I won't put this on LinkedIn because those folks would probably have an aneurysm but....
Everyone is talking about @openclaw
I have been working with AI, and automation tools for 6+ months - Claude, n8n, etc
The tooling available is cool/exciting - and pretty powerful
It won't solve all of your problems and the learning curve is pretty steep
Those that learn it will be able to build cool things and move at a much faster pace than those that don't
The ability to cut 'techy' people that don't understand or care about your business is an exciting concept
(Not an indictment on all of our nerds but those that have worked with development teams understand it isn't always the most fun experience)
Most people are afraid of AI or vehemently dislike it - I've been skeptical at times but I think it is going to lead to a lot of good, all things considered
Watch a team of humanoid robots running a full 8-hr shift at human performance levels. This is fully autonomous running Helix-02 https://t.co/IdZR0T1F5I
Nearly every entry level question at Miami Sellers Conference comes back to this
The person starting has to create small pressure events that lead to little reward
Do this 1000-2000 times and you will acquire all of the skills you need to win more than you lose consistently
External forcing mechanisms
A ton of people need external pressure to force action
If you are one of those people, become aware of it and leverage the mechanism