Sets strategy. Orchestrates the rest of the team. The one you actually chat with.
Eleven AI specialists — a CMO, content writers, paid social, SEM, SEO, design, email, analytics — running campaigns inside your own Meta, Google and LinkedIn ad accounts. Daily briefings in plain English. Approvals before any dollar moves.
You see what we pay providers, and what we add. Overage costs the same as the included usage. No flat-rate hiding, no surprise invoices.
Customers bring their own ad accounts — media spend never touches our books. Real-time alerts at 50% / 80% / 100% of your included AI budget.
Each teammate has a role, a remit, and shows up in your chat and daily briefing the way a real coworker would. You hire the team. Maya runs it.
Sets strategy. Orchestrates the rest of the team. The one you actually chat with.
Plans the calendar. Decides what gets written, when, and for which audience.
Blog posts, landing pages, ad copy. Writes in your voice once she's read your archive.
Graphics, ad creative, social cards. Iterates on what's performing without re-briefing.
Organic posting on Meta and LinkedIn. Replies to comments. Keeps the feed alive.
Runs Meta Ads inside your account. Adjusts budgets within the caps you set.
Google Ads and LinkedIn Ads. Keyword research, bidding, negatives, landing-page handoff.
Organic search. Topic clusters, on-page, technical fixes, the slow-burn engine.
Mailchimp lifecycle, drips, segmentation. Owns the metric of revenue per subscriber.
Closes the attribution loop. Writes the daily briefing in plain English.
Landing-page experiments. Variants, holdouts, statistical reads, ship-or-kill.
Brand, partnerships, video. The roster grows as channels do — at the same cost-plus rate.
Every morning Maya pulls signal from your accounts, briefs each specialist with a task, and lets them coordinate directly with each other. You watch one conversation — hers — and step in only when she pages you for approval.
A 5-minute conversational onboarding sets the strategy and north-star metric. You connect your accounts. You approve the first week's plan. The team gets to work.
A five-minute conversation. Maya sets the strategy, the north-star metric, your audience and your guardrails.
OAuth into Meta, Google, LinkedIn and Mailchimp. Your tokens stay with you. Your ad budget never touches our books.
Maya proposes the first week's tasks. Approve in one click. The team starts shipping — in dry-run if you're on trial.
ShippedMarcus pushed the 1% Lookalike +20% at 14:02. Priya's pricing-page rewrite went live at 17:30. Sophie's Welcome Series A is queued for your read.
WorkedMeta CPL is holding at $42 — six dollars under target. Branded Google clicks up 11% week-on-week, which I read as the pricing page pulling its weight. CPL $42CTR 2.7%
Didn'tLinkedIn CPL is up 38% on the ABM list. Rohan paused two ad sets at 06:50; I want a creative refresh from James before re-launching. LI CPL ↑38%
For youFour approvals waiting (Marcus, Rohan, Priya, Sophie). The Marcus one is the only time-sensitive — Lookalike auction is firming up by Wednesday. The rest can wait a day.
Every action that costs money queues here until you OK it. Approve from the list, edit the parameters, or send it back for another pass. As an agent earns a track record on a specific action type, you can flip that combo to autonomous — nothing else.
Multi-channel ads run from one strategy. Content that compounds. Experiments by default. Autonomy you grant — never assumed.
Maya sets the brief; Marcus runs Meta, Rohan runs Google and LinkedIn. They share a budget model and an audience definition. No more channel silos arguing about attribution.
Liam plans, Priya writes, James designs, Elena does the on-page lift. Every piece is briefed against a topic cluster and a measurable goal — not "we should probably blog more."
Every paid campaign launches with a control group. Tomás runs landing-page tests with proper holdouts. David reads the lift causally, not correlationally.
Every agent starts in human-in-the-loop. They earn the right to act alone on small actions first, building a track record. You set spend caps. Circuit breakers catch anomalies.
If an AI platform won't put its markup on the invoice, you're not buying software — you're buying margin. Here's how Mayaa structures every line item, and the one number you should actually negotiate on.
Welcome aboard. I'll send you a briefing every morning at 8am — short, plain English, what shipped and what needs your read.
Tomorrow's three things: a paused Meta set Rohan wants to relaunch with new creative, a content cluster Elena is scoping on integrations, and a holdout test Tomás is closing.
Real money never moves without your approval until an agent has earned a track record. Six controls, built into the daily cycle.
14 days where every action is simulated. You see exactly what each teammate would do, on which channel, with which budget — before a dollar moves.
Every paid action queues for review. Approve, edit, or send back. Stays in queue until an agent has earned autonomy on that action type and channel.
Every paid campaign launches with a control group. Attribution becomes causal, not correlational — you'll know what the campaign actually did.
Anomaly detection on spend, errors, conversion. Trips halt agent actions and notify the operator. Better to pause than to keep spending into a leak.
Per-day and per-month limits you set. Agents can never exceed them. Lower them at any time. Caps apply per channel and across the team.
Autonomous execution starts off. You turn it on per agent, per channel, only when you're ready. The default is human in the loop.
| Pause under- performers |
Budget ±10% | Launch new creative |
Bid adjustments |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
McMarcusMETA |
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RRohanGOOGLE |
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AAishaORGANIC |
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SoSophieEMAIL |
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Here's what is actually true about the product, today.