All stages
Stage 3 · 10 min read

Sell

Let the AI team drive customers

How the team works for you

Every employee runs on a schedule (most of them daily), reads the freshest data, decides what to do, and either does it (autopilot) or drops a draft into your inbox for one-tap approval (review mode). New employees default to review mode. You graduate them to autopilot once you trust them.

Scout — fix your SEO

Scout watches 43 SEO checks every day: meta tags, schema, listing accuracy, mobile speed, reviews, photos, hours, links, content freshness. Each morning you get a ranked list of fixes. Tap the top one to apply it directly through Atlas; the others stay in your queue.

What you'll see from Scout

  • Daily score (rises or falls with the changes)
  • Top 3 fixes ranked by traffic impact
  • What competitors changed this week
  • New keywords you're starting to rank for

Grace — handle every review

Grace reads every Google review the moment it lands, drafts a reply in your voice, and shows you the angry ones first. Reviews under 4 stars get a soft, specific response that names what went wrong; 5-star reviews get a warm thanks that mentions a real menu item. You tap approve or edit, then it posts.

Grace also tracks sentiment over time. If complaints about wait times start rising in week three, Chief will surface that on Monday — and Dash will check whether your busy hours actually got busier.

Ink — write content that ranks

Ink ships three things a week: one blog post that targets a real keyword from your scan, two Google Business posts about what's happening at the restaurant, and menu descriptions for any item that's missing one. All in your voice, all citing real signals from your data.

Tip: turn Ink to autopilot once the first three pieces sound right. Most operators do this in week two.

Vibe — keep your social full

Vibe schedules across Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Google. It pulls real moments — a new dish, a busy weekend, a 5-star review — and turns them into posts. You see the week's calendar every Friday and can swap, edit, or drop anything.

Atlas — keep your storefront live

Atlas owns your website and Google listing. It detects gaps (wrong hours, missing menu items, broken schema, slow pages, no online ordering) and either fixes them itself or files a one-line task for you. Atlas also rebuilds whole pages — events, catering, FAQ, gallery — from real data.

Atlas's four modes

  1. Create — build a brand-new site or page from scratch
  2. Detect — find what's missing or broken
  3. Fill — fix only the gaps without touching the rest
  4. Refresh — pull the latest menu, photos, reviews into existing pages

Dash — explain the numbers

Dash reads your POS every day and writes a short note: what changed, why, and what to look at. Not a dashboard you have to interpret — a one-paragraph explanation in plain English. If revenue dropped, Dash already knows whether it was traffic, ticket size, or a specific channel, and tells you where to look.

What 'driving customers' looks like

Most of the lift comes from compounding small fixes: a corrected hour pulled in five extra walk-ins this week, a replied review pulled in three repeat visits, a faster website cut bounce by 20%. None of these are dramatic on their own. After eight weeks they're a different business.

Next: Scale — add more locations, read your weekly brief, and turn the whole team to autopilot.

Start building