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The AI-First Agency Model YC Just Revealed (6 services to sell)

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Agencies have always been crazy hard to

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scale. Low margins, slow manual work,

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and the only way to grow is to add more

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people. But AI changes this. Now,

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instead of selling software to customers

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to help them do the work, you can charge

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way more by using the software yourself

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and selling them the finished product at

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100 times the price. Think of a design

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firm that uses AI to produce custom

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design work for clients upfront to win

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the business before the contract is even

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signed. Or an ad agency that uses AI to

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create stunning video ads without the

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time and expense of setting up a

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physical shoot. Or a law firm that uses

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AI to write legal docs in minutes rather

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than weeks. That's why agencies of the

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future will look more like software

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companies with [music] software margins.

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Y Combinator, the company that founded

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Airbnb, Stripe, and Dropbox. They just

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described exactly what I've been

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building word for word. So today, I'm

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going to break down exactly what YC

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said, why the economics are insane, and

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most importantly, I'll give you six

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specific services that you can sell with

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this model with real prices, real

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customers, everything. Let me decode

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what YC just said because the language

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sounds simple but the implications are

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really massive if you understand how it

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works. So YC said quote instead of

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selling software to customers to help

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them do the work you use the software

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yourself and sell them the finished

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product at hund times the price. Let me

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translate that. So most people in the a

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space right now are selling tools. They

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sell a chatbot. They sell a dashboard.

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They sell an automation workflow and the

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client gets the tool and then they have

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to do the work with it. YC is saying

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flip that. Don't give the client a

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recruitment dashboard. Give them a hired

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employee. Don't give them like billing

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software. Give them a resolved insurance

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claim. Don't give them an automation

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workflow. Give them the results. You've

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got the idea. That's the difference

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between selling access and selling

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outcomes. And the price difference is

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massive. Let's say a recruitment SAS

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tool might charge maybe $15 to $100 a

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month. A recruitment agency that

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delivers a hired employee, they charge 5

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to 15,000 per placement, right? Because

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the client doesn't want the tool, they

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want the outcome. YC also said agencies

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of the future will have software company

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margins. So what does that mean in real

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numbers? A traditional agency makes 15

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to 25% margins. You charge a client like

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5,000 a month, but three to 4,000 goes

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to salaries, tools, overhead, all the

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costs. So, you keep maybe a,000. A

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software company makes 70 to 90% margins

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because they build the product once and

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the cost of serving each additional

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customer is almost nothing. There is

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almost no marginal fee of replication.

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Here's what changes with AI. The cost of

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delivering the service drops by about

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80%, because AI handles most of the

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execution. So you're not paying human

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salaries for every deliverable. Most of

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the work is done by AI at a fraction of

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the cost. Your agency charges the same

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$5,000 a month, but your delivery cost

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drops from 3 to 4,000 down to $6 to

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$800. So that's where the 60 to 75%

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margins come from. Same price to the

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client, but 80% less cost for you. The

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third thing that Vice said is that these

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agencies will scale far bigger than any

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agencies that exist in these fragmented

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markets today. Think about how many

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service niches exist. There are

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recruitment, medical billing,

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bookkeeping, content creation, lead

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generation, legal documents, customer

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support, logistics, many more. Each one

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of these is a billiondoll market and

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each one is fragmented into thousands of

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agencies. Each one limited by how many

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people they can hire. So the reason they

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can't scale is simple. More clients

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means more humans, more employees. More

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humans means more management, more

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overhead, more problems. So growth is

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linear. Every new client cost you almost

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as much to serve as the previous as the

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last one. And AI breaks that. When AI

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handles 50 to 80% of the execution, one

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small team can serve dramatically more

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clients. You're not hiring 10 people to

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go from five clients to 25. You are

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building skills and systems that work

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for all 25 simultaneously. So that's

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what YC is telling their startups right

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now. Pick a fragmented market. Use AI to

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deliver the outcome and then scale

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without adding more headcount. YC gave

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three examples. A design firm and ad

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agency and a law firm, right? But they

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were very vague. They didn't tell you

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who to actually sell or how much to

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charge. This is something a founder, an

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entrepreneur has to figure out, right?

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And by the way, it's not just YC saying

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this. Listen to what Alex Hermosi said

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recently.

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>> What kinds [music] of businesses do you

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think are going to succeed because AI is

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so prevalent [music] and people get

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tired of it?

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>> I think the businesses that will have

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disproportionate returns are ones that

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are very opssh. [music] So a marketing

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agency for example that heavily

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introduces AI, there will never be a

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lack of businesses that want new [music]

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customers. the difficulty with scaling

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that particular type of business is the

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operational drag and the headcount and

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the coordination of people. And so if

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you can have something that has amazing

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product market fit, which is get more

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customers from somebody, [music] there's

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lots of demand there, um, but do it in a

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way that allows you to scale the ops so

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that you have increasing margins and you

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have [music] less complexity, that

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becomes incredibly valuable business.

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>> He's actually saying the exact same

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thing. And the example that he provides

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is marketing agencies. Agencies that

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heavily introduce AI will have a

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disproportionate returns because the

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demand for new customers in this case

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never goes away. Every business wants

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more clients, right? The problem with

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scaling agencies has always been the

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operational drag, right? The headcount,

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the coordination of people, etc. Jose is

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saying if you can deliver that same

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result getting businesses more customers

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but do it with AI handling the

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operations and delivery so your margins

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increase and your complexity decreases

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that becomes an incredibly valuable

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business. So you have Y cominator

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telling their startups this is the

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future you have Alex Hermosi a guy who

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is crushing it in business saying the

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exact same thing and I've been living it

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for for the last several months. Now let

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me get specific. So, I have identified

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six services that work incredibly well

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with this approach. For each one, I'll

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tell you who buys it, what you can

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deliver, how AI handles most of the

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work, and what you can charge. And

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Hermosi just gave us a a very good

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starting point. He said there will never

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be a lack of businesses that want new

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customers, right? So, let's start there.

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Number one, AI lead generation as a

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service. So, this one is massive. Who

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buys it? pretty much any B2B company,

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agencies, SAS companies, consultants,

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constructors, etc. Anyone who needs

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meetings booked in their calendar with

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potential clients, right? So, what can

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you deliver here? You can deliver

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qualified leads with verified emails,

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personalized outreach sequences, and

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booked meetings on their calendars.

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Here's how AI handles it. I've actually

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built this system from scratch myself.

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So, step number one is scrape. You pull

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leads from different directories, from

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Google maps, from Google search or

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various industry specific directories.

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Then AI finds businesses that match your

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client's ideal customer profile. The

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cost here is about 1 cent per lead. Step

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number two is enrich. So AI finds their

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email addresses, phone numbers, company

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