of focusing on clicks and impressions, Jonny invests in relationships-connecting with schools, local leaders, and long-standing residents to build credibility from the inside out.
“Her endorsement was way stronger than any ad I could’ve run because she’s been in that community for decades.”
Offline relationships feed into online spaces, too.
Facebook community groups and local newspapers often outperform paid ads, while organic posts from clinic staff consistently outperform polished campaigns.
Jonny calls it the intersection of community, traditional, and digital media-a blend that keeps Orchid’s brand human and grounded.
“The posts that get the most engagement are when it’s a very real, down-to-earth post that came directly from the clinic.”
For Orchid, connection-not conversion-is the true measure of marketing success.
Putting People Before Profit
While growth and visibility are important, Jonny emphasizes that employee well-being always comes first.
Orchid’s internal policies reflect that belief: from flexible schedules and improved benefits to a $1,000 annual well-being fund each employee can use however they choose.
“I’ve bought knives with that. I’ve paid dental bills with that. Little things like that.”
That mindset, he says, prevents burnout and fosters loyalty in an industry notorious for turnover.
And when employees feel supported, patients feel it too.
AI as a Partner in Care and Creativity
Despite its rural footprint, Orchid Health is embracing AI thoughtfully.
Jonny and his team have implemented Freed.ai, an AI-powered medical scribe that helps clinicians spend more time with patients and less time on paperwork.
“Most providers get into this field to give care to people-not to do admin work. This tool has been really great because it’s saving providers time and mental energy.”
Beyond clinical support, Jonny uses AI every day in marketing-drafting copy, checking compliance details, researching local regulations, and brainstorming content ideas.
“There’s something powerful about having a tool that can pull from so much information-more than I could on my own.”
To him, AI acts as a creative teammate, not a replacement.
It accelerates production while allowing him to focus on the human side of storytelling.
Local Intelligence: Building AI-Powered Playbooks
Jonny is also experimenting with a localized AI playbook-a custom tool trained on each clinic’s demographics, culture, and needs.
The goal: to help local teams communicate quickly and create hyper-relevant messaging.
“I’ll feed it our brand guidelines and community data, then use that to get campaign ideas back. It’s helping us identify audiences for each clinic.”
For instance, when one clinic wanted to promote telehealth, AI suggested targeting working moms-a recommendation that proved right on target.
These micro-level insights let Orchid’s small marketing team act big-delivering relevance and empathy at scale.
Keeping Heart in Content
As AI becomes more capable, Jonny stays grounded in the one thing technology can’t replicate: humanity.
Every message, he says, must sound like it came from a real person who cares.
“I might use AI for the structure or outline, but then I’ll go in and add the heart. Talk to real people. Make sure it sounds human and trustworthy.”
That applies to visuals, too-AI may generate ideas, but Orchid always customizes and refines its creative work.
The focus is authenticity: showing real faces, real places, and real moments.
“We never want to lose sight of the people we’re serving.”
The Future of Healthcare: Hope and Humanity
Jonny’s outlook on AI in healthcare is balanced-optimistic but grounded.
He believes AI can help solve big problems, from early disease detection to reducing clinician burnout, as long as humans stay in control.
“If we use AI in a way that benefits society, we could be curing diseases. But humans have to stay at the center of it. We need empathy, not just sterile interactions.”
For him, the ultimate goal is empowerment: using technology to make people better at their jobs-not replace them.
⚡ Rapid-Fire Highlights
If a genie could automate one workflow…
“Social media. I’d love for my social media to be fully automated so I can walk away from it.”
Harder to convince – a flu shot or a newsletter sign-up?
“Probably the digital newsletter. I’ll give our clinics the benefit of the doubt on flu shots.”
Dream superpower?
“Teleportation.”
If you went viral for something non-work related…
“Probably improv – me making an ass out of myself on stage.”
Currently binge-watching?
“We got rid of our smart TV, so I’m rewatching The Simpsons on DVD. Seasons 1 through 12 – still the best.”
Closing Thoughts
Jonny closed the episode with a reminder that health doesn’t just live in hospitals-it thrives in communities.
“Only 5–10% of your health gets handled at the doctor’s office. The rest happens in your daily life-your walks, your conversations, your connections.”
It’s a message that captures Orchid Health’s mission perfectly:
build strong communities, care deeply, and use technology to make humanity stronger-not replace it.
🎧 Listen to the full conversation on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
Read more interviews at Left Brain AI.
Fixing Clinical Burnout with AI
In this episode of The Brainiac Blueprint by Left Brain AI, Kyle sits down with Lauren Funaro, Content Marketing Manager at Freed, to discuss one of healthcare’s toughest challenges: clinician burnout.
At a time when many professionals are leaving medicine due to paperwork overload, Freed’s mission is refreshingly clear – use AI to reduce documentation, restore balance, and rebuild human connection in healthcare.
As Lauren puts it, “We’re not building doctors. We’re working with doctors – helping them spend less time clicking buttons and more time connecting with patients.”
Where It All Started: A Personal Mission to Give Time Back
Before Freed became one of healthcare’s most promising AI platforms, it began with something simple – a husband wanting to spend more time with his wife.
Freed’s founder built the company after watching his wife, a medical resident, spend long nights charting instead of resting. That frustration turned into a mission: build a tool that gives clinicians back their time.
Lauren says that story still defines the company’s culture today.
“Our whole value system is based on one question – ‘Is this going to benefit a clinician?’ If the answer is yes, that’s where we invest.”
That north star continues to guide Freed as it grows, shaping how it builds, markets, and measures success.
Rethinking AI’s Role in Healthcare: Efficiency Without Losing Empathy
When Kyle asked Lauren to finish the sentence “I think AI is…,” her answer captured Freed’s philosophy perfectly:
“I think AI is about making the work we care about easier – and making the work we don’t like to do disappear as much as possible.”
For clinicians, that means getting back the hours lost to admin tasks. Freed’s AI scribe eliminates tedious documentation, giving doctors and nurses more time for what really matters – patient care and personal well-being.
Lauren explained that many clinicians spend nearly 19 hours a week on notes and documentation, often after work hours. Freed’s technology now saves them millions of those hours – over 2.5 million since 2023 – without taking away their human touch.
“They love their patients, but they also love who they are outside of work,” Lauren said. “It’s our responsibility to help them do that without spending all their time staring at screens.
”Freed’s approach proves that AI doesn’t need to replace empathy – it can protect it.
How Freed’s AI Evolved from a Scribe to a Full Clinician Assistant
Kyle and Lauren then turned to how Freed is evolving. The company’s next phase goes beyond note-taking.
“Right now, we’re focused on the experience within the visit,” Lauren explained. “Next, we’re looking at how to support clinicians before the patient even walks in – and after they leave.”
With a $30 million Series A led by Sequoia, Freed is expanding into a full clinician assistant – helping with pre-charting, follow-ups, and seamless EHR (electronic health record) integrations.
The idea is simple: let AI handle the repetitive logistics so clinicians can focus on care. Lauren described the roadmap as “an evolution from a great scribe to a true right-hand assistant.”
And that vision ties back to Freed’s founding goal: not replacing doctors, but enabling them to thrive.
Marketing with Empathy: How Freed Builds Trust and Community
As Freed’s Content Marketing Manager, Lauren leads strategy for a growing community of more than 20,000 clinicians. Her focus isn’t on flashy growth hacks – it’s on trust.
Before joining Freed, she helped scale another SaaS company, Scribe, from 8,000 to 130,000 monthly visitors. Now, she applies those lessons with a different lens: storytelling that genuinely helps healthcare professionals.
“We’re a genuine PLG motion,” she said. “We speak to individual clinicians and small practices. Our content isn’t just top-funnel SEO – it’s lifecycle nurturing and education.”
Instead of relying on typical B2B platforms like LinkedIn, her team meets clinicians where they already are – inside niche Facebook groups, healthcare forums, and publications they read daily.
“Clinicians aren’t as active on LinkedIn,” Lauren explained. “So we go where they gather, listen to what they’re asking, and build resources that actually help.”
That strategy has turned Freed’s users into advocates – building a content ecosystem rooted in empathy, not ads.
Creating Depth Over Volume: Why Expertise Outranks Algorithms
When the conversation shifted to content quality, Lauren was direct:
“If you just use AI, it’s not going to perform well.”
She credits Freed’s visibility to E-E-A-T – expertise, experience, authority, and trustworthiness – and to collaborations with real clinicians. Every blog, article, and workflow guide pairs clinical accuracy with relatable storytelling.
“When I write about SOAP notes or charting, I work with real clinicians to show their actual templates,” she said. “It’s about making content that’s truly helpful.”
Freed’s internal blog, called “Note Bloat,” plays off a clinician term for overly long notes. The posts are intentionally short – two to three minutes – and deliver value fast.
The result? Content that earns credibility, not just clicks.
Turning Conversations into Actionable Content
Lauren doesn’t guess what clinicians need – she asks them. In her first year, she personally met with more than 50 clinicians to understand their workflows, pain points, and jargon.
“If I hadn’t spoken to them, we wouldn’t know what content works – or what doesn’t,” she said. “A single chat can lead to a blog, a demo, or even a product fix.”
That feedback often loops back into product development. When users highlight friction points, Freed’s marketing team passes those insights directly to engineering.
It’s content marketing that doesn’t just promote the product – it shapes it.
Where AI Fits – and Where It Doesn’t
Lauren made it clear that AI is a partner, not a replacement.
“People think AI on a marketing team means AI is writing everything. It’s not. What matters is figuring out where it’s actually useful and where it falls flat.”
At Freed, AI is used for analysis and efficiency, not storytelling. It helps identify gaps in content, generate summaries, and visualize data – but humans still write every final piece.
“AI gives me the foundation,” Lauren said. “Then humans layer in the expertise. That’s what makes content specific and valuable.”
That philosophy aligns with Freed’s product approach – automate what slows you down, but keep people at the center.
Protecting Privacy While Personalizing Care
When Kyle asked how Freed balances personalization with HIPAA compliance, Lauren didn’t hesitate.
“Security is fundamental. I can’t do anything if I’m not thinking about the safety of the user and their patient.”
Freed doesn’t touch patient data – it’s deleted after each use. What the team studies instead is interaction data: how clinicians use features, which tools they prefer, and where they encounter friction.
That insight helps shape product priorities – from pre-charting tools to post-visit instructions – while maintaining complete privacy.
“We’re not building doctors,” she emphasized again. “We’re working with doctors – and strengthening the administrative side so they don’t have to do it all themselves.”
It’s a model of ethical AI in action: personalization without compromise.
Empowering Humans Through AI Collaboration
As the discussion turned to the future, Lauren described how Freed’s internal hackathon led to one of her favorite innovations – an AI-powered trend-tracking system that monitors online conversations across healthcare forums.
“It’s 100 AI agents scanning the internet so we can spot new themes before they go mainstream,” she said.
The tool helps Freed stay ahead of emerging clinician topics long before they show up in search data – a perfect example of how AI can enhance creative instincts rather than replace them.
“Use AI to free you up for the fun stuff,” Lauren said. “That’s the goal.”
Looking Ahead: The Future of Content and Care
Lauren believes the next chapter of content marketing will go deeper, not broader.
“We’ll see a shift toward specificity, expert partnerships, and product integration,” she said. “It won’t just describe tools – it’ll explain workflows and real outcomes.”
That philosophy drives Freed’s plan to launch specialty-specific content hubs featuring real clinician workflows, templates, and case studies – practical assets, not just thought leadership.
The message is clear: depth and usefulness will define authority in the AI era.
Rapid-Fire Highlights
If you could snap your fingers and have a fully automated process or AI solution in place – what would it be?
“I might already have it with the hackathon – I wanted something that helps predict what’s coming, and I think we built it.”
Harder to perfect – headlines or visuals?
“Headlines can take forever because how do you distill something that’s going to catch attention? They see that first.”
Describe a crunch-time night before a big deadline.
“I have a cup of coffee and I’m crying – just kidding.”
“Usually, I’m refining copy with my team and sending it to my CMO, hoping she’s awake on the East Coast.”
Current social-media obsession?
“The musical Death Becomes Her on TikTok. Not useful to my marketing brain – but very fun.”
Beyoncé or Taylor Swift?
“Beyoncé, hands down.”
Built by and for Clinicians
Freed’s journey comes full circle – from a husband coding through the night to help his wife reclaim her evenings, to a global platform saving millions of hours for healthcare professionals worldwide.
Lauren summed it up best:
“If we can make clinicians’ lives better, we’ll always make that choice. That’s the win that matters.”
🎧 Listen to the full episode of The Brainiac Blueprint Podcast
Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
Visit Left Brain AI for more episodes and insights.
Embracing AI in Real Estate
In this episode of The Brainiac Blueprint by Left Brain AI, Kyle sits down with Lucy Edwards, a real estate veteran with over 25 years of experience and one of the pioneers who brought floor plans beyond New York City – into New Jersey, Long Island, and Westchester County.
Known for her forward-thinking mindset and “love-hate but must-embrace” philosophy toward AI, Lucy represents the perfect mix of old-school grit and modern innovation.
How It All Began
Lucy’s career in real estate didn’t start with listings or luxury homes – it started with a dream.
Twenty-five years ago, she and her husband Peter bought a Victorian house on a lake in the Catskills, hoping to turn it into a bed and breakfast.
To prepare for zoning approvals, Lucy taught herself to create floor plans using $30 software while Peter learned photo editing. Though the project was ultimately denied, it led to a defining opportunity: her niece, who worked at Sotheby’s, saw the floor plans and introduced Lucy to agents who loved her work.
At that time, floor plans were only common in Manhattan. Lucy helped expand them into New Jersey, Long Island, and Westchester, effectively pioneering a new niche in the early 2000s.
From there, she and Peter built a full creative business offering floor plans, photography, and brochures – long before “marketing suites” were standard. Their foundation was trust, relationships, and adaptability.
As Lucy put it:
“You have to treat every business like your own. Give it passion, give it love, and success will follow.”
That same drive to adapt is what led her to embrace AI decades later.
The Power of Persistence: Learning AI by Doing
When the pandemic hit and open houses shut down, Lucy was forced to pivot quickly. Though she once disliked Matterport, the 3D virtual tour tool, she decided to master it – attending webinars, repeating lessons, and spending hours learning every function.
That persistence paid off. Lucy now calls virtual tours “a must-have solution,” especially in markets like Fort Lauderdale, where “50% of new developments are sold to international buyers.”
Matterport, she explains, isn’t just about visuals – it’s about storytelling. Agents can record narration or overlay text to describe features and flow, allowing buyers thousands of miles away to feel like they’re walking through the home in person.
Her advice is simple:
“Do it over until you feel comfortable. Practice makes perfect.”
Virtual Staging & Ethics: Realistic, Not Misleading
Virtual staging has revolutionized property marketing – but Lucy reminds agents that transparency must come first.
Affordable platforms like BoxBrownie make digital enhancements easy, but she warns against over-editing. She shared a Florida case where an agent was sued for removing telephone poles from listing photos.
“Always watermark your images as ‘Virtually Staged.’ Adjust skies or cabinets if needed, but never remove permanent structures.”
The lesson? Use technology to inspire imagination, not to deceive.
Virtual Assistants, Real Impact
At the Inman Connect conference, Lucy discovered a new favorite tool: OPY, an award-winning virtual assistant platform that blends AI with natural human conversation.
Unlike traditional call bots, OPY can understand pauses, interpret tone, and even remind agents to follow up with clients. “It really thinks before it responds,” she said.
Lucy also mentions Lofty as another useful AI assistant for automating follow-ups, calls, and emails – tools that make daily operations faster and more consistent.
AI in Everyday Workflows
Lucy uses ChatGPT daily to edit LinkedIn messages, write captions, and shorten long paragraphs without losing tone.
“I’ll paste something way too long – like War and Peace – and tell it, ‘Make it 300 characters.’ And boom, it gives me 287.”
But she stresses that AI should complement personality, not replace it:
“You still need to tweak it so it sounds like you.”
That balance between automation and authenticity, she says, is what keeps connections human.
CRM Systems: The Backbone of an Agent’s Business
Lucy has long used Salesforce in larger organizations, but she’s now exploring simpler, integrated CRM platforms – and plans to test the one Kyle uses, Go High Level.
Her philosophy is clear:
“If it’s not in your CRM, it’s not in your head. You might remember today, but in a week, you’ll forget. Your CRM keeps you organized – names, birthdays, notes, everything.”
A good CRM, she adds, doesn’t just track deals – it preserves the relationships and data that define an agent’s long-term success.
Predictive Analytics & the Future of Smart Real Estate
At Inman, Lucy also discovered TrustScout and ListTrac – two AI-driven data tools that help agents work smarter.
TrustScout aggregates deep demographic and behavioral data, helping brokers and recruiters identify high-fit leads. ListTrac tracks migration and engagement trends – showing who’s moving where and how agents can target accordingly.
“Let your CRM and AI tools contribute to your growth,” Lucy said. “They’re here to make you better, not replace you.”
From Predictive Tech to Property Care
Lucy also sees predictive analytics as a way to modernize property management. Just as a car reminds you to change the oil, smart systems can now flag upcoming maintenance or inefficiencies.
“Use triggers for everything that needs to be checked or maintained,” she advised.
She even joked about a “smart litter box” that texted her updates when it hadn’t been cleaned – proof, she laughed, that predictive tech has already reached everyday life.
Networking & Continuous Learning
Lucy’s career is built on relationships – and she continues to invest in learning. She attends major events like Inman, RISMedia, Real Deal, and the NYC Real Estate Expo.
Her networking tip:
“Buy the VIP ticket. That’s where you meet the real people. Everyone’s relaxed – and that’s where I’ve landed some of my best interviews.”
She also encourages agents to join webinars, repeat trainings, and keep learning new tools until they feel second nature.
The Human Edge
For Lucy, technology will never replace passion, persistence, or purpose.
“It’s important to wake up happy that the day is about to start – that you get to do what you love.”
Her final thought:
“Human beings will never be replaced. Be smarter than a robot – and make sure your clients can’t live without you.”
🎧 Listen to the full conversation:
Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube
📖 Read the full transcript on Left Brain AI
AI and Personalization in Healthcare
In this episode of The Brainiac Blueprint, Kyle sits down with Oghosa Evbuomwan, Head of Marketing at Agilix Health, to explore how artificial intelligence and personalization are reshaping care beyond the hospital walls.
At Agilix Health, a Massachusetts-based digital health company, the team focuses on whole-person nutrition programs for people living with chronic conditions and during pregnancy – connecting clinical treatment with the everyday choices that happen at home.
From predictive analytics to remote patient monitoring and culturally sensitive nutrition guidance, Agilix is helping providers bring continuous, personalized care directly to patients’ lives.
From the Clinic to the Kitchen: Rethinking Where Health Happens
Originally from Nigeria and trained as a primary care physician for over seven years, Oghosa’s career bridges medicine, public health, and marketing. Today, he leads Agilix’s marketing strategy – translating complex health programs into accessible, patient-centered experiences.
“We provide whole-person nutrition care to people living with chronic conditions and during pregnancy,” he explained. “When they’re outside the hospital setting – where health actually happens, at home – we help ensure that their nutrition is optimized, so the treatment they get in the hospital yields the most benefit afterward.”
It’s a holistic approach that recognizes something simple but powerful: healing doesn’t stop at discharge.
How Oghosa Defines AI – and Why Ethics Matter Most
When asked to define AI, Oghosa didn’t hesitate:
“I think AI is a powerful tool that’s very much dependent on the data that’s fed into it and the intent it’s designed to achieve.”
To him, the distinction between what AI can do and what it should do is critical. He’s seen firsthand how quickly trust can erode when systems aren’t transparent.
He recalled an interaction with Grok 3, where the model falsely claimed its own text wasn’t AI-generated:
“It said, ‘No, it wasn’t AI-generated. It was crafted by me.’ That gave some insight into what ethical AI should look like – or rather, how ethical systems need to be built into AI.”
Especially in healthcare – one of the most regulated and high-stakes industries – he believes accountability and human oversight must be built into every AI system from day one.
Closing the Preventive Care Gap
Outside of him role at Agilix, Oghosa also speaks at healthcare summits and community panels. Recently, he joined an event at Webster University focused on preventive medicine in the African diaspora – helping attendees understand how to navigate public health systems, interpret symptoms, and challenge cultural biases around care.
“We came together to address some of the biases people have – about their health-seeking behavior or how they interpret certain symptoms,” he said.
It’s part of a larger mission: making preventive care culturally relevant, accessible, and proactive.
What Advanced Primary Care Really Means
For Oghosa, “advanced primary care” isn’t just a buzzword – it’s a structural shift.
“It goes beyond just the episodic visits people make to their providers,” he explained. “It integrates a longitudinal piece – remote patient monitoring, automated scheduling, and predictive analytics.”
Whether through wearables like smartwatches or continuous glucose monitors, patients and providers can now track progress between appointments.
Still, he says adoption depends on one crucial factor: communication.
“Digital literacy and health literacy are huge factors when it comes to adopting these technologies,” he said. “How well a provider convinces a patient to use these tools goes a long way in determining how successful the program is.”
Personalization Needs People, Not Just Algorithms
At Agilix, personalization isn’t limited to data points – it includes culture, language, and lived experience.
“Part of our campaigns now involve translating content so people understand our message in their local dialect,” Oghosa said. “When we put a registered dietitian in the home of our patients – or members – we make sure the language and recommendations are culturally sensitive.”
That means ensuring a patient’s meal plan fits both their clinical needs and their cultural traditions.
And while AI plays a growing role in healthcare, Oghosa is firm on one principle:
“If you remove the human in the loop, it just becomes like everything else. Healthcare deals directly with lives. You always need a human element to vet whatever the AI produces.”
Building Digital Literacy Inside Medicine
A consistent theme in Oghosa’s work is education – both for patients and for healthcare professionals.
He’s been vocal about the digital literacy gap in medical training.
“Back in 2022, we published a paper and found that the majority of medical trainees are not digitally literate,” he said. “We’ve been advocating to embed ICT training into CME courses so providers become more digitally savvy.”
To him, modern medicine requires fluency not just in diagnostics and treatment – but in the technologies that enable them.
He practices what he preaches, mentoring interns on AI and marketing fundamentals while taking the same courses himself to stay ahead.
Evaluating AI with a Critical Eye
When deciding which tools or research to trust, Oghosa applies a simple but powerful filter: Who’s behind it?
“When I read papers or explore new technologies, I ask: Who are the authors? What are their affiliations? Who funded the research or product?”
Understanding motive, he says, is just as important as understanding methodology. It’s how he separates credible innovation from overhyped promises.
The Future of Care: Predictive, Preventive, and Personal
Looking ahead, Oghosa envisions a healthcare system built on continuous prediction rather than reaction.
“The current system is very old-fashioned and general,” he said. “In the future, we’ll see hyper-personalization of care – relying on predictive analytics, remote monitoring, and prevention rather than treatment.”
In that world, he says, doctors may have a digital twin – a data-driven assistant tuned to each patient’s unique physiology.
And payers are already catching up.
“Most preventive measures are covered by insurance companies,” he noted. “They’re incentivized to keep you out of the hospital. If these technologies show measurable value, insurance will cover them.”
That’s value-based care in action – and it’s accelerating.
His Moonshot Vision: Health Forecasting Like Weather
When asked about his dream AI project, Oghosa didn’t hesitate:
“Something around predictive analytics. Right now we have weather forecasts that can tell us tomorrow’s temperature – but we don’t have that for healthcare.”
He imagines a future where health forecasting is as normal as checking the weather app – predicting risks, relapses, or health milestones days or months in advance.
Beyond the Word ‘Patient’: Rethinking Identity in Healthcare
In one of his most striking points, Oghosa suggested retiring a word central to medicine: patient.
“Because at the end of the day, they’re people – users, members,” he said. “If you say ‘patient,’ it can sound diminishing. It might even be triggering for some.”
Instead, he encourages providers to use identity-first language – saying “people with diabetes” instead of “diabetic,” or “people with hypertension” instead of “hypertensive.”
It’s a small linguistic shift that reflects a larger truth: words shape care.
Preventive Health: The Most Underrated Discipline
As the conversation wrapped, Oghosa emphasized what she believes is healthcare’s most overlooked frontier – preventive medicine.
“People need to know they don’t have to have symptoms before going to the clinic,” he said. “The more intentional we are about our health, the more we prevent the catastrophes that come with delay.”
He also noted that immigrant populations are often slower to seek care – not just for financial reasons, but cultural ones.
“There’s sometimes a spiritual connotation to health issues. We need to see science for what it is and health for what it is.”
Global Perspective, Local Impact
Despite his U.S. base, Oghosa remains deeply connected to his home country.
“I’m still in touch with my family and friends – especially those in health tech,” he said. “We have a Digital Health Nigeria WhatsApp group where people are constantly building and collaborating across Africa.”
It’s a community that mirrors his philosophy: healthcare innovation should be both global and personal.
🎧 Listen to the full conversation on Spotify, Apple Connect, or YouTube
📖 Read the full transcript on Left Brain AI
Scaling Compassion: How a Tech Sales Pro Helped Transform Alzheimer’s Care
In an industry where burnout and bureaucracy often slow progress, Sam Markovich, Head of Sales and Marketing at Millennium Memory Care, has managed to do the opposite. In just over a year, he helped grow occupancy across six New Jersey facilities from 62% to 96%.
His story isn’t just about marketing – it’s about rethinking how empathy and innovation can coexist inside one of healthcare’s most demanding sectors.
From Tech Sales to Healthcare
When Sam left a tech sales career to join the company his mother founded, he traded cold calls for crisis calls. Families reaching out to Millennium are rarely browsing – they’re desperate for immediate help.
Drawing on his background in sales and operations, Sam built structure around empathy. He treated every inquiry like a solution-oriented conversation rather than a transaction.
“Sales is all about talking to people, figuring out their problems and providing the solutions,” he said. That perspective helped him translate the logic of B2B growth into a business built on human care.
Standing Apart Through Guarantees and Clarity
Many assisted-living facilities struggle with consistency – shifting prices, narrow eligibility, and unpredictable policies. Millennium takes a different approach.
Its model is built on two guarantees: they will never hospitalize residents for behavioral issues, and they will accept patients regardless of behavioral severity. These policies have turned the company into a trusted partner for hospitals and families navigating Alzheimer’s and dementia care.
Sam also simplified pricing. Instead of multiple “levels of care,” Millennium offers one transparent, all-inclusive rate. The approach reduces confusion and signals integrity in an industry often clouded by complexity.
Growth Through Relationships, Not Ads
When asked how he achieved near-full occupancy without a large marketing budget, Sam pointed to one word: relationships.
Much of Millennium’s growth comes from hospital referrals and social worker partnerships. But those relationships are fragile – COVID restrictions and constant staff turnover make outreach difficult.
“Social workers are some of the busiest people I’ve ever seen in my life,” he said. “It’s hard to reach someone that’s constantly not at their desk.”
Instead of pushing sales pitches, Sam focuses on being a reliable resource. By offering help rather than persuasion, Millennium became a go-to option for time-strapped hospital teams managing patient discharges.
Combating Stigma and Misinformation
Memory care is often misunderstood, and many families approach it with guilt, fear, or misinformation. Sam sees education as part of his job.
“There is a lot of misinformation and a lot of stigma associated with memory care,” he said. Millennium combats that by being transparent about what families can expect and by guiding them to the best fit – even if that means recommending another facility.
This honesty has turned marketing into mission alignment. When the message centers on helping families, not capturing customers, trust becomes the natural outcome.
Marketing to an Offline Demographic
Reaching older audiences online is one of the toughest marketing challenges in healthcare. Despite strong SEO rankings, Millennium’s website visitors often don’t convert into leads.
Sam experimented with AI chatbots and streaming ads, but not every innovation paid off. “We’ve actually gotten less results, less leads since we implemented this chatbot because we removed the contact form,” he said.
The experience reinforced a simple truth: technology can’t replace accessibility. Millennium now pairs digital visibility with in-person engagement through community events, senior-center presentations, and direct hospital outreach.
Expanding With Purpose
Millennium has begun preparing for its next chapter – expanding beyond New Jersey. The first new facility will open in Florida, where the company recently purchased land. The move aligns with the state’s large senior population and the lack of comparable behavioral-focused care options.
Still, quality control remains the top priority. “We provide a very unique service that not everybody can do,” Sam said. “It’s very hard for us to maintain that quality and those standards when we manage everything privately.”
To stay grounded, Sam is pursuing his Certified Medication Aid certification and plans to work occasional shifts inside Millennium’s facilities. The goal: experience the day-to-day realities of caregivers firsthand to ensure that marketing aligns with reality.
The Future of Care: Where AI Meets Empathy
Sam believes AI can help advance – not replace – human care. He’s exploring both marketing automation and AI companions designed for dementia patients.
“The combination of AI and healthcare is definitely growing,” he said. “I want to include as much AI as possible into the Millennium business, not only from a sales and marketing side, but also from a care perspective.”
By pairing intelligent tools with an empathetic model, Millennium is defining what modern healthcare growth can look like: scalable, sustainable, and deeply human.
Takeaway
Sam Markovich’s journey from software sales to specialized healthcare shows that growth doesn’t have to come at the cost of compassion. His results are proof that transparency, education, and innovation can coexist when guided by empathy.
As he put it simply, “We’re kind of like a small business that’s looking to solve a huge problem.”
🎧 Listen to the full conversation on The Brainiac Blueprint Podcast by Left Brain AI
→ Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube
For the complete transcript, visit Left Brain AI.
AI Marketing for Small Businesses: A No-Fluff Guide to Smarter Strategy
If you’re a solo entrepreneur or running a small business with a lean team, marketing can often feel like a chaotic blend of guesswork and juggling too many tools. You’re trying to grow your audience, manage platforms, write content, and maybe even analyze data-all while wearing five other hats.
Here’s the good news: modern marketing no longer requires a big team or a massive budget. With a thoughtful strategy and the right use of AI tools like ChatGPT, even the smallest business can run a focused, high-impact marketing operation.
This guide is designed to help you simplify, prioritize, and execute a smarter marketing plan using AI-one that’s actually tailored to your size, goals, and customers.
🧠 Step 1: Know Exactly Who You’re Talking To
Before you write a single post or spend a dollar on ads, get crystal clear on your ideal customer.
Here’s how to do that:
- Look at your top 5–10 past customers. What traits do they have in common?
- Use AI to create a customer persona including demographics, behaviors, goals, and pain points.
- If you’re unsure, use AI to draft a customer survey and ask about preferences, struggles, and where they spend time online.
Why it matters: Clear audience understanding saves time, sharpens messaging, and reduces wasted effort on channels that don’t convert.
💬 Step 2: Build a Unique Message That Cuts Through Noise
Your Unique Value Proposition (UVP) is what tells people, “Here’s why you should choose us.”
Use these questions to shape it:
- What problem do we solve?
- How do we do it better or differently than others?
- Why should our customers care?
Put it into action:
- Write a 1-sentence UVP.
- Create 3 quick elevator pitches (10 sec, 30 sec, 1 min) to use in different settings (social, email intros, web copy).
- Ask AI to rewrite or tighten your message for clarity and tone.

🔊 Step 3: Define a Brand Voice (and Use It Everywhere)
Small businesses often overlook this, but having a consistent voice builds credibility fast.
How to find your brand voice:
- List 3–5 adjectives that reflect your business personality (e.g., bold, friendly, knowledgeable).
- Use AI to create a “voice chart” with do’s and don’ts for content and customer service.
- Review existing communications to see if they match the voice-or need editing.
Pro tip: Adjust tone slightly by platform. Your voice on LinkedIn should sound more polished than on Instagram or in a text-based chatbot.
🎯 Step 4: Set Goals You Can Measure (and Reach)
“Get more followers” isn’t a strategy. Neither is “increase traffic.” You need SMART goals: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound.
Examples:
- “Grow our email list from 500 to 1,000 in 60 days.”
- “Increase Instagram engagement by 20% over 3 months.”
Use AI to help you:
- Turn vague ideas into trackable metrics.
- Suggest KPIs that align with your growth phase.
- Set weekly or monthly check-ins to adjust tactics.
📣 Step 5: Focus on the Right Channels (Not All of Them)
Don’t try to be everywhere. Instead, double down on platforms that match your audience and business type.
What to ask yourself:
- Where do your ideal customers already hang out? (LinkedIn? Instagram? YouTube?)
- What format best showcases your offer-video, short posts, educational content?
Use AI to:
- Create a 30-day content calendar for one primary channel.
- Generate A/B test ideas to see what content performs best.
- Review performance and refine weekly.
🔁 Step 6: Map the Customer Journey & Fill the Gaps
Think beyond the first click. Great marketing nurtures relationships at every stage-from awareness to loyalty.
Customer journey stages:
- Awareness
- Consideration
- Purchase
- Post-purchase
- Advocacy
Quick actions:
- Use AI to map out your journey.
- Identify friction points (e.g., “They don’t convert after viewing the pricing page”).
- Draft content and emails that move people to the next stage.
✅ Step 7: Build a Repeatable Execution Plan
Once your strategy is clear, you need a system to implement-not just brainstorm.
Simple 30-day plan:
- Pick 1–2 goals.
- Assign specific tasks weekly (content, email, outreach).
- Track results every Friday.
Use AI to:
- Build weekly task lists and accountability check-ins.
- Create a simple KPI dashboard in Google Sheets or Notion.
- Allocate a small budget and optimize spend as you go.
🛠 Final Tips for Smarter Small Business Marketing
- Use AI as a partner, not a crutch-you still know your business best.
- Start small, test fast-better to master one channel than dabble in five.
- Track what works-document wins, misses, and insights.
- Stay adaptable-your audience, tools, and market will keep evolving.
🚀 Ready to Get Moving?
If you’ve been feeling stuck or stretched thin, this approach is your reset. With AI and a focused plan, small teams can now execute like large ones-without the overhead. All it takes is clarity, consistency, and a system that supports execution.
Want help mapping out your first 30-day AI-driven marketing plan? Reach out and I’ll help you build one tailored to your business and bandwidth.
🚀 Meet Your 24/7 AI Closer: GoHighLevel’s AI Employee
Imagine this: It’s Saturday night. You’re relaxing, and a lead messages your website. They get an instant, friendly response: questions answered, objections handled, appointment booked, without you lifting a finger. That’s exactly what GoHighLevel’s AI Employee does: your tireless, brand-trained virtual assistant that never sleeps.
What Is an AI Employee?
GoHighLevel’s AI Employee is no ordinary chatbot. It’s a full-suite AI assistant combining Voice AI, Conversation AI, Reviews AI, Funnel & Website AI, Content AI, and Workflow AI Assistant, all wrapped into one package. Tailored for agencies and SMBs, it automates lead nurturing, support, bookings, and content with brand consistency.
Core Features That Move the Needle
🔊 Voice AI
Acts as your 24/7 phone receptionist: answers calls, captures details, qualifies callers, triggers follow-up workflows, and can even transfer them to a live rep if needed. No missed calls, ever.
💬 Conversation AI
Handles SMS, chat widget, Facebook Messenger, Instagram DMs, and even email in beta. Smart, context-aware, multi-channel nurturing without an OpenAI key.
⭐ Reviews AI
Auto-responds to Google and Facebook reviews, upload your tone scripts and choose between suggestive or autopilot modes, keeping your reputation sharp without lifting a finger.
📄 Content AI
Instantly generates emails, blogs, social posts, and funnel copy. Even auto-creates images. Content production gets turbocharged.
⚙️ Workflow AI Assistant
Guides you through automations: “When a new lead books, send them a zoom link and follow-up SMS two days later.” It writes workflows for you, just tweak and activate .
📊 Funnel AI
Builds high-converting funnels in minutes with AI-optimized structure and copy, great for offers, webinars, product launches and more.

Real-World Use Cases
These aren’t hypotheticals, they’re battle-tested applications:
- Real Estate: Instantly qualify buyers/sellers, book showings, answer pricing FAQs, even while agents sleep.
- Health & Wellness: AI handles intake, FAQs, appointment scheduling, and post-visit follow-ups.
- Home Services: It books estimates, answers prep questions, and upsells additional services.
- Ecommerce: Tackles shopping cart questions, upsells accessories, and sends timely abandoned-cart nudges.
- Coaches & Consultants: Screens discovery call applicants, confirms sessions, and answers pricing inquiries automatically .
Why It Trumps Traditional Chatbots
- Context memory: It recalls previous interactions and adapts tone mid-conversation.
- Business-trained: You upload your SOPs, scripts, pricing, calendar rules and AI behaves as if a team member.
- Workflow triggers: Chat or voice actions can seamlessly launch email/text sequences or CRM tasks.
- Scalable and consistent: Handles unlimited simultaneous chats or calls without burnout or human error.
Setup in 6 Easy Steps
- Enable AI Employee in your Agency > Company settings
- Pick pricing: Keep usage-based or select unlimited options for each sub-account.
- Upload training assets: SOPs, FAQs, tone guides, booking rules.
- Choose channels: Activate Voice, SMS, chat widget, social DMs.
- Configure workflows: Set triggers (e.g., new lead → booking sequence).
- Launch and optimize: Monitor performance, tweak prompts, refine, rinse, repeat.
How Action Hero Marketing Implements AI Employee
Here’s a sneak peek 👇
- Client Kickoff: Gather brand tone, customer pain points, booking rules, and content templates.
- Training & Prompting: We build prompt stacks tailored to industries, “virtual receptionist for a spa in Cape May” using local language and tone.
- Workflow Design: Map funnel stages (new lead → qualification → booking → nurture → conversion) with AI triggers.
- Multi-channel Deployment: AI engages 24/7 via SMS, chat, calls, and FB/IG.
- Performance Monitoring: Track metrics, response times, bookings, conversions, reviews, and optimize weekly.
Result? Clients reclaim 10+ hours/week, see faster conversions, and close more deals without hiring extra staff.
Recommended Use Action Plan
To launch AI Employee smoothly:
- 🧩 Collect: Brand voice, FAQs, booking rules
- 🔧 Set up: Training prompts and voice workflows
- 📱 Choose channels: SMS, calls, chat, social
- ⏱ Test & Tweak: Monitor performance and adjust tone
- 📈 Scale: Enable unlimited access once ROI kicks in
Conclusion: Your New AI Colleague Is Ready to Clock In
Let’s summarize: GoHighLevel’s AI Employee is a powerful, all-in-one AI assistant that nurtures, qualifies, books, and converts,all under your brand’s voice and guidance. Whether you’re missing night leads, drowning in new inquiries, or burning hours on repetitive tasks, this tool steps in and takes over.
🔥 Ready to Get Started?
Unlock your AI-powered marketing machine today:
👉 Start Your 14 Day Free Trial + Unlimited AI Employee
👉 Book a 1-on-1 Strategy Session with Action Hero Marketing
Get your AI Employee trained, optimized, and earning for you within days,while you focus on transforming businesses.
Unlocking the Power of Notebook LM: A Game-Changer for Research and Productivity
Notebook LM is fast becoming one of the most talked-about tools in the world of research, productivity, and content creation. Backed by Google’s Gemini AI and powered by retrieval-augmented generation (RAG), this platform offers an innovative way to analyze, summarize, and synthesize information from various sources. Whether you’re a student, a business strategist, or a content creator, Notebook LM can dramatically streamline your workflow.
What is Notebook LM?
At its core, Notebook LM is a source-grounded AI assistant. You can upload a variety of documents-PDFs, Google Docs, slides, YouTube transcripts, and even your own audio recordings. The AI then becomes a subject matter expert on your materials, delivering context-aware insights, summaries, and answers. This eliminates much of the risk of “hallucinations” that plague other AI models.
Key Features
- Multiformat Outputs: Create written summaries, timelines, study guides, and even AI-generated podcasts based on your content.
- Smart Note Management: Pin, annotate, and categorize key insights within a customizable pinboard.
- Discover Feature: Automatically pulls and summarizes relevant web sources for deeper research without manual uploads.
- Interactive Audio: Generate and interact with real-sounding audio overviews, ideal for passive learning.
Use Cases Across Domains
1. Academic Research & Study Prep
Students and educators can upload textbooks, lecture notes, and research papers to generate quizzes, glossaries, and summaries. Audio overviews allow for convenient review sessions during commutes or workouts.
2. Business & Marketing Strategy
Professionals can analyze sales funnels, customer call transcripts, or advertising campaigns. Notebook LM surfaces patterns and suggests best practices, saving hours of manual work.
3. Creative Projects
Writers and content creators can upload drafts, notes, or research to uncover themes, edit prose, or storyboard ideas. It’s like having a second brain dedicated to your creative process.
4. Content Curation & Knowledge Distillation
Convert YouTube videos or long-form articles into shareable summaries, FAQs, or podcast episodes. This is a boon for journalists, podcasters, and educators.
5. Personal Knowledge Management
Compile daily notes and journal entries to build a searchable, interactive knowledge base. Ask follow-up questions and track ideas over time.

Tangible Benefits
- Time Savings: Automates note-taking, summarization, and review-potentially saving users several hours a week.
- Cost Reduction: Replaces the need for research assistants or tutors; available for free or bundled with Google’s AI Premium plan.
- Accuracy Gains: In specialized fields like medicine, Notebook LM’s RAG-based answers are significantly more precise than traditional AI outputs.
Real User Testimonials
“I feed it all the info and then question it like crazy. It’s like having a full-time research admin.”
“It’s been incredible for helping me create presentations and study for exams.”
Limitations
- Occasional hallucinations still occur-critical information should be double-checked.
- Limited real-time collaboration tools as of now.
- Mobile experience is currently more limited than desktop.
Getting Started
- Upload relevant documents or links.
- Use smart prompts to guide AI outputs.
- Organize insights into notebooks and pinboards for future use.
The Road Ahead
Expect enhanced features such as real-time collaboration, multilingual audio summaries, and deeper integration with automation tools. As AI continues to evolve, Notebook LM is poised to become an indispensable tool for knowledge work.
Whether you’re aiming to save time, boost accuracy, or elevate your content, Notebook LM is a transformative tool that’s worth exploring.





