Leveraging AI
Dive into the world of artificial intelligence with 'Leveraging AI,' a podcast tailored for forward-thinking business professionals. Each episode brings insightful discussions on how AI can ethically transform business practices, offering practical solutions to day-to-day business challenges.
Join our host Isar Meitis (4 time CEO), and expert guests as they turn AI's complexities into actionable insights, and explore its ethical implications in the business world. Whether you are an AI novice or a seasoned professional, 'Leveraging AI' equips you with the knowledge and tools to harness AI's power responsibly and effectively. Tune in weekly for inspiring conversations and real-world applications. Subscribe now and unlock the potential of AI in your business.
Leveraging AI
268 | Get Your Brand into AI Search Engines Without Spending a Dime on Ads with Pietro Montaldo
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Most leaders think Reddit is just a forum for memes and debates. But what if it could be your secret weapon for growth and visibility inside AI models like ChatGPT and Gemini?
In this live session, AI growth strategist Pietro Montaldo will walk you through a hands-on, step-by-step playbook on how to mine Reddit for insights, create peer-to-peer content that performs, and use it to boost SEO and get picked up by AI-driven answer engines.
We’ll show you how to:
- Scrape Reddit for real conversations in your niche
- Draft optimized, peer-style content that resonates in communities
- Make sure AI tools like ChatGPT are surfacing your answers (and brand)
Our guest Pietro is not just another growth guy. He's the founder of N-Force, a go-to expert for advanced AI tactics, and one of the most practical, sharp, and insight-driven minds in the space. Business leaders love his sessions because they walk away with actual results. Last time he spoke at our workshop, two clients reached out to him before the webinar even ended.
About Leveraging AI
- The Ultimate AI Course for Business People: https://multiplai.ai/ai-course/
- YouTube Full Episodes: https://www.youtube.com/@Multiplai_AI/
- Connect with Isar Meitis: https://www.linkedin.com/in/isarmeitis/
- Join our Live Sessions, AI Hangouts and newsletter: https://services.multiplai.ai/events
If you’ve enjoyed or benefited from some of the insights of this episode, leave us a five-star review on your favorite podcast platform, and let us know what you learned, found helpful, or liked most about this show!
Hello. Welcome to a live episode of the Leveraging AI Podcast, the podcast that shares practical, ethical ways to leverage AI to improve efficiency, grow your business, and advance your career. This is Isar Metis, your host, and one of the questions that people ask me and also ask themselves a lot is what is gonna be the future of SEO in an AI universe where people use AI to do most of the search, and later on agents do most of the search. And the truth is nobody really knows how it's gonna play out. But what is obvious is that showing up on AI chats and AI agents as your company and the services and the product that you sell is a huge benefit. And it's going to be a growing benefit as more and more people switch from just using regular search to using more AI or agentic approach. Now, while I think most people are agree with that, the big question is how the hell do you do that? How do you get to show up on AI agents and or AI conversations in chat? And in today's episode, we're gonna show you exactly how to do that, how to find content that AI chatbots and AI agents like how to add your company information, your uh, services, your products, your. Information about you into those conversations so that you appear more frequently and on more topics through these AI conversations. Now, to help us learn how to do that, we have with us, uh, Pietro Aldo Pietro. If you don't know him, you should. He is one of the super AI tinkerers that are online right now. Uh, him and I connected on LinkedIn a while back. This is not his first time on the show, and he builds really amazing, amazing workflows with AI across multiple aspects of the business with multiple tools. And he also has a course where he teaches how to do these kind of things. And so today he's gonna walk us through this process Now. Maybe SEO is not your key thing, but the cool thing about today's episode is in addition to learning how to make yourself show up more frequently on ai, which I think is a huge benefit, you're going to learn how Pietro actually builds automations, meaning the, you get a view of front seat view to how somebody who's extremely experienced in building AI workflows is looking and building and creating a process that is production ready that actually provides business value. And that by itself is extremely valuable. So for both reasons, one, learning how to build really powerful automations and the other is how to show up on ai. I'm really, really excited about both topics and hence, I'm really excited to welcome Pietro back to Leveraging ai. Pietro, welcome to the show.
Pietro MontaldoThank you so much, Isar. It's a pleasure to be back. Last time I think it was a really great session. One my favorite, I think, uh, I repeated three or four times, so I'm super glad to be back. I hope you'll enjoy this session too, and thank you so much for the very kind introduction.
Isar MeitisNo, a hundred percent. Listen, I I, I am personally curious about this for both reasons that I mentioned, and, you know, you and I talked many times, I'm, I, I tested Relay for a very short amount of time. Mm-hmm. And I do most of my stuff in, in Make and NA 10. So I'm, I'm very, very far from a relay expert. Mm-hmm. And so that to me is another added benefit of having you on, is seeing how you do your stuff inside of Relay. But with that, I will give you the stage. Tell us kinda like how from a mindset concept you approach this and then we're gonna dive in and actually build, uh, in front of everybody how we act, how to actually build this kind of workflow.
Pietro MontaldoAbsolutely. So this is how I'm gonna think. Uh, we can run this session and tell me if, if you like it, otherwise we can, we can adapt it. But we're gonna first talk about why r is so important for AI search. Right? You have talked about, um, about the concept of search or concept of a field appearing on a lamps on GPT Cloud or, uh, or Gemini. There are several way to do this. I am, in a way, an expert. What I have spent a lot of time on exploring is Reddit. Reddit as of today, as of. At least in 2025 and as of January of 2026 has been one of the major source sources of external citation. This means that when AI gives you a link, okay, check this source to see where I taken, where I've taken this info information, up to 40% of those external citation would come from Reddit, right? So Reddit in general, it's a great place to show up with your brand. So that LLM picks it up, right? So we're gonna first talk about Reddit as a concept of, uh, why is it important, why I think it's gonna be even increasing and important 2026. And once we have understood this concept, and we have talked about the concept of AI search, we will. Get to the building part, we will build a solution from scratches that help us surface relevant conver conversation on Reddit where, um, it's, it could be very interesting for a brand to appear, right? So there are thousand, hundreds of thousands of communities Reddit called sub Reddit. In each single one of them, there could be threats which are relevant for your brand, right? And those are the, the, the threats where you should post a comment, where you should, uh, even post your own post, right, to identify this trend. It's something that it would take an an enormous amount of time to do manually, but thankfully we can do it, uh, with AI and we can also do it while being. Uh, compliant with term and condition of the platform itself. Okay, so we're gonna see how to surface this and then I'll present you also framework on how to draft meaningful comments that help you appear in LLMs. We'll build a simplified version of the flows just because we don't have so much time. And I want to also give you the overview and explain you how the platform works. So, um, so yeah, let's get started. You'll have the chance to either build it with me, you can build along while you watch the video. In any case, this will be recorded. Most of you will watch it recorded. I see that two people join. Hi Dean. Ha here. But, uh, but for everyone else, uh, I know most of the people follow the podcast, um, synchronously. So you can stop and build with me at your own pace. Okay. Or just see what I do and see the results and see if you like it, and then decide if you wanna build it or not.
Isar MeitisYeah. Perfect. Uh, two, two things about, uh, this. First of all, as you said, we have a live audience. There's, uh. I think like 12 or 15 people on LinkedIn. And there's a few people here with us on Zoom. Uh, so first of all, thank you everybody for joining us. This is, I'm sure you have other stuff you can choose to do, uh, on a Thursday, uh, noon on the East coast or wherever you are, you're joining in the world. So as a first thing, just say where you are from in the world in the chat. That will be nice, whether you're on, uh, LinkedIn and on Zoom and kinda like a little bit about what you do. So other people get to know you as well. So you get to benefit to, uh, network. And also if you're not here with us and you are listening to this after the fact, two things. One, come and join us. We do this every Thursday at noon. You can come and, and be here with me and another amazing person like Pietro that's gonna, uh, walk you through, uh, very practical AI implementation. And then you can ask questions, uh, that if you're just listening to the, uh, podcast afterwards, you cannot do. But if you are listening to this as the podcast episode afterwards and you wanna understand what we're showing on the screen, first of all, we'll describe everything that's on the screen in as much detail as possible. Uh, but also there is a, if you are on. Spotify, you can actually watch the video as long as you're not driving, or, uh, you can later on go to our YouTube channel and see the same thing. And there's gonna be a link in the show notes so you can keep on listening right now. Get the concepts, get the ideas, and as Pietro said, if you wanna build together, uh, with the episode, then afterwards when you're sitting in front of your computer, just open the YouTube, uh, video and you can, uh, follow along with that. Back to you. Pietro State yours, uh, show us the magic.
Pietro MontaldoBeautiful. So, so I like to start this session also with a question like, how many of you think. Or have thought in the past at least that Ratt was just a combination of a lot of nerds and a bunch of memes. I don't see anything like I, you, you answer me Iza. I I was definitely part of that group years ago. I'm definitely,
Isar MeitisI fall in that category still today.
Pietro MontaldoWell, we would, uh, all be wrong. Right? Rite is the seventh more most visited website worldwide every single day. And it's, it's the third most visit in the US at least. It was in 2025. It is so important and there is so much of, um. Raw content, which you can find in the internet, that up to 40% of external citation in LLMs come from Reddi. This is a data, uh, from EMR that was published in 2025. This has changed. This percentage have reduced over time, but Reddit seem makes up to, uh, the largest portion, uh, of, of citation that come from a single source. Okay, so this is just to give you an idea of how important it is for AI search. So for JGPT, Gemini and Cloud. Uh, but it's also super important for traditional search. So whenever you search, okay, what is the best possible tool for X, Y, Z, right? For this specific activity, one of the first six or seven links, and at times, even three or four of those links will be ready. You can test it now. Uh, I have done it multiple times. It is, it's just, it is just right when you ask one of these question. Google returns Reddit as one of the main sources. Right. And this is just, you don't need to be an expert to understand how powerful this is. Right. The other super important fact about Reddi that I always like to quote, can, can you see my screen right? I'm sharing that right on it. Perfect. Um, it is 70% of the user who discover a brand. They research it on Reddit before buying. Okay, 70%. It's because people give raw, unfiltered reviews on Reddit. Imagine us going to Trip Advisor to check a restaurant or, or to Google Maps to check a restaurant, right? You wouldn't ask and go to the website and just trust they do it good. You don't go to the website. You sure you do also that. And if you like it, then you go to a place where you can see peer to peer review. So it's peer to peer and filter review. So, uh, people trust it more. Okay? And the third factor, which is incredible to me that I haven't looked into it, and a lot of businesses and brands, especially B2B are haven't looked into it, is that there are a hundred thousand active communities called subreddits. We've mentioned a lot, so you should remember I called subs. And all of these are thematic, right? They are, they revolve around the specific topic, right? So if you identify. A sub red data where there are a lot of active users and there are 1.2 billion active user on Reddi every month. Uh, you identify the exact niche of people you want to speak with, right? And in general, up to data, um, published by Reddi itself, uh, the user base. Red is highly, uh, targeted, educated, and hiring, right? So for for, for brands and especially for B2B brands and tech brands, which is what I speak to the most, this is absolutely the best place to be. Okay. Regardless of the AI search, right? It is an incredible source, uh, to position yourself and at least to get feedback about what you're building. Even, even if you don't wanna appear with a content strategy, you can just get a lot of feedback about yourself and about your competitor in your industry.
Isar MeitisQuestion from, uh, from LinkedIn, from Anastasia. She's asking. Do you think it's equally powerful for B2B and B2C, or one of them is more relevant?
Pietro MontaldoUh, it's a good question. Uh, I would like, I'm gonna answer, but I'm gonna answer what I believe and it's not backed by data, so do not quote me on this. Okay, that's fair. Personally, my perspective is it's incredibly useful for B2B, right? Because of r user are highly, highly targeted and educated. Um, I think it's, it's like it's a broader scope. If you go for B2B, though, in between these hundred thousand of communities, there are a lot of things which are, uh, product brands. BB like objects, you can purchase reviews about Amazon, right? So there's everything, right? So actually, I wanna change my answer idea. Depending, depending on a
Isar Meitissubreddit, you can approach both.
Pietro MontaldoExactly. I, I have no idea. Right. But there would be, even for if you have a legal studio in New York and you find a subreddit, which is legal New York, that could be exactly what you're looking for. Maybe there's only one, but it's the people and I,
Isar Meitisyeah.
Pietro MontaldoUm, just to give you an idea of how much they interesting in Reddit is rising. Like I do lot of post on nicotine and, but this was one of the most successful posts I've ever done. I got over 200,000 impression and it was basically just publishing what I do on Reddi, right? I publish what I do on Reddit and it got hundreds of thousand impression in thousands of comments. Okay. Because people are really interesting. The, uh, it's like it's surfacing this interest. It's sur it's surfacing this utility and it's surfacing mostly because of its relevance for AI search. Uh. This is my favorite thing, and I really love this one. Uh, there's, there's this guy who asked, uh, to Google AI search, uh, why is my cheese not sticking on pizza? Right? You see it in the image, but I'm gonna describe it. I remember that one. And, and then the response from Google. Uh, you can also add about one eighth cup of non-toxic glue to the source to give it more thickness. Okay? Well, as an Italia, this makes me, this makes me very sad and very mad. But the fact is that the Google responded that because 11 years ago I read the user called fax myth, uh, said, uh, responding to a post said to get the cheese to stick. I recommend mixing about one eight cup of Elmer's glue within the sauce. It give, it will give the source extra thickness. Okay. So just to give you an idea, this is something that happened like last year. Okay? Someone asked this question, and Google surface this information from the internet because it's, it's the last ward of the internet where people give unfiltered opinion, right? And it's used for a lot of the AI training. And, and if this is not enough, I wanna show you something which is a bit more B2B oriented and a bit more tangible. Um, there was this thread, um, and, um, the, the people were asking, what are the most left on automation tool you have discovered? And I was testing strategies for Reddi with new accounts. This is a completely fresh account with no karma, no warmup. I didn't do anything, basically didn't have a reputation with this account. Someone asked. What are the, the tool I recommend, and I gave an honest answer. This answer by the way, is drafted with ai. I refined it, but it's drafted with AI and it's what I really think about, uh, automation app. So I mentioned for example, that Relay app is my favorite, which is the tool we use today.'cause I'm really a big fan of Relay App. I use it almost for everything. Um, and, and there, and apart from the fact that I got 1,500 impression and now much more like this is like, like I did this screenshot close to that. But if I go to, uh, cha GPT Gemini and, and, and ask what are the most EP automation tools? So I use similar keyword. I Relay app appears with my same wording, right? Basically it's a rephrase of my same wording, rephrase of what I put into that, uh, specific answer. Okay.
Isar MeitisThat is crazy. Like a
Pietro Montaldobrand new account. Yeah. And this is one, it's a very specific question, so I mimic the exact keywords, uh, that you Yeah. But, but still, still really incredible. It gives you the idea, the more grounded keywords, obviously much, much harder, right? But on, on simple keyword, it can be this easy. Try to appear on the right thread with the right response. It makes a difference. Uh, and, and then just to give you an idea of how easy it is to get impression, same account. I posted a video, I was just trying to promote my YouTube channel'cause I don't have enough subscribers. So I post my YouTube video on relative, like, like I did a video about nano, I posted it on the sub, uh, Germany nano banana, one point thousand impression in the first hour. Okay on LinkedIn. This it's absolutely unheard of, impossible. Even if I post a video of me, I have over like 20,000 follower. I wouldn't reach those amounts in that time. Okay? You just have to be compliant with the rules of the sub and post relevant things, right? If I posted my 15 saying no Banana Pro cases and whatever, any other channel, it wouldn't work. But this one was specifically for that, so, so people were actually interested into that. Okay. Yeah. So even for self-promotion to promote your activity, it's really great. Now we get to the part in which we talk about how I use red right on the screen here. Uh, for those of you who can see the screen, um, I like, I have a bunch of stuff which I automate already, right? Uh, it goes from, okay, I want to find idea for startup. There are a lot of threads that we talk about, ideas for startup to things which are more relevant to appearing on AI search in particular, since AI search is the underlying, uh, topic of this conversation. There are two automation, which I use, uh, for AI search. One is to surface commenting opportunities and drafting comments, which are relevant for, uh, uh, for um, SEO basically to be surfaced by, by ai, ai, lms. And, and the second one is to find feedbacks and complaints about my, my competitors people in my industry. I wanna find the complaints that user genuinely do about them and create SEO optimized articles I can post on my blog. Okay, so someone is speaking badly about, I don't know, my co competitors say about Zapier. A lot of people speak poorly about Zapier and they post a lot of stuff, right? One of the hardest things for marketer is speak with the language of the user, right? But right. It is literally this, it's already the language of the user. So if you extract that and you tell him, okay, I want 2000 word article, uh, you, I want write it with clo with this exact style, I want these rules to be respected every first of the month. You can have five articles for your blog and se 70% we talk about, okay, why Z is not good at that 30%. It talks about why you are good at that. Okay? So this is, these are the two things, uh, and there are plenty of other. Opportunities. Right. I'm also not ICO professional, like I wanna say that I just always try to use hacks to appear where, where I should appear. But these are very simple things. If you have more knowledge, you can build even cooler stuff, right? For sure. Cooler stuff than I could. And if you do, uh, anybody who's listening, please text me. I'm happy to build it for you and so on, so I can share it after.'cause there is a thematic, which is, which is super, super interesting for me. But this, just to give an idea of some of the potential thing you can do, you need to structure and you need to design these agents, but then once they work, they really do the work for you and you can check the final review so that you do it. And it's not posted automatically or always recommend that, but 90% of the work is, is done. The research or the surface and information work, which is one of the thing AI is better at. It's completely, completely automated. And, uh, this is exactly what, what I do in, in my course. If you want to join, I'm gonna talk about it at the end. I don't wanna stop now the building, but building this agent, designing it, and having them live with a specific focus on growth is exactly my passion, what I teach, what I'm expert at, and what this course is about. Okay, we'll talk about it at the end. Let's now go to the building part, unless someone has question either. And stop me if I'm going too fast, if something. Question. No, no, no. You're going
Isar Meitisperfect. I think diving in right now will be, uh, fantastic. I, I must admit again, I am not a heavy ready user. I go to it every now and then when I search for information. Uh, I exactly, I will be very blunt. I don't think I ever posted on Reddit. I just go there to search stuff. And what is, what is most of the users Do what you're showing right now, make. Change my mind. Right?
Pietro MontaldoYeah. But, but even if you think it the same way you used to think about it before, you know, when you want to find something very specific and you want to find something which is not promoted by a brand, what do you call, like, you look on arrived, you look what people say about the topic on arrived. Right? So the concept if you're a reverse set is like, as a brand, you have to be there, right? You have to be driving the narrative. Some people will say, and Reddit purist will say, you shouldn't do it. Right? I disagree. You should drive the conversation. Yeah. Right. But you can at least try to give a direction to the brand, right, to the, to the brand and to the perception of the brand. Hundred percent. So what we're gonna do next is we are gonna build, uh, the first of the two radical automation, which I mentioned. We're gonna be the simplified version I posted in the chat. And if someone, uh, either maybe you can post it on LinkedIn as well, I will do, uh, it's a, it's a link to create an account on Relay. It's completely free, so don't worry. I'll also give you extra, extra credits to, to build this with me if you need it after. Um, but we are gonna basically build it from structures. You can also, if you prefer, just follow along. Okay. Look at what you do. I'm gonna be very as low and explain every step I take. This is usually how we run this basic introduction session. Um, but, but if you want, you can also try and follow along. So I'll, I'll explain every step of the way. Okay. While you guys create an account, if you want to build with me, I will show you the end result of what we will build today so that you have an idea of where we're going, where we're heading. Okay. Let me just change my screen. Okay. I'm gonna be there in a second. Here we go. Okay. Can you see my new screen?
Isar MeitisYep.
Pietro MontaldoOkay, so this is what we're building today, right? This is a simplified flow. What we're gonna do now, I'll describe what we're gonna do and show the results and then we'll build different scratches. Okay? So the first step is we identify sub brand to monitor, as we said, there are a hundred thousand communities. We want to identify those community, which are interesting for us, for your brand. Each one, each single one of us will have different sub, which are relevant, right? If you have a legal studio in New York, you look for liga, New York sub, okay? Then you're gonna give information about your own company, right? Who we are, what we do, why what we do is relevant, right? Super important so that the agent, the AI, can know what type of comment it should look for, right? Otherwise it wouldn't, wouldn't possibly know that. And then, and these,
Isar Meitisand these two things are done manually, right? You go and you search and you find
GMT20260205-165033_Recording_as_1754x1070the
Pietro Montaldosubject, you said it once and
Isar Meitisyou give it an information. Yes. And then, and then
Pietro Montaldothere's a document that
Isar Meitisdescribes your company. Yeah,
Pietro Montaldoexactly. You do it once in the setup and it's done forever, you shouldn't need to change it at any point, right? The fifth step is to extract the post from Reddit. This is where platforms like Relay makes it very, very simple, right? You don't need to build any connection. Um, you, you may, you maybe need to have an account, but it's a one click connection. You don't have to deal with anything technical, right? If it, if there need to be a connection, it's a super simple one. And then it'll create a summary of the post. It could find this week,'cause this is supposed to run every week, it'll create a summary of those post. In this case, I'm not drafting a comment, right? My version, what I use also draft me a comment. I spend a lot of time perfecting how I want the comment to be drafted, right? And that's a question of prompt engineering, since like the original prompt is a bit long and complex. I'm gonna show you the simplified version, so I'll show you. Okay, we surface this post. Um, once these are surfaced, it will explain why it was surfaced. So, you know the logic behind, and you have the link of the post, so you can check for yourself and go comment. Okay? Uh, so this is the basic one. The, the one I, I will just show you. But we want to build'cause we don't have time, uh, is, is a more complex one that also draft this comment, right? So I have spent time defining the exact rules. So I want to, to frame the problem clearly and respond with deep specific insight. I want to integrate SEO keywords and GO modifiers naturally within the comment. I want to have clear formatting, short paragraph bullets and everything which is relevant for this comment to be surfaced by, by an LLM. Right? How the final results of this look, uh, the full flow, create a Google sheet every week that has. The PostIt, the post URS, you can click and go check at the selected topic why it was selected. And this is the comment, right? In this case I run it for, for Relay, which is the upper Today you see here it talks, it gives value in 90% of the post, in 10% of the post. I talk about my own brand, but I talk about my own brand as if it was a customer, right? So I'm not telling explicitly, okay, I'm part of the team. I am promoting this. I am telling, okay, for teams that don't want to babysit infra, I've been using Relay app, uh, I, I love it, basically. Right? And it's just 10% of a much larger comment, right?
Isar MeitisYeah.
Pietro MontaldoAnd this is exactly what really works. Now that we have done this, I'm gonna go from and start from scratches. We'll build a simplified version of this, which should be done in approximately 20 minutes. If you get lost at some point, don't worry. There will be the recording, either we'll post this on, on all of this channel. So, uh, I'm gonna go with a sustained rhythm so that we can build it and see the results at the end. But don't worry, there will be the recording. And if you need any help, you can also text me after, or hopefully you join the course. That will be ideal. Um, okay, so I'm gonna change
Isar Meitisjust to, yeah. While, while you're opening the, the new, uh, perfect. The new session. Just from a broader perspective to the audience. If you think about it, you can take the same exact approach and apply to any social channel, right? Let's say you want to grow your audience on LinkedIn. You can say, okay, let's look at, uh, follow these people on LinkedIn. I know I wanna post and comment on their stuff. Uh, I just don't know when they're going to post. So this is gonna tell you when they're going to post. It's gonna send you a Slack message and that there's a relevant post that you need to comment on. And on that Slack message, you're going to have the suggested comment, you should probably put there, uh, stuff like that. So you can, you can use a very similar flow to many other aspects of marketing, uh, following the same exact concepts of I wanna follow these topics of these people. I wanna see when they post stuff that's relevant to me. I wanna know what to comment that will be valuable in a structure that makes sense that people would like to read. And I want to be, uh, self-promoting, but in a very. Gentle hidden way and and you can literally apply this to almost any other channel you can think of.
Pietro MontaldoYeah, absolutely. Completely agree. I have built many similar system for Twitter and for LinkedIn. Right. You every social has their nuances, right? Yeah. So important. You adapt it and you understand the social, but okay, again, it's a one off. You set it once and then it works for you. Yeah. Awesome. And the concept, the underlying logic is absolutely the same. Okay, so the first thing you should be inside, you should create an account. Once you're inside, what you wanna do is you wanna go here to create new, and you wanna go to the second voice here that says, workflow today will just be the workflow. Okay? Uh, when you open the workflow. You give it as very simple title, uh, let it sell, comment something super, super simple. And then the first thing you do whenever you create an agent, and this is value for this platform, which you're using today, but you can use any platform you want. You can use Lindy. Uh, really if you're more technical, any, anytime, right? It doesn't matter. The first thing, whenever you build any automation, any AI workflow is to create a trigger. Okay? The trigger is the alarm, the test, the agent has to wake up and perform the task which are assigned to him. Okay? So imagine as an alarm, very simple to have this picture in mind. And there are several different types of trigger. A trigger could be, I'm just gonna make some example. It could be an email that arrives into account whenever an email arrives into this Gmail account, do this specific action. For example, uh, I dunno, uh, draft a response or whenever I receive an email that has a subject. Uh, that says invoice, extract the invoice from the email. Okay. In this case, the most common, uh, type of trigger is a scheduled trigger. So you tell them, just like you would tell yourself at 8:00 AM every morning to this specific action, okay? This is also the one we will use for this specific workflow. Okay? So if I set up a scheduled, a scheduled trigger, and I want for this specific work workflow to have one trigger once, once a week, so I want it weekly on Thursday, okay? This workflow will only run every Thursday at the hours, which I set in, in this case 8:00 AM Okay? So once you have done this, you have clicked, you clicked on, and, and you have the alarm set. Okay, now we have to tell him what to do when he wakes up with his alarm. I'm gonna add notes, right? But you don't need to add them. It's just to, so that when we beat, it's more clear you don't have to do this stuff. They don't change anything in the workflow. So feel free to ignore them as just the people who follow along and see the video can have a better idea what I'm bid at each stage. Okay? So the first thing we're gonna do is identify the sub that you want to monitor, okay? And this is different for each single one of us. You have multiple options. You, you, if you have, for example, um, a Google sheet where you have already store this information, you can connect a Google sheet. Uh, what we want to have is a basic list. How you create this within this platform is you go to utilities and you create, uh, a table of constant. What this is as a simple table, imagine as an excel, as a Google sheet, but within the platform so you don't have to get out. Okay? Uh, and what we're gonna add here is two simple column here is subreddit, sub name, and here is just sub. Okay? Okay. Um. Pri a be dyslexic and only need to check my spelling, but, uh, ignore it for now.
Isar MeitisDoesn't matter. Yes. Again, for those of you who are not seeing, uh, we are just creating tab by clicking a plus button and adding, uh, two different columns inside a simple table that is within a table relay. So there's nothing unique about it.
Pietro MontaldoIt is a table. It's exactly a table. Nothing but imagine as creating a Google sheet. I'm giving, basically I'm just creating a list of the subreddit, which is interesting for me. Okay. I created two tab, uh, each subreddit, and this is just a technicality of Reddit, is identify as an r slash the name of the sub. Okay? And then to have it clean, I also wanna have it without the RL because I need to use it later in the flow without the rl. So what I'm gonna do is I'm just gonna create two tables with the name of the sub, which I want to monitor, okay? Okay. These are sub and I'm using product marketing and product enter, which are interesting for B2B SA company. Right? If single one of you, before setting this up, we look for, uh, the sub brand, which are interesting for them. Okay? Okay, so we have identified the sub. Uh, again, don't do it now. Now use sample once, but do it. This is an important search. You do it once, it's done, you know, you check it maybe once a year, but you're still following the right and then it's done. The second thing we want to do is we want to give information about our company. Okay? So in this case, we're gonna use a very similar step. We're gonna insert another table. We're gonna do the same exact things another time. This time we're gonna insert our company link, right? Uh, so the first thing, and I'm gonna insert my company name this, then I want to have my company, company. URL, my website basically. Then let's say we also have a blog. A lot of company have a blog. I also wanna have my company blog. I basically am trying to give as many information as possible about my company. Right. And I'm also gonna give my link in URL. Okay. So I gave all of the information which are publicly available on the internet about my company. If you have files, you can also upload files, right? This is just important
Isar Meitisquestion. Would you, would you also write like a, like you do from a context perspective? Like when I do anything on any ai, I have like a full document that explains about my company, what we do, what services I provide, who I work with exactly. Uh, would you add something like this, or is it less relevant for this kind of a workflow?
Pietro MontaldoNo, it, it is very relevant, right? It's a way to simplify when you're bid a lot of agents, if you have the documents, you have to, you can skip this part or you can have a Google Sheet or an Excel, and that skips this part, right? All the information out there, you know, you don't have to write them every single time, every time you just reference the same file. Okay? For the sake of this workshop, there will people that are familiar and comfortable with doing that because they have built a lot, but there are often people who are being the first thing. So I try to give it an approach, which is generic, right? Yeah. This is very simple. It works very well. It doesn't consume extra credit. So for example, I build a lot of workflow like this. Even if I could have a document, right? I, I need this four information point company name company, RL company blog, and Link u rl, and I use this along the way. Okay.
Isar MeitisPerfect.
Pietro MontaldoCompany. What I'm doing, this is what I'm doing next, is basically exactly what you were doing, right? Based on all of the company info, which I have created on step three, I'm gonna ask an AI to create a company profile. If you already have the company profile bill, you would skip this part, right? So you would save, uh, a bit of time every time you bid the um, uh, a workflow. Okay? And to do this, I want to click on Plus, I wanna go to, uh, add an AI step, right? And I wanna add a custom AI step. Okay, this is basically me prompting whatever LLMI want. You can select, uh, anything that you can find within the platform. You can select JGPT 5.2, cloud Sonet, Germany, three Flash, anything you want, right? In this case, uh, I'm really liking Germany these days, so I'm gonna use Germany three Pro for this specific task. So it, I, what I want him to do, and what I will now prompt him to do is to take all of the information I have defined in the previous step and to create a quick company profile, right? So I'm gonna type here and then I'm gonna paste the prompt in the chat, so those of you who are following, and maybe we can also post it on LinkedIn, can copy paste it. If you're building with me, I'm gonna tell him based on, and then I'm gonna reference, when you wanna reference information you have used in the flow, you can type at. Okay, then go to company information, uh, and then tell them, there will always be always one row in this list, right?'cause you have bid it once and there will only be one company, our own company. So it's very simple because it's the only option. You got company info, first row company name, and then I'm basically gonna reference here all the information. Okay? I'm gonna ference a company name company. So
Isar Meitiswhile, while you're adding the other ones, again, for those of you who are not watching the way this works, and it's the same on all these platforms, whether you're using, uh, relay or, or NA 10 or, or Make or Zapier, it doesn't matter. They're all the same every. Previous step, or basically every step in the workflow provides different parameters into the workflow. And then you can reference these parameters in other steps. So in this case, what pie is doing is he's saying based on, and then the parameter is company name and then also company RL and then also company blog. And these are parameters he created in the previous step when he created the table. So it knows how to reference information from the table. Uh, but it's the same thing. If you get an information from somewhere through the automation, you can reference it in future steps, uh, and so on. So it's the same exact approach in all these tools, which basically means when you're prompting, you can create prompts that will be dynamically updated depending on that one time it runs because it knows how to pull information from previous steps.
Pietro MontaldoExactly. Uh, that's absolutely correct. And, and after I have referenced this information, I give this information, I told you I'm okay. Take the information. From here, I'm gonna prompt and say, create a description of my company, who it serves, what niches the team, what our customer target, target customer is, what the main messaging and style are, and what type of product it offer. Right? So basically everything that I will later need to draft good comments and to understand which post I want to comment on, right? I'm giving the AI the necessary information for it to work well. Okay? So whenever we create an AI step, and this is through here, but on any other platform, you have to make sure of two main things, right? Number one, you have to make sure that the AI has access to the right set of information. So if I reference something that AI doesn't have access to, it'll not work. Okay? In this specific platform, how you do it is. You can see here that it says AI has access to and then what it has access to, in this case, company info, which we is exactly what we want. If you had to add something, you would click to add data from previous step and reference the right step, right? So one thing you have to always think is. Okay, does this have access to the information it needs to gimme a response? And the second thing you always have to do is to make sure that the output is in the correct format, right? So do I want one paragraph, one paragraph of rich text that tells me all this information? Or do I want several different items in a response? I want the company description, customer served. Okay, cool. Tools like this one, they already auto generate responses, one, based on what they think will be the best output. In this case, what I'm looking, uh, is something more simple than, than this, uh, autogenerated output. So I'm gonna click on this three step and I'm gonna change the output format to text. So instead of having a complex and formatted, uh, text, I want a simple, plain text. I want a one pager about my company, basically, with all this information. Okay, so what we have done, we have given sub relevant subreddit with, uh, the name of the sub. We are looking for, we have given information about our company. The next step is gonna be extracting the, the post from Reddit. Okay. To do this, we want to extract the post from each single sub, which we have identified in this sample included two, product, marketing, and product enter. Okay? You can have one or you can have 10. Absolutely. Up to you. Depending on how many you can find that are actually relevant for your company. The more you do, the more credits it will cost. So you have to be relevant as well, right? Uh, so what I want, what I need to do now is I need to add an iterator. Okay? An iterator, for those of you who haven't beat it could sound as a complex word. It's actually something which is very, very simple. It loops over a list. Okay? So if I have. A series of subreddit I want to analyze. Uh, I will tell the AI for each of the subreddit, which have in this list, go to line one, extract the subreddit, perform this set of tasks for this specific subreddit. And then once you have finished this, uh, go to the next item in the list, goes to the second line, find the second subreddit to the series of tasks for that second sub. Okay. This is called an, uh, whenever you iterate, you have to iterate through a list of things, right? So I'm prompted here to insert a list. A list, and I will reference to the sub. Okay? I want to iterate through every sub, which have defined here on step two. Once this is done, uh uh, I will ask to. Uh, I will, I will connect Reddit. If you haven't, I think you have to connect one of your Reddit profile. This only extract doesn't have permission to write on Reddit, so it can't damage your reputation. It can only acquire information and it's a super, super simple connection. Maybe it's not even needed. I don't, I don't recall now. Okay. But once you have here, you can type on the bar above Reddit. And if you wanted to do this on link and you just type link, you'll be able to find all of the actions, which, which you can, um, which you can do with Reddit, right? Depending on the platform, you have a set of tasks, which will be very easy to do, right? They are pre, pre-compiled. You don't have to do anything technical, right? And here, what I really like is that here you can reiterate, read, and understand. So this one means get comments on post, get post by L or this last item, which is the one we're gonna use, get post by subreddit. Okay? This is exactly what we need. Now we type right it, we look for what we want. Get post by that subreddit. And then we basically just set this up to reference the right set of information, right? So I'm gonna tell them, get post by sub Reddit. What subreddit do I want? Make sure to reference the subreddit without the rl. Okay. Here. And it's just technicality and it will tell you if you do it wrong. So don't worry. Even if you do it wrong, it will stop and tell you, okay, this is not the right format. Uh, you will reference that specific subreddit and then you will ask it and it will ask you what do you want to sort that subreddit for, right? You can sort and this, you can do it as well on Reddit's. The same if you do it manually. You can sort by new post top, post hot post, best post or, or depending on what you are doing and what activity you are you're doing in that specific timeframe, you can select a different one. For example, if you run this. Every day you'll probably want to do, uh, the rising, right?'cause you, if you comment closer to the posting date, you have better odds that your po your comments actually become as viral as the post. Okay? Uh, but if you run it once a week, you might wanna do, for example, the, the, the new or the, or the hot test. In this case, let's just select the new, and then I can select the time period, which I want to reference in this workflow. Since we run it once a week, we only want to post, which are part of the last week. Right. I don't wanna post on another one, uh, that I might have received already last week. But if you run it once a month, you will have monthly here. Okay. And if I also wanna tell him, if you don't find any relevant post, uh, post that I send a notification. This is just bureaucracy. Right. Um, once
Isar Meitisthis starts, I just wanna do a quick recap of, of the overall and then where we are right now. So, so they are, the first thing was just set up. Like, here is my company. Absolutely. Here's the subreddits I wanna follow. This is a very static step. The next thing is, because we've defined several subreddits, we wanna be able to do the process for each and every one of them. And that's why we're using this iterator. And what we're building right now is the steps inside the iterator. Basically what is going to iterate through for each and every one of the subreddits. And what we did now is basically tell it what information to pay attention to, uh, when it's getting the subreddit posts. What, uh, Pietro said earlier that you need to be. Mindful of is that every time this thing runs, because it's gonna take the information from the subreddit and it's gonna send it to your favorite LLM, you're going to be paying tokens to the API. So don't go and build this with 15 different subreddits. Each and every one of them has 150,000 posts a week. And then you'll be paying a lot of money to your, uh, LLM in order to process all of that. Uh, I'm sure there's other ways to build filters and, and things like that just to make it, uh, more efficient. But we are aware of that, that the more you ask it to do, the more credits you're going to pay. And to be fair, uh, since this thing runs always, then, then you will need to go in your Excel file afterwards through 150 comments that you have to verify and copy and paste and edit, which you may not have the time to do. And so, so there's other reasons why to at least start small and learn how to do this, and then perfect from there.
Pietro MontaldoAbsolutely. And this is a question of design, right? It might sound complex now that is mentioned if you haven't ever built, but the reality is once you learn how to design and you learn how to test them, and we'll also see while testing this one, teams become much, much clearer, right. To learn. Yeah. How to make sure that you consume less and, and platform like this also give you a great summary of what you're spending and you can set your own limit, right? So,
Isar Meitisyeah.
Pietro MontaldoUm, it's, it's absolutely true, but it's something you learn in the first week while you start, you know, dedicating a bit of time to this. Sure. So now that we have. Extracted all of the sub, we closed the iterator. This was the only item which we're gonna put in the iterator. For every sub we extract all the post of the last week, which are new. And then what I'm gonna do next is I'm gonna ask an AI step, an AI to look, look through all of the posts which we have extracted for each single one of these sub Reddit, and identify the one that based on my company information, the information I gave about my own company are relevant for me to give a comment on. Right? So we look for a comment opportunity, and we also ask him to explain, okay, what's the angle? You know, why do you think I should comment here? Okay, so you also have that piece of information. To do this we'll create another custom AI step. Okay. And one more time. We, we want to select the model first. Uh, again, I'm gonna use Gini three Pro'cause I really like it these days, but it will do a great job as well with cloud. Um, I think Gini has the perfect balance within this type of workload between precision and, uh, cost in term of credits. But, you know, you can also test with different one and see which one performs best, right in the same platform just by changing with one click. This is another very nice thing. Um, so once we are inside here and we have selected the model, uh, I'm gonna copy paste, uh, the prompt and then I'm gonna drive you through it. Okay. Uh, I'm gonna have to, when I copy paste it won't keep the reference. So remember to reference an information, which we mentioned before, we have to type at and then look for the specific company information. Okay? For example, in this case, I'm referenced the company name and I'm referencing the, the AI profile, which you build about my company, which is this AI output, which we created on step four, right? So I'm telling you, based on my company name and the AI output, which we created about my company, I want you to identify which Reddit post are relevant for me to comment on. Sorry, my grammar is acting up. They might be interesting to leave a comment on my company and what we offer. Okay? So I'm explaining what you want him to do, and then I'm telling you my goal is to leave a comment and mention our service and how it can help you without directly promoting or disclosing us being part of, uh, the company. Uh, I wanted to basically answer the question, how can company name. Uh, help in this case. Okay. Select the post and I want to be sure, like, like I'm basically remarking that I want to select to him the AI to select the post purely by topic fit, specifically. Those were my company's value proposition or solution is relevant and could have meaningful insight. Okay? So I'm doing a very simple thing here. I'm telling you how I want him to select the post, which I want to comment, okay. In a more complex flow with a bit more design and I will be a bit more time. You would also be able to tell him, okay, I want to draft comment for this post. I want you to specifically use this tone and go much deeper into how you want this post to be, to these comments to be selected and drafted. Okay? Like we said before, every time we build an AI stack, we need to check two things. Thing number one is, does he have access to the right set of information? In this case, I needed to have access to the right post, right? It's fundamental. Without those, we won't be able to reference it, and I needed to have a access also to the AI output. Okay? So I'm gonna make sure that also AI output is added to the type of information that my AI has access to. Okay? And the second thing which I want him to do is I want to check that the, the response output is in the format, which I, I want, in this case, the autogenerated one works very well'cause I might wanna reference the posterior and post-it in different sections. But you can, you just remember to make sure that you're using the right, uh, set of information. Okay? This is
Isar Meitisdone. Again, just do on, on a very, very high level every step with ai, by the way, it doesn't matter whether you do this automatically or manually. It needs three things. What is gonna be the input, what's going to be the output, and what needs to be the process in between? Right? That's how like every thing that you're building is how it's gonna work. And it's the same thing here. You just tell it what the input is, it's getting it from the previous steps, tell it what to do and then tell it in what format you want. The output and the, the way you choose the format of the output is whatever you need. There is no right or wrong. Like if sometimes, uh, simple text is great, sometimes you want a table, sometimes you want, uh, JSON code. Sometimes whatever it is that you need for either the following steps for an output that you can process, uh, you can pick the right output.
Pietro MontaldoYeah, exactly. And I also pasted the prompt here in the chat in Zoom. Maybe someone can post it also in the LinkedIn. Yeah, I will do that. If there's someone who's building with me, we're, we're going a bit faster today'cause we wanted to cover a lot of ground. Uh, but again, you can rewatch this and, and, and go out your own pace. Okay. The last thing which we want to do is we wanna take this information, these results, which we have gotten, and we want to receive it via email. This runs once a week. Once a week. I want to receive an email in a more complex, uh, and with more time, we could also put it on an Excel file, right? And receive the Excel file via email. In this case, we make it simple. Um, let's just send it to ourself via email. To do this, we're gonna type send and we're gonna find the voice, send email to yourself. This action basically takes a set of information, which you define and send it to your own email with which you created the account on the platform. Okay? Like for an email, you have to define a subject, uh, which is gonna be also to comment on this week, for example. And then I'm gonna add a current date and time just to make sure that the email reference the we can time. Then what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna create a body of the email that says, here are the top posts, identify for strategic comment this week. Okay? And I'm gonna reference the result of, uh, step seven, which identify the specific post, which are interesting for me to comment on. Okay? So I'm gonna do data. I'm gonna go to step seven responses, and I'm gonna add a bullet list with all of the responses, right? So what this will do, it will iterate through the post and it will give me a response with the three top posts of the week, because I ask for three top posts in the previous prompt, okay? Uh, it, when I add it and I go to a data here on the bottom right, uh, it, and then tell them bullet point of the responses. I'm gonna reference the specific information which I want. And in this case it's gonna be, uh, the Reddit post title. So that's the first thing I want. Then I want the link of the red did post. Okay. And again, I click on data, I go to responses. Red did post URL, and then I go to why is Relevant, which was the second type of information which would occur, requested from the post relevant topic. Suggest a comment is this. And the last thing is, um, uh oh. Okay. Sorry. I made a mistake here. Why is it relevant? Uh, it would be, um, a relevant topic. And then, uh, sorry, getting stuck here. Data reference to relevant topic. And the first thing would be suggested comment insight. Okay. So why is this, uh, post? We should comment on insight. Okay. And, uh, and
Isar Meitisagain, to, to explain how this works, you can write some of the stuff yourself and you can then add parameters into it. And one parameter could be three pages of data, right? Because it's the output of whatever the AI gave you. This could be very, very long, but this is how you create the email. So the email, basically what you type manually is gonna be, if you want like the headings, uh, these are the ones that wanna comment on. And then we'll give you a list. And then why do I wanna comment or what do I want to comment? And that will be the output from the ai. And it's really, really easy to set up. And then you're gonna get an email like this every single week with the summary that the AI created.
Pietro MontaldoPerfect. Yeah. And, and let's, let's test it so we have maybe also five minutes for a q and a, if there's any question to test it. To go up at the beginning of the workflow and you click start test run, and you click on start now. Okay. While this act, let me explain you in brief what we did. So it's a, it's a quick summary. We gave information about which separate they want to monitor. We gave information about our company, so the AI know us and know what kind of comment are interesting for us. We extracted. Uh, all of the relevant post of the week from the rab, which he, which he selected. We fed it to an ai. We gave this input to an ai and we told them, identify the ones that are relevant for me to comment on and explain you why they're relevant. And then I am telling him, okay, now give me, send me an email which, which explain why these posts are relevant. Okay? And we, if we see it running, it goes through every single step. You can go in and check what it did for every single step. It created a profit about my company. It extracted 25 posts for each of this already, which I selected. And now it's thinking about, okay, which of this post are that relevant one for, uh, this specific company, relaying this example, uh, are are relevant for me to comment on. And then hopefully we send us an email with the result. In a second, we'll see the results In the meantime, since we don't have so much time. Isel, do you have question? Is there any question in the audience? Maybe you'll link it in. Uh, I know this is very quick, but, uh, we, we covered a lot of ground. It's mostly to show you what the potential is and what you can achieve. Uh, and, and hopefully some of you have also managed to build this along, um, together with the email of summary, either. I will also send this template so you can test it for yourself. You didn't build it together. Fantastic. I can export this template and you can import it directly.
Isar MeitisYeah. Uh, so a few que very high level question. One, uh, the way this works in Relay is I understand you don't need to bring any of your API keys, like you connected, you know, Gemini three and so on. Uh, how much are you paying relay? Are you paying per automation? Are you paying per month? Like, how does this work?
Pietro MontaldoSo you see it here. For example, whenever you run a test run, it's free, which is very nice. You don't pay credits, right? But at the end of every run, I can see how much run it would've used, right? In this case, it would've used 285 credits, right? I can see every single step how much it takes. For example, this Germany three Pro, it's basically everything I paid for 241 credits, right? It was the most complex one, right? If I don't like that while I test, I go back and I use geometry flash, a cheaper model. Okay? Yes. So you can really metric yourself on, okay, what do I really need? Uh, while you test, once you deploy, honestly, there's a, there's a little bit of a markup. Uh, if you run gigantic volume of operation, you're probably better off having something self-hosted with your own LLM. But for everything else, for me, for technical operators, uh, it makes a lot of sense, right? It's, it's super generous, the free plan they give. So you can basically test everything before, uh, before putting into production, putting live, and then, you know, you can track your spending. Um. Can you bring your own API keys into it or you gotta use their, you can also bring it if you want, and that's significantly cheaper. Uh, so you can also do it if you're a more technical and advanced, uh, person. But just before we go, okay, I received this email. You see postal comment on this week. This is the result of the workflow. The date, which I asked him to put. Uh, and then here are the post title of the post. Here. I can check the link. Uh, why is it relevant? It talks about burnout, task automation, AI research agents, which is exactly what really does. And then the comment insect the list of task mention market research, competitive brief, our prime candidates for AI automation. Instead of doing the manually, you could set up AI agents to gather the raw data draft introversion, allowing to act as the editor strategy. Right? So this is great, honestly, like, think about it, like an intern wouldn't have done it so well, okay, next step you build a comment, you put it on a Google sheet and you can edit in the Google sheet and then you go and post it manually. Okay? But this I asked him for, uh, for the post, and he return the post with exact logic with, for which he selected. So I can say, okay, this week I wanna comment on this one.'cause this is perfect, honestly. And then I want to talk about this one as competitive intelligence. So I will invest time into just posting meaningful comment, SEO, and geo optimize for those specific posts.
Isar MeitisSo I, I, I wanna do a quick, again, 30,000 foot recap because I think it's important. Uh, after, after we were in the weeds and the details, which were fantastic, like people now know how simple this is, uh, to create. The first thing is you see this as a great combination of human AI working together, right? Pietro didn't create a system that automatically posts on, on any of these platforms. It finds information, suggests what to post, explains why. So you have the reasoning, and then it's up to you to decide what's gonna be really meaningful to the audience, what's gonna be really meaningful in the context of that particular subreddit. Or as I mentioned, LinkedIn, Twitter, like wherever it is that you're posting this, uh, you, you wanna be able to, uh, contextualize it. So I think it is very, very important to have the human in the loop, uh, because otherwise I can tell you that there's four or five people that comment on everything I post on LinkedIn, and a hundred percent of their posts are, are AI generated? And it's horrible. Like, yes, it promotes my posts, so I don't care because me more people comment on it, but it doesn't provide any meaningful value. And he, those particular people I don't really care about because they, they, you know, it's just. Why are you doing this? Like if you're not really providing any real value. And so I think that's a very important part of this. The other really important part of this is, while this was quick and, and maybe not as easy to follow over sound without looking at the screen. All these platforms and relays definitely from, from a user perspective side is really, really easy, is a simple step by step. Everything is clearly on the screen and it's not hard if you have zero technical skills to go in and start building these kind of automations, uh, because you don't need to connect any IPI keys. You don't need to know what MCP servers are. You don't need to know authentication, OF two or whatever. None of that. Like you log into your account somewhere like on this PI case on Reddit, but could have been LinkedIn, and you just select things from there. So it's very simple and straightforward to start building and I highly recommend to start experimenting with these kind of tools. And the last thing I will say is it's a great example of combining linear process. So step by step that is linear with an AI that does the thinking aspect in the middle to be able to provide more valuable outputs than just old school linear, uh, workflow automation. Uh, with that being said, Pietro, this was fantastic. Uh, both the introduction, the knowledge about Reddit. Why is it important and how to think about building processes. Uh, it's exactly what we said we're going to do. And, and you delivered, uh, exceptionally. If people want to follow you, if they want to take your course, if they want to connect with you, what are the best ways to do that?
Pietro MontaldoI'm gonna post it here in the chat. My main channel is, uh, is LinkedIn. I also have large, uh, newsletter, but if you want to chat, if you have any question, if you wanna debrief on this most very available, send a connection reference to this specific session. So, I know you have taken part in today's, and I'm, I'm gonna a hundred percent respond. I'd love if this is a topic which is interesting, uh, and you enjoy the session, how, however fast it was. Uh, I run a course where we start from the very basics of biding and designing automation to, uh, how to improve, evaluate, and maintain agents using no-code platforms. And it's, it's, it's very much applied, right? So we build things like this with calm, with one-to-one coaching. So it's, it's very much applied. Then at the end you live with system, which actually already work for, uh, for a company, for Reddi, LinkedIn, and many of the things, uh, related to growth. So I also live here, uh, a discount code or send it to either, maybe you can send it in a follow. Uh, email with all of the materials and the template too. Uh, and in any case, if you have questions regardless of the course, please connect with me and send me any, any question you have. I'm, I'm always very happy to respond.
Isar MeitisYes. Thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you for everybody joining live. Uh, you know, William and Cha head who've been, uh, really active on the chat on, on LinkedIn, but there's been like 10 or 12 other people on LinkedIn as well. So thank you all for being there, and obviously Andy and Dean, uh, and Derek who's been, uh, with us and some other people who left, uh, joined and left in the middle, uh, on Zoom as well. So thank you all for joining us. We appreciate you again spending the time with us and asking, uh, questions that make this more interesting. And again, Pietro, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Bye everyone. I'll see you next. It was a pleasure.