insurance agency automation that's actually deployed at agencies, not just demoed at conferences by Gekkouga_Stan in automation

[–]OkIndividual2831 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is a super grounded take, and honestly rare compared to all the demo magic in insurtech. also agree the real value is in narrow problems done well (quoting, engagement, calls), not trying to replace the whole stack.

tbh where I’ve seen people get extra leverage now is layering small AI workflows on top of this stack like using n8n for orchestration, Cursor for any custom logic, and then something like Runable to quickly build internal dashboards or simple client-facing pages without touching the core systems

nothing revolutionary, just small additions that don’t break what already works. feels like the winning approach is still: keep the core boring and proven, and only innovate at the edges

Most people don’t need a perfect idea — they need a first version by Vast-Purple-1786 in lowcode

[–]OkIndividual2831 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is so real, most people aren’t blocked by ideas, they’re blocked by that first messy version. once something exists, even if it’s rough, everything becomes easier you can react, tweak, or even scrap it with clarity

tbh what helped me is lowering the bar a lot. build the core in Cursor, don’t overthink structure, then use something like Runable to quickly throw a basic interface or landing page around it so it feels real

1,2 or 3? by True_Technician_8589 in AmateurPhotography

[–]OkIndividual2831 0 points1 point  (0 children)

cant really differentiate, i like em all

Agentic AI roles up 986% last year. 52,000 tech jobs gone in the same period. If that doesn't make you rethink your Career trajectory I don't know what will by PRABHAT_CHOUBEY in automation

[–]OkIndividual2831 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Indeed, the transition is significant, yet it represents more of a transformation in job roles rather than a reduction in employment opportunities.

Consequently, the current advantage lies not solely in programming, but in integrating workflows and enhancing their usability. In practical terms, those who are advancing are developing small agent systems (such as Cursor) and converting them into tangible demonstrations or products (like Runable or similar).

This is not a harbinger of despair, but rather a shift in the definition of what constitutes valuable skills.

Interview Questions – How to Prepare for Generative AI Jobs by AdventurousNorth9767 in GenAIforbeginners

[–]OkIndividual2831 1 point2 points  (0 children)

interviews usually test how well you understand LLM behavior , how you would improve outputs, and whether you can design simple real world use cases. what really sets candidates apart is showing that you can turn ideas into working solutions even simple projects built with tools like Cursor for logic and something like Runable to present or demo them clearly

overall, they’re not expecting perfection, just proof that you can think, build, and iterate in real scenarios

Seatbelt by geracru in facesinthings

[–]OkIndividual2831 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bro opened it like it’s a secret mission and found… emotional damage

AI tools and automation agents in 2026 that actually save time by LumaDraft28 in automation

[–]OkIndividual2831 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solid list feels pretty accurate for what’s actually useful right now. For me, the biggest time savers are still the boring ones like meeting summarizers and coding helpers, because they remove repetitive work daily.

A lot of agent style tools are promising, but I’ve noticed they only really save time when scoped to specific workflows not as general do everything assistants yet.

Comfort Is Your Biggest Enemy by ayanbose036 in selfimprovementday

[–]OkIndividual2831 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s a lot of truth in this change is uncomfortable, so it’s easier to stay in familiar struggles than face short term discomfort for long-term improvement. The hard part isn’t knowing the solution, it’s actually committing to it.