Modern Creator
Codie Sanchez · YouTube

How To ACTUALLY Make Money Using AI

A 21-minute live build where one host goes from idea to first paying customer using nine AI tools and five named frameworks.

Posted
4 days ago
Duration
Format
Tutorial
educational
Views
59.6K
3.5K likes
Big Idea

The argument in one line.

Frameworks are what separate AI power users from prompt tourists — the nine tools in this video are useless without the strategic layer that tells you which one to reach for, when, and why.

Who This Is For

Read if. Skip if.

READ IF YOU ARE…
  • You have a product or service idea but have been paralyzed by not knowing where to start.
  • You have used ChatGPT but have not gotten output you would actually put in front of a customer.
  • You want a full sequence — demand validation, avatar, site, brand, copy, customer service — shown end-to-end in one session.
  • You are evaluating whether Lovable, Jasper, or Tidio belong in your stack and want to see them used on a real project before deciding.
SKIP IF…
  • You are already running an established product brand and want advanced scaling tactics — this is a 0-to-launch walkthrough, not a growth playbook.
  • You want depth on any single tool — this is a deliberate breadth-first flyover of nine tools in 21 minutes.
TL;DR

The full version, fast.

AI is not a replacement for thinking but a force multiplier on good thinking, and this video proves it by building an entire e-commerce brand in real time. The host filters a trending product through a three-question viability test, uses Perplexity for research, ChatGPT for structure, and Claude for reasoning to build a specific buyer avatar, then builds a landing page with Lovable, critiques it against three conversion principles, generates a logo and brand guide in minutes, rewrites all copy with Jasper for brand voice, and installs Tidio for 24/7 AI customer service. Every tool is paired with a named framework that tells you what the output should look like — without the framework, the tools produce nothing useful.

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Chapters

Where the time goes.

00:0001:37

01 · The Business Blueprint + What to Sell

Introduces 7-step framework on screen; uses Exploding Topics to find trending products; applies RRT Test to select hands-free dog leash.

01:3704:50

02 · Who to Sell It To

Whiteboard segment on avatar specificity; live demo of Perplexity + ChatGPT + Claude in sequence to synthesize a data-backed buyer persona named Jordan.

04:5005:30

03 · Save Time Typing

Introduces WhisperFlow as a voice-to-text background tool that removes the typing bottleneck between thinking speed and execution speed.

05:3008:38

04 · Build Your Website

Lovable demo generates a first landing page in ~4 minutes; host critiques it against three conversion principles: above-fold completeness, headline clarity, and social proof.

08:3809:12

05 · Sponsor — BizScout Radar

Mid-roll ad for BizScout Radar, an AI business-acquisition scanner offered free for 90 days with a Main Street Millionaire Live ticket.

09:1212:44

06 · Build Your Brand

Villain/Victim/Vow framework at whiteboard; names brand Coast Leashes; uses ChatGPT to write an optimal image prompt, feeds it into Google image AI for logo, then generates brand style guide.

12:4414:35

07 · Revised Website

Feeds the Coast Leashes brand style guide into Lovable; the output is dramatically improved with avatar-specific copy, social proof, and an upsell bundle.

14:3518:21

08 · Copy That Converts

Cold vs. warm traffic distinction drives two different opening strategies; Jasper AI used for brand-voice ad copy and landing page copy; .Online domain pitch.

18:2121:18

09 · Handle Your Customers

Tidio AI chatbot installed in ~20 minutes; money loves speed principle; video ends with a first order notification.

21:1821:30

10 · Wrap + CTA

Reframes AI as force multiplier on good thinking; directs viewers to full prompt breakdown in description.

Atomic Insights

Lines worth screenshotting.

  • Start with search data, not personal conviction — validate demand before building anything.
  • A product passes the RRT test only if it survives recessions, supports price increases without losing customers, and can be improved by technology.
  • Your customer avatar is not a demographic — it is one specific person whose problem is severe enough to make your product feel made for them.
  • Perplexity is for facts, ChatGPT is for speed, Claude is for reasoning — mixing them up wastes both money and quality.
  • A landing page fails before anyone reads a word if headline, subhead, and CTA are not all visible without scrolling.
  • Social proof must appear before the scroll — a customer photo and quote outperforms a polished design with no reviews every time.
  • Cold traffic and warm traffic need different opening moves: disrupt a belief for cold ads, lead with pain for warm landing pages.
  • Prompt engineering is itself a skill: use one AI to write the optimal prompt for a specialist AI, then feed it in.
  • Speed of reply is the most predictive metric of conversion rate — AI customer service turns response time into revenue.
  • The first output from any AI tool is rarely good enough — the framework is what tells you what to fix and why.
  • Branding is the feeling someone gets before they read a single word — Villain/Victim/Vow maps the emotional arc a buyer takes.
  • Americans spend over $100 billion on pets annually and that number has risen every year for a decade — it passes the recession test.
Takeaway

Nine tools mean nothing without the frameworks behind them.

WHAT TO LEARN

Every AI tool in this video is paired with a named framework that tells you what good output looks like — without that layer, you get generic results from expensive software.

  • Start with search data before building anything — a trend-spotting tool shows you what people are already paying for, which is a stronger signal than personal conviction.
  • Filter every product idea through three questions before investing time: does it survive recessions, can prices rise without losing customers, can technology improve margins?
  • Your customer avatar is not a demographic — it is one specific person whose pain is severe enough that your product feels made exclusively for them.
  • Perplexity, ChatGPT, and Claude each have a distinct job: facts and sources, fast structuring, and deep reasoning respectively — mixing them up degrades output quality.
  • A landing page fails before anyone reads a word if headline, subhead, and CTA are not all visible without scrolling.
  • Social proof must appear before the scroll — a real customer photo and quote outperforms a polished design with no reviews.
  • Cold traffic ads and warm traffic landing pages need different opening lines: challenge a belief they hold for cold, lead with their specific pain for warm.
  • Prompt engineering is a skill in itself: asking one AI to write the optimal prompt for a specialist AI produces dramatically better output than prompting the specialist directly.
  • Speed of reply to a customer inquiry is one of the most predictive metrics of conversion — AI customer service addresses this without requiring you to be online around the clock.
  • The first AI output on any task is a starting point, not a deliverable — the frameworks are what tell you exactly what to improve and why.
Glossary

Terms worth knowing.

RRT Test
A three-question product viability filter: Does this business resist a recession? Can you raise prices without losing customers? Can technology meaningfully improve margins or output? All three must be yes.
Villain / Victim / Vow
A branding framework that maps the customer emotional arc: the villain is the problem they fight, the victim is who they are before your product, and the vow is the promise of what life looks like after.
Avatar
A hyper-specific fictional buyer persona — not a demographic bucket but a single named individual whose pain, habits, and vocabulary you know well enough to write copy that makes them feel the product was built for them.
Cold vs. Warm Traffic
Cold traffic has never heard of you and needs to be disrupted before they will read anything; warm traffic already knows you exist and needs to be met with their pain immediately, not a product pitch.
Prompt engineering
The practice of crafting optimized instructions for an AI model — here used as a chain where ChatGPT writes a detailed prompt that is then fed into a specialist image-generation tool.
Exploding Topics
A trend-spotting tool that scans search traffic, social media, and online retail stores to surface products and topics with rapidly growing demand before they peak.
Lovable
An AI website builder that takes a natural language prompt and generates a functional, designed landing page — used here to go from idea to live site in under four minutes.
Resources

Things they pointed at.

03:40toolChatGPT
03:58toolClaude
04:51toolWhisperFlow
05:35toolLovable
11:00toolGoogle Nano Banana / Gemini Imagen
17:23toolJasper AI
18:53toolTidio
08:38productBizScout Radar
Quotables

Lines you could clip.

01:00
Does this business resist a recession? Can you raise prices without losing customers? Can technology meaningfully improve the margins or the output? If the answer is yes to all three, you have a business worth building.
Complete self-contained framework delivered in three punchy questionsTikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
04:10
You use Perplexity when you need real world evidence and source data. You use ChatGPT when you need to move fast and structure things quickly, and you use Claude when you need to think through something deeply or when the quality of the reasoning matters.
Clearest one-sentence differentiation of the three dominant AI tools in circulationIG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
07:21
If you can't say your headline and tagline to someone over loud music playing at a bar, it's too complicated.
Visceral memorable test for marketing clarity with no setup needednewsletter pull-quote↗ Tweet quote
21:11
AI is not a replacement for thinking, I wish, but it is a force multiplier on good thinking.
The thesis of the entire video in one sentence — works standaloneTikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
14:57
Bad copy will kill great products every single day.
Short, hard, universal — no context neededIG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
The Script

Word for word.

Read-along

Don't just watch it. Burn it in.

See every word as it's spoken — crank it to 2× and still catch all of it. The same dual-channel trick behind Amazon's Kindle + Audible.

metaphoranalogy
00:00I went through over 500 AI tools and found the ones that will actually help you start a business and make money. And I'm going to use them right now in this video to go from zero to a real paying customer. But I'm not just going to use them in this specific case.
00:12I'm gonna give you the frameworks behind every step of the process so that you can apply it to any business. This is how to build a business in today's AI world fast. What to sell?
00:23So we have to start with the obvious question. What are we gonna sell? The better question is actually, what do people want to buy?
00:29I this see all the time. When people wanna start a business, they fall in love with an idea before they find out if anyone wants to buy it. You have to start with demand, and you can find it in two ways.
00:39You could talk to a lot of people, get a few feelings, a hunch, or you could use data of what people are searching for and buying. This is where exploding topics comes in. It's an AI trend spotter that scans search traffic, social media, and online retail stores to find the hot products businesses, and it's gonna tell us what people are looking for.
00:56And there are so many options. So what do we choose?
01:01This is the framework I use to filter any of my ideas. I'm gonna do it in under five minutes. I call it the RRT test.
01:09Resist, raise technology. We're gonna ask three questions. Does this business resist a recession?
01:15Think garbage collection, pet care, health care. People don't stop spending on these things when times get hard. Second, can you raise prices without losing customers?
01:24That's how you instantly make more money. And third, can technology meaningfully improve the margins or the output? If the answer is yes to all three, you have a business worth building.
01:34Alright. So I'm in trends tracking here. Let's see what we have.
01:38We have a lot of options. I'm gonna go with the hands free dog leash. This is interesting.
01:44Why? The search volume has exploded. It also seems to be doing well on TikTok and Pinterest.
01:51Let's see the sales report. And when I look at this, I see 30,000 monthly sales on average.
01:59It's pretty crazy. I think the question is, are people still going to buy things for pets in recessions? And the answer that we know is yes.
02:07Because Americans spend over a $100,000,000,000 on their pets each year, and that number has gone up every year for the past decade. Then the next question.
02:15Right? Can we raise the price on it? So I see designer collars selling for more than I spend on probably my facial products.
02:24So yes. Can we add some technology to increase margins? Well, uh, you know, I'm not gonna add technology to the actual leash, but we can automate the whole process of advertising and selling with AI tools.
02:34I'll actually show you how. So, yes. Now we have to figure out who we are selling it to.
02:40Okay. I call this our avatar, and I'm not talking about the blue people with tails. This means the specific person you are selling to.
02:48Avatar is not a dog owner. Way too vague. There's a huge difference between an adult who owns a service dog and a teenager who convinced their parents to get a puppy.
02:58Both are dog owners, but they don't have the same wants and needs as customers. There's a huge degree of variance. An avatar is the one specific person who's going to see your product and immediately think that was made for me.
03:09He is the one. The more specific you can get it, the more money you make. And I know this sounds backwards, but it's actually true.
03:16So before we go build anything else, we need to deeply understand our buyer. There are three tools you can use. You've probably heard of all three, but you might not know the difference.
03:25ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity. I wanna start with Perplexity.
03:29It's the best research tool you can use, and it gives you answers with all of its sources cited. So you're not gonna have AI hallucinations like you get with ChatGPT.
03:36It isn't the best at inference, so we're going to use it to get data. Here is the prompt. Now we're gonna go to chat GPT for your first draft.
03:45I like to think about chat GPT like a Swiss army knife. It can do everything pretty good, but maybe nothing amazingly. Let's prompt it for its identity and what we need it for.
03:54Prompt's gonna go something like this. Now we're gonna take these two outputs and put them through Claude. Claude is the best at thinking and nuanced writing.
04:03So let's ask it to find the difference between the research perplexity did and the avatar chat GPT designed to get a complete picture. There we go. We have a data backed picture of exactly who we are selling this product to.
04:15The way I think about these three tools, you use perplexity when you need real world evidence and source data. You use ChatGPT when you need to move fast and structure things quickly, and you use Claude when you need to think through something deeply or when the quality of the reasoning matters or if you wanna use agents.
04:29So now we have our avatar. This avatar is called Jordan. We can see her demographic information.
04:36We can see how often she goes out, why normal leashes don't work, who she follows online, her purchasing habits, and what she wants from a hands free dog leash. No matter what company you have or trying to start, you have to build with an avatar in mind. Let's go make the business now.
04:51Okay. At this point, I'm building my business, but my mind is moving faster than my hands. So because of that, I like to use WhisperFlow.
04:58I've got ideas. I've got prompts. I wanna run, and typing it all out is really slow.
05:02So I use this tool. Basically, voice to text tool that runs in the background on your computer, transcribes everything you say instantly into whatever app you're using, and doesn't make a bunch of mistakes like my voice to text, which says the word duck all the time.
05:18I never mean the word duck. There's like a massive gap, I think, between how fast you think and how fast you type, which causes you to waste time you shouldn't be spending building your business or typing. So I like this app for this.
05:28I use it all the time. So will you. You're welcome.
05:31Great team. I love these. Thanks.
05:35Now we have our product. We know exactly who we're gonna sell this bad boy to. Now we need a place for them to buy it, and that means a landing page.
05:42This is where Lovable comes in. I think it's the best AI website builder on the market. You describe what you want, and it builds you an actual functional design site.
05:50I'm gonna give you the prompt right here. Build me a website for a hands off dog leash company, make it super high converting, really simple for a gen z to millennial woman aged 24 to 35 who loves her dog, and base it off of the best converting websites for that avatar that exist.
06:13So after a couple minutes and some magic, boom, we have a landing page. This would have taken a developer a couple weeks of three k, maybe just last year, and we just did it in four minutes. But let's be honest, this thing is not good at all.
06:27In fact, you probably see it too. This landing page is actually a nightmare. And why?
06:31There are three things every high converting landing page needs. Let's get into it. First principle, we need all the information above the fold here.
06:39Your headline, your sub headline, and your call to action all need to exist in this first screen. If someone has to scroll to understand what you're selling or why they should care, you've already lost the cash. You have to make your company instantly clear, credible, and build trust.
06:52This website has a headline problem, and the problem is also the sub headline. Let's look at this.
06:59So your headline and your sub headline, these two things right now, should tell your customer exactly what your company does and how it solves their problem. Hands free flow state, like, okay.
07:11But aerospace grade bungee cord meets hands, what are we talking about here? We're selling a dog leash, not a spaceship, people. I want you to think about it like this.
07:21If you can't say your headline and tagline to someone over loud music playing at a bar, it's too complicated. Number three, social proof. People do not believe you.
07:31Liar. They believe your customers. There have to be reviews before the customer scrolls.
07:35They could be really tiny based here. You see that all the time. But the problem is there are no reviews and no validation anywhere on this homepage except by somebody called verified buyer.
07:46I've never met anyone with that name. And I know that this seems like it's not that important. But if you actually had an image of Sally saying, I love this so much I can barely handle it, and lord help us if there was a picture of her four legged is that a dog?
08:01Yes. It is. It's a three day good dog with a leash, then you would sell way more.
08:06In fact, you would probably sell more with this website even with this drawing on it. Because number four, your customer has to see themselves on this landing page. Right now, the font color, the text, the picture, I don't know, I feel nothing inside.
08:19It doesn't speak to our avatar, Jordan. It's very tactical. It's not aesthetic, and like this is the most AI image of all time.
08:27Also, like, I don't know, I wish my arms look like that. My arms don't, and I bet Jordan's arms don't either. So we're gonna fix this with branding.
08:39Alright, guys. As we were editing this video, one of my companies just launched this amazing AI. And I get asked the question all the time, Cody, I don't wanna start a business.
08:47How do I find one to buy? So my company BizScout, a marketplace for small businesses, just launched Radar. It's an AI tool that scans the internet twenty four seven for listings that may never even hit a marketplace.
08:58So an owner posts on their website that they're selling their business, Radar catches it, sends it to you, and you get the direct link to where Radar found it. A lot of the best businesses never make it online, so Radar gives you the edge. It's literally a $199 a month, but if you come to Main Street Millionaire Live this week, it's an event where I give you the full playbook to finding and buying your first small business.
09:19You get to use Radar ninety days for free with your ticket. And I will actually teach you how to use it like a pro. So click the link in the description for more information.
09:27I'll see you there. Let's talk about building your brand. This is one of the most overlooked parts of a business that moves the needle with your customers.
09:33Branding is the feeling someone gets when they see your product before they even read a single word. The colors, the fonts, the tone, the photos.
09:42I use a framework for branding that I call the villain, the victim, and the vow. The villain is the problem your customer is trying to solve. Think those little germ guys from the medicine commercials.
09:54Right? The victim is who your customer is before your perfect product they find with you. Think of the person miserable in bed with the stuffy nose with those little gremlins inside.
10:05They're frustrated, they're achy, they're angry, and the vow is promise of what they get on the other side. The promise of a clear sunny day, open air nostrils, like you help them solve their problems.
10:17For our hands free dog leash brand, the villain is every cheap and ugly dog leash that she fights with on every walk. The victim is Jordan who has to hold this thing while she's holding her latte and trying to text somebody back. And the vow is hands free, baby, to do all of the above while you're on your run with our little dog leash.
10:37This is the freedom to run without compromise in this issue. Let's build a brand and a logo in three steps. The speed is gonna shock you.
10:45First, let's start with an a. I'm gonna go with coast dog leashes. Why?
10:49It's like premium. I want a beachy lifestyle company, and it tells our customers they can just coast on the walk. Get it?
10:56I'm going to start by using ChatGPT to write a prompt for Google's Nano Banana Pro. This is called prompt engineering where you create the most optimal prompt to get the best results. I'm able to prompt ChatGPT with something very simple, and it outputs a much more detailed prompt that then gives Nano Banana more direction to make my output better.
11:13Does that make sense? You kinda give the simple thing to the person who's smarter than you that then gives the better output that you give to Nano Banana. This is the key step most people skip.
11:22Let the robots talk amongst themselves. Another autonomous AI. Interesting.
11:27Affirmative. So I'll ask ChatGPT something like, based on this brand's direction, write me a detailed prompt for a logo concept using Nano Banana Pro. The brand is a premium hands free dog leash for active women.
11:40The aesthetic is clean, modern, outdoorsy. Think minimal line art, earth tone, sage cream, worn tan, off white. Okay?
11:48Then ChatGPT gives me a crisp detailed prompt, and I paste that into Nano Banana Pro. Look Look at this, you guys. This is amazing.
11:56I can't believe a computer just did this for us for basically $0. This actually looks like this is actually fucking amazing, but it's, like, cute, and look at the design, and you can see the design. This actually looks great.
12:07The only thing is this leash is, like, out of control. It's like a mount. Oh, because it looks like a mountain because you're wandering and it's a leash.
12:15Fucking nano banana. I think I'm down. I'm into this.
12:18We should just run with this design perfectly. Do you know how long this would take designers to make? This actually pisses me off looking at this thing.
12:24Anyway, so now we need the brand style guide from this logo. This is just another prompt. Sick.
12:32There it is. Detailed brand style that we can take and give to Lovable to change the website so it doesn't suck. Let's do that right now.
12:45This is actually cute. Look at the top. Oh, actually, keep up upping one another on names.
12:52Lovable came up with one called paw free. I don't know which one we like better. Maybe you guys tell me in the comments if you like the one we ended up choosing.
12:59But this copy is actually really good. Walk your dog, hold your latte. Come on.
13:03We should just change it to matcha because all the just know. But over 25,000 happy dog moms at the top, that is a lie. They're not.
13:13But I guess if we said in general from number of fans for dog leashes, that could be it in general. This website is usually, look at this review.
13:25Maya twenty eight with Biscuit says, I literally cried on my first hands free walk. I forgot what it felt like to just walk and drink my coffee.
13:36That's dramatic, Maya. But this one's cute. Cute enough that I actually wanna wear it on the trail.
13:41Color matches my lulu lemon. Sue me. Holy shit.
13:44This is, like, the best marketing I think I've ever seen. Plus, we have an upsell on here called the dog mom bum bundle, a paw free leash, matching harness, plus a treat pouch.
13:54They're even upselling for us. This is better than most entrepreneurs, I swear to god, which is horrifying. The robots are gonna take over.
13:59We better start our businesses soon. Uh-huh. Stop.
14:02You guys, free shipping on orders over 50. Sixty day happy tail guarantee.
14:07Get the fuck out of here. I don't know if you're a woman, but if you are, hit me in the comments if this hits you as hard as it did me because this is incredible marketing. There's a couple things I don't love here though.
14:16You can see, like, these long em dashes. That's, like, an immediate no. We've got to probably change some of the stuff, like, 6,000 reviews.
14:25I don't think we have 6,000 reviews yet. But the rest of this is, like, pretty money.
14:31I wanna buy it. Do you guys wanna buy this? Should I actually launch this company publicly?
14:35Probably. So the copy that converts. Like, most people building a a business, they don't understand that their product is almost never the reason someone buys.
14:42They buy because of how your words make them feel. You know, that's what we're talking about here. Copying your sales department in print and bad copy, well, that's gonna kill great products every single day.
14:53Before we write a single word, you need to understand the most important distinction in all of marketing. Cold traffic versus warm traffic. Cold traffic is someone who's never heard of you.
15:02Didn't They search for your product. They didn't ask for your ad, and frankly, they don't care about you yet.
15:08This is who sees your meta ad while they're scrolling through videos of dogs doing funny things or adorable things. You have maybe two seconds to earn their attention before they're gone, which, I I mean, mean that little quote from Maya would fucking do it. Warm traffic is someone who already knows you exist.
15:21They clicked on your ad, they heard about you from a friend, they googled your your hands free dog leashes and found your site. They're now on your landing page. They gave you their attention on purpose.
15:30These two people need completely different words. For your cold traffic, your ads, you lead with disruption. You challenge something they already believe.
15:38They've done studies, you know, 60% of the time, it works every time.
15:43Bad ad. This leash is great for runners. Good ad.
15:47Every leash has the same uncomfortable flaw. And maybe you show it pulling up a girl's leggings with camel toe.
15:54That's the annoying thing for women, actually, if you wanna know. The first one gives me information. The second one makes me need to know the answer.
16:00I know the pain of that. That's actually what we wanna do. So curiosity makes them wanna click.
16:05For warm traffic, your landing page, you lean with the pain, not the product. Jordan doesn't care about your leash. She cares about the fact that every walk with her dog in the last year has been slightly more annoying than it needed to be.
16:15This is actually true for me. Don't tell anybody, including Babar, but I didn't take him on my walk with me this morning because I had a delicious coffee without a top on it, and I didn't want that little to derail me in my latte I just made. And so that's where you start, and then you make her feel like you've built the headlines specifically for her and for Babar.
16:33Poor little guy. Three rules that apply to both. First, write like you're talking to your avatar as your friend.
16:38Use their language, their frustrations, their vocabulary, not yours. Like, I love this. It's like, this is actually a comfortable belt.
16:44It goes with my lululemon's. It's like, get to keep my latte, and this is so good.
16:50Good. Run, scroll, sip. Second, lead with solving the pain.
16:54Your customer doesn't care what you built. They care about what it fixes. So, again, this is happy dog longs.
17:00This is a happy tail for the the little dog. This is built in poop bag holder. Love that.
17:06This is also a padded waist belt so you're not getting, you know, jagged all the time by it. Third, clarity kills confusion, and confusion, that'll kill your sales.
17:16If you can't say your headline over loud music at a bar and have someone immediately get it, it's too complicated. This is where Jasper AI comes in. Has dedicated agents for both ad copy and landing page copy, and what it different from just chatty petite is that you upload your brand voice, your avatar, and your style guide once, like would you say the word camel toe in a YouTube video?
17:37That's a real decision. And every output it gives you stays on brand. It's not writing generic marketing copy.
17:44It's writing copy that sounds like the brand you're trying to build, talking directly to you, your avatar. Right? So for the landing page, I gave Jasper our avatar profile and our villain, victim, bow, framework.
17:56For the ads, I give it our cold traffic hook and ask it to build out the full ad. This is honestly so good, you guys, that as I'm writing all of this, I'm like, I'm gonna go yell at my marketing team and give them this entire video and have them implement it. So I hope you guys are subscribing because this is free fire right now.
18:12Now we're gonna take the landing page output. We're gonna give it to Lovable, and we have a page that looks really good.
18:19Headline and subline clear. They speak to our avatar. This website looks like a real brand, you know.
18:25Put on Kiel. He's a real boy now. But here's the one thing.
18:28You can build a clean professional site with Lovable this weekend and still lose the customer before they read a single name because of your domain name. Most default to .com, but .com is oversaturated.
18:39Like, the good names are gone. Where's my paw free? I can't get it.
18:43So smart business owners aren't settling for some clunky hyphenated workaround. They're just using dot online domains, not because .com isn't available, because it's actually the cleaner's choice.
18:53So think about it. When someone lands on your biz dot l l c dot 123.com or, you know, your hands off leash 1279.com, something already feels off.
19:04But paw free .online, okay. Easy to read, easy to remember, and it looks like a business that was built with a 10 intention, not assembled from leftovers.
19:13I think, like, three and a half million businesses worldwide already use it, and because the word online shows up in over 500,000,000 monthly searches, gives your site a real SEO edge from day one. You can actually get a dot online domain at all the major providers GoDaddy, Namecheap, Squarespace, Lovable.
19:29But if you want a deal on the first year, go to the link on screen or in the description and get your dot online domain for just 99¢. We have a product, a brand, a website with a domain, and this beautiful ad made by a combination of Jasper and Google's Nano Banana. People are starting to come to our site, and we need to be able to answer any questions quickly in convert sales.
19:49I have a trick when asking business owners about their revenue. Usually, I can predict your revenue by asking you one simple question. How long does it take you to reply to potential customers?
19:58Money loves speed. The quicker you are, the more money you will make. But the unfortunate reality is that you can't be online twenty four seven, and you really shouldn't.
20:06You have a business to run. You have dogs to pet. Even experienced business owners are overlooking the importance of responding to customers.
20:13This is where Tidio comes in. Tidio is an AI powered customer service tool that sits on your website as a live chat widget. It answers customer questions in real time, and it uses this knowledge base you build.
20:24So your return policy, your shipping times, your product details, your FAQ. It even acts as a salesperson to help the customer solve their pain and and go to checkout. I set it up for my leash business in about twenty minutes, and now when a customer lands on our site at 11PM and asks, will this work for a 75 pound Bernese mountain dog?
20:43Tidio answers and says, yes. Sales is my love language. Tidio speaks it for you.
20:48So why don't you, like, make money while you sleep? Now we wait for our first notification. See what happens.
20:54Alright, guys. Check this out. We just got our first order, and what we did used to take people months and cost tens of thousands of dollars.
21:02But we were able to find, build, and launch this idea in a single city. I wanna make this clear, AI is not a replacement for thinking, I wish, but it is a force multiplier on good thinking.
21:14Every tool we use today required us to show up with a framework and a strategy because the first output generally wasn't great. If you wanna go deeper on any of these, I put together a full breakdown in the link below, including the exact prompt we used in every section. I'll see you in the next one.
21:28Tell me what you're building.
The Hook

The bait, then the rug-pull.

Five hundred tools, nine keepers, and one live build — that is the premise. The host opens by calling her shot: not a listicle, not a review, but a real business launched on camera from first idea to first paid order.

Frameworks

Named ideas worth stealing.

01:00list

RRT Test

  1. Resist recession
  2. Raise prices without losing customers
  3. Technology can improve margins or output

A three-question product viability filter. All three must be yes before the idea is worth building.

Steal forPre-validation before any product, service, or business acquisition
03:20model

Perplexity to ChatGPT to Claude

  1. Perplexity: real-world evidence + cited sources
  2. ChatGPT: speed + structure
  3. Claude: deep reasoning + nuanced synthesis

A three-tool research and reasoning stack with distinct cognitive roles for each model.

Steal forAny research task that requires both data credibility and strategic interpretation
09:13model

Villain / Victim / Vow

  1. Villain: the problem the customer fights
  2. Victim: who the customer is before your product
  3. Vow: the promise of life after your product

A branding framework that maps a customer full emotional arc from pain to transformation.

Steal forAny sales page, brand guide, or ad creative brief
14:57model

Cold vs. Warm Traffic Copy

  1. Cold: lead with disruption — challenge a belief they already hold
  2. Warm: lead with pain — meet them where they are, not with the product

Two distinct copy strategies based on how much the reader already knows about you.

Steal forAd creative vs. landing page copy for any product launch
11:00concept

Prompt Engineering Chain

Use ChatGPT to write a detailed optimized prompt for a specialist AI tool, then feed that prompt into the specialist. Produces far better output than prompting the specialist directly.

Steal forAny workflow that uses image generation, video generation, or specialized AI tools
CTA Breakdown

How they asked for the click.

VERBAL ASK
21:18link
If you wanna go deeper on any of these, I put together a full breakdown in the link below, including the exact prompts we used in every section.

Soft and non-pushy — offers the prompts as a resource rather than a pitch. Effective because viewers who got value will want the exact prompts.

MENTIONED ON CAMERA
Storyboard

Visual structure at a glance.

open
hookopen00:00
blueprint
promiseblueprint00:22
avatar
valueavatar02:41
branding
valuebranding09:28
revised site
valuerevised site12:44
copy
valuecopy17:23
chatbot
valuechatbot18:53
CTA
ctaCTA21:18
Frame Gallery

Visual moments.

Watch next

More from this channel + related breakdowns.

18:31
Kate Hayes · Tutorial

Claude Design Tutorial for Beginners

A 18-minute walkthrough that shows how to go from blank canvas to branded, exportable designs — and why the Design System feature is the one most beginners skip.

June 2nd
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