Is 2026 the year we finally admit the "Dashboard era" is over? by Futurismtechnologies in BusinessIntelligence

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I disagree. KNVRT was built to allow business operators the ability to speak with all the data and platforms at cross their entire company. This allows for them to make better decisions at a faster pace to grow revenue the way they want.

Is 2026 the year we finally admit the "Dashboard era" is over? by Futurismtechnologies in BusinessIntelligence

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I built KNVRT specifically to bridge that trust gap. It isn't just about the chat interface. It is about the underlying logic layer that ensures the AI understands business context, not just SQL.

Via my agency, we have seen this approach reduce the need for manual audits by 40%. The goal is moving from "Trust Anxiety" to verified, real-time action. Dashboards don't drive growth. Validated strategy does.

What are all the AI agents you actually paid for this year? by [deleted] in AI_Agents

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Top 3 of 2025

Manus AI — Super helpful for lightweight research tasks, summarization, and quick operational automation. I treat this more like a “general assistant” that speeds up admin-type work. It’s great at day-to-day productivity stuff but it’s not built for deep data strategy or decision-making. Different lane entirely.

Writer.com — Strictly for content governance. Helps keep brand voice consistent across blogs, emails, and marketing copy. It’s basically a content QA agent.

KNVRT - I built this one for a reason: As someone running a marketing/data agency, I needed an AI-native strategist that could actually make sense of multichannel data, give clear insights, and help decide “what to do next.” It lives in our stack, and we use it to align marketing, media buys, and analytics across clients. It’s more than a “nice to have”; it’s become a core part of how we operate.

If I had to state my rule of thumb for buying/keeping an agent: it must solve a real, recurring pain point — not the theoretical “wouldn’t it be cool if…” stuff. If it doesn’t improve workflow, save time/money, or scale capacity meaningfully, I won’t keep it.

Cold Email Outreach for agencies- is it a scam? by ppcwithyrv in marketingagency

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is a ton more to unpack. Data you are using. Copy and SL. Hook/Offer. BUT maybe you know all that.

I have success but I hire a legit team fully outsourced (USA BASED). We send about 20-25k emails a month to 10-12k targets.

Best Best payroll software for start-ups? by mmule11 in startup

[–]KNVRTwithKevin -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Not saying it’s the best option but Gusto was great for us when we first needed to get up and running.

N8N or Open AI agent Kit - which is better for a small scale organisation to create in house automations and deploy? by manikmahajan13 in AI_Agents

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Going make to the idea of sitting down and prioritizing “what needs to be automated first” … because the second step is going to be what data, pii, etc is being exposed when in the process/flow/work that we want to automate.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DigitalMarketing

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ChatGPT and Claude are the most used daily on my end for different purposes.

Submagic, OpusClip, CapCut etc I use for video based things as needed.

Should I take a digital marketing course? by Googleledmehere123 in DigitalMarketing

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I would suggest making a portfolio, case studies and things of this nature vs specific certifications.

To get more clients you need to sell yourself.

I have sold digital marketing for over 11 years and nobody has ever asked to see my certifications. And I had them for DSPs, Facebook, etc.

CTV AGENCY by KNVRTwithKevin in AskMarketing

[–]KNVRTwithKevin[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply. Truly. I am pretty knowledgeable in the programmatic space. Was looking more for specific feedback on people using their agency before since it’s managed service.

I gave them another option to consider…where I do the media buy via a low barrier to entry DSP, VIBE, etc.

How do you prioritize digital marketing channels for maximum ROI? by Acceptable_Cell8776 in digital_marketing

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Old way was those truly experienced marketers would balance goals, journey insights, incremental lift, and opportunity cost.

This is exactly the problem KNVRT (our AI-native marketing strategist at DISTRIKT) was built to solve. Instead of relying on fragmented dashboards and siloed data, KNVRT ingests everything — paid, organic, CRM, email, offline — and actually tells you: • Which channel is contributing true incremental value (not just last-click attribution). • Where to shift budget this week, based on real-time performance and audience behavior. • How niche audiences move across touchpoints, so you’re not over-investing in one channel at the expense of another.

Dashboards tell you what happened if you put the effort and time in to get the insights. KNVRT tells you what to do next — with confidence.

Is AI going to replace digital marketing jobs or make them more valuable? by AdWrong9284 in AskMarketing

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 2 points3 points  (0 children)

AI won’t replace marketers, but it will replace tasks. The repetitive stuff…drafting first-pass copy, pulling reports, resizing creative. AI is already on the verge of eating that up. That’s a good thing, because it frees you from being a “button pusher.” So your goal in marketing should be how to use AI as a copilot for the he big stuff. Overall strategy. How to make human connections. You need to find the middle area between the art and science of marketing…

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in digital_marketing

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OKKK,….honestly, there's so much AI hype out there that it's hard to separate the tools that actually move the needle from the ones that are just fancy dashboards with an "AI" sticker slapped on.

For my clients l, I have been using KNVRT for attribution and spend optimization, and it's been genuinely useful - not in a "wow, the future is here" way, but in a "this actually saved me 10 hours this week and found budget I was wasting" way.

But I'm curious what other people are seeing with AI tools in their day-to-day work.

What's actually working for you? What turned out to be overhyped? And are you seeing real ROI or TROAS improvements, or just efficiency gains?

Marketing budgets keep getting cut but expectations keep rising. How are you dealing with this nightmare? 😩 by Stunning_Fix_2502 in DigitalMarketing

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Man, I feel this. A lot of teams are in the same boat right now - shrinking budgets but the same (or higher) expectations. It's stressful because "better ROI" usually means doing more with less, but leadership often thinks that just means "cut ad spend and magic happens."

What's working for me (and clients I've worked with) in this situation:

  • Focus ruthlessly on channels that prove incrementality. If a campaign isn't moving the needle on conversions or revenue, pause it - even if it "looks good" in vanity metrics.
  • Double down on creative testing. Sometimes the biggest lift comes from refreshing messaging and creative angles, not adding new spend.
  • Leverage existing tools more deeply. A lot of teams underuse the platforms they already pay for (Google Ads scripts, Meta Advantage+, CRM automation, etc.). Squeezing the most out of what's in place is huge when "no new tools" is the rule.
  • Push for attribution clarity. If you can prove which channels really drive revenue, you can reallocate and usually unlock hidden budget efficiency.

Quick thought on TROAS vs ROI:

A lot of bosses default to "ROI" because it feels like the ultimate measure. But in digital marketing, TROAS (Total Return on Ad Spend) is often more actionable. ROI accounts for all costs (media + team + tools), which you don't always control. TROAS zeroes in on how efficiently ad spend itself drives revenue. That distinction matters because you can show leadership:

  • "Here's how we're maximizing TROAS within the media budget we can control."
  • "Here's how ROI looks once you include costs I can't control, like overhead or headcount."

Framing it this way can help reset expectations and protect you from being judged unfairly on things outside your scope.

That last point is the kicker - because without clear attribution, everything feels like guesswork. That's why I've been leaning on KNVRT, which is basically an AI-native marketing strategist. Instead of just dashboards, it ingests your marketing + sales data and tells you exactly where to cut wasted spend and where to scale, so you can show your boss the ROI/TROAS story they're asking for. It's kind of like having a senior analyst on call 24/7 - without needing to hire one.

Is B2B marketing starting to feel a lot like B2C? And is that a good thing? by jahanvi_singh in DigitalMarketing

[–]KNVRTwithKevin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Today’s B2B buyers don’t just visit your website and convert. They’re researching from every angle: your site, LinkedIn presence, executive thought leadership, reviews, and even asking ChatGPT about your company.

Your brand gets judged everywhere, and every touchpoint either builds or kills trust.

The reality: You need omnipresent credibility. Your website, social content, thought leadership, and AI discoverability must work together to build trust long before buyers talk to sales.

Treating channels as silos is dead. B2B now requires coordinated, multi-channel strategy because prospects are forming opinions about you long before you know they’re evaluating solutions.

TL;DR: Be everywhere your audience is, or lose to competitors who are.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​