Same source, two different buyer journeys

AGENTYX applies one strategic source: companies and professionals want practical AI outcomes, not abstract demos. From that same source, we split execution into two lanes so the website is easier to understand and conversion friction drops.

The personal lane is for freelancers, specialists, and founders who need direct coaching, workflow optimization, and upskilling. The business lane is for teams that need cross-function automation with governance, measurable KPIs, and rollout ownership.

Lane 1: Personal coaching for fast capability gains

This lane works when the buyer wants to improve their own execution in days, not launch a full company-wide system in weeks. Session-based delivery keeps the scope clear and the value immediate.

  • Hands-on coaching on prompts, workflows, and tool selection.
  • Quick-win implementation for repetitive tasks.
  • Clear next steps after each session to sustain momentum.

Lane 2: Business automation for operational change

This lane starts with a paid audit, because business automation impacts multiple teams and requires process mapping, data checks, and risk controls. Publicly showing only the audit price keeps expectations realistic while preserving proposal flexibility for implementation.

  • Audit first: identify bottlenecks, approval points, and integration constraints.
  • Scoped roadmap: define implementation sprints and responsibilities.
  • Governed rollout: keep human sign-off for financial, legal, and customer-risk actions.

Why this structure improves trust and close rates

Most websites fail because they mix small personal services and enterprise automation in one pricing story. The two-lane model removes that ambiguity. Buyers quickly self-select, forms capture higher-quality intent, and sales conversations start with better context.

It also aligns with responsible AI deployment frameworks that recommend governance, monitoring, and human oversight in higher-impact business use cases.

Sources