A campus ambassador agent runs a morning sweep, posts the daily content drop, replies to members in your voice, and flags anything worth your attention.
Yes — a weekly community cadence agent can run the Monday welcome, Wednesday check-in, and Friday recap in your voice, freeing up 5+ hours a week.
Agents handle prep, follow-ups, and note-taking. The humans handle the actual live teaching. That split is the whole future of the live facilitation model.
A bot follows rules. An AI agent makes decisions. That difference changes what you can actually automate in your community.
Yes — a retention agent watches login activity, post history, and lesson progress, then hands you a short list of members to personally re-engage each week.
The trick is in the inputs — give the agent a warm brand voice and personal details about the new member, and the welcome feels human even though a bot drafted it.
Yes — an AI agent can post daily prompts in your voice, keep the topic variety high, and stop your feed from going silent. Here's how to set one up.
Three categories of tasks are perfect for an AI agent — repeat jobs, triage jobs, and amplification jobs. Everything else stays with you.
AI tools polish production. They shouldn't replace your presence. Here's the 80/20 rule that keeps your teaching human even as your output scales.
AI content strategy tools find topics with real demand, identify gaps in your niche, and build a content calendar in an afternoon. Here's the approach.