Late 2024: AI agencies sold n8n workflows for $2-$5K.
Mid 2025: they pivoted to AI agents for $5-15K.
Today: Claude Code ships in hours what used to take weeks, and most agencies are still pitching 2024's playbook.
I spent 2 months rewriting mine for where we actually are in April 2026.
Inside:
→ The offer closing $25K-$60K projects right now
→ Top 5 industries worth selling to this quarter
→ Content schedule generating my inbound (exact post types + cadence)
→ LinkedIn + cold email sequences booking calls today → My 4-call sales process from first touch to signed
→ The strategy doc + proposal template I'm using to close
→ 3 live client builds my team is shipping this quarter
BONUS: First 100 people also get 2 discovery call recordings from my own sales process.
Like + RT + reply PLAYBOOK and I'll DM you the link. Make sure to follow me so I can DM you.
I mapped every AI automation opportunity across 25 industries.
10-15 pain points each. With the exact positioning, pricing range, and who to sell to.
This took me 4 years and 80+ client engagements to figure out.
A lot of AI agencies pick a niche and pray.
They don't know the actual pain points.
They don't know who the buyer is.
They don't know what these companies are already paying for broken solutions.
They don't know what the realistic project size is.
So they end up competing on price for generic "AI automation" gigs.
I've worked with marketing agencies, recruiting firms, e-commerce brands, law firms, real estate companies, healthcare practices, financial services, SaaS companies, manufacturing, construction, logistics, and more.
Every single one has 10-15 processes that are bleeding money because they're still done manually.
Here's what the guide covers for each industry:
→ The top 10-15 automation pain points (ranked by ROI)
→ Who the actual buyer is (CEO, COO, ops manager, etc.)
→ What they're currently paying for manual labor or broken SaaS
→ Realistic project pricing ($5K-$60K+ depending on scope)
→ The discovery questions that unlock the deal
→ How to position yourself as the expert even if you've never worked in that industry
→ Red flags to avoid (industries and company sizes that aren't worth it)
25 industries and 300+ specific automation opportunities.
This is the cheat code for picking your niche and knowing exactly what to sell before you ever get on a call.
Like + RT + reply "NICHE" and I'll send you the full guide (Must be following so I can DM)
@lukepierceops I’ve been seeing a lot of that. Just straight regurgitated content. I’ve been learning from you and a couple others. What’s funny is actual people with ops and delivery experience can see right through it 😂
@AskEdgarIO Interesting thanks for sharing! I was doing this as a side project as well. Essentially a sentiment tracker, dilution tracker. Question For the API keys, once the free trial period is done, essentially the data pulls stop working correct?
@gregisenberg Why is there a lot of negative sentiment in openclaw security? Is it really as easy as step 10? Are there other risks / caveats between this and your own agent via claudeApi let’s say
@SevenviewSteve@obie hey Steve, / Obie curious when you guys did this whats the primary method of communication? Is it literally typing in the terminal or claudeCode Desktop versus Slack interface / Discord? the openClaw camp is loud
@NoahOmriLevin@obie that was your output from his prompt? there has to be more than that haha looks liek you had it make a wrapper / your own interface?
@ysommer2@obie hi Yoel, did yo udo this via claudeCode api's as well ?Im wondering when Obie talks to it, is it just via terminal and not through any other channel? curious between this and something like OpenClaw (i know theres security concerns there - would love to hear your thoughts via DM
What a time to be alive, all those times you been thinking to yourself "what if this existed" + "what if I can create an app that did x y z". Its becoming more and more possible even if its just your own side project / your own personal version of whatever it is.