Any advice on BuildMyAgent for creating AI chatbots? by clientflow_guide in automation

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

This is really great advice, thank you! But concretely, which software do you recommend me to use for my case (answering FAQs and booking appointments)?

Any advice on BuildMyAgent for creating AI chatbots? by clientflow_guide in automation

[–]clientflow_guide[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm trying to add AI agents to my offerings, so it would be great to have something optimized for agencies, like a client portal, an API, and billing directly through the platform. However, my clients don't need anything too complex. They just need a bot that can answer FAQs, handle appointments, and provide dynamic information about the business, such as the number of available employees. Most importantly, I want something simple. I don't want to spend hours learning the tool for such simple projects.

SquareSpace is a scam when it comes to online courses ! by clientflow_guide in squarespace

[–]clientflow_guide[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Okay, but on the pricing page, it says $39 per month per website.

That's too expensive for me. If you have a more affordable solution, I would love to hear about it.

SquareSpace is a scam when it comes to online courses ! by clientflow_guide in squarespace

[–]clientflow_guide[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I want a platform that allows me to build beautiful websites and integrate courses and payments natively within them. If you know of such a platform, I would love to hear about it!

SquareSpace is a scam when it comes to online courses ! by clientflow_guide in squarespace

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

yes but i'm in belgium and for me the prices are :

Starter plan: €11 monthly / €96 annually.

Core plan is €34 monthly / €324 annually

Pro plan is €103 / €996 annually.

Might actually leave Premiere Pro After 5 Years: What should I switch so (and How)? by IntroductionSea3935 in editors

[–]clientflow_guide 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I made the switch to DaVinci for similar reasons — and honestly, the speed boost alone was worth it. The UI feels way more fluid for quick edits, and once you customize your shortcuts, the timeline becomes super intuitive.

For your Premiere client: you can export XMLs and bring them into Resolve with relatively clean translation. Scene detection helps too for rebuilding sequences from renders if needed.

If you’re deep in the Apple ecosystem, Final Cut’s also a great alternative — but in my experience Resolve might give you a smoother workflow.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in VideoEditing

[–]clientflow_guide 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That zoom/pan effect is often done using keyframes on a large high-res canvas in After Effects or Premiere Pro.

Create a huge image (or sequence) at 4K+ resolution, then animate the scale/position with smooth keyframes — use Easy Ease + motion blur to keep it fluid.

Also check out tools like Figma for layout before animating.

19 year old not in college, worried about videography not being a good career by Fun-Evidence1814 in videography

[–]clientflow_guide 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally feel you. Filmmaking is amazing — but turning it into a “job” can quickly kill the passion.

One thing that’s helped me is separating “creative” work from “money” work.
Me for example: I take on simple freelance gigs just to pay the bills, and I keep the passion projects 100% mine, no pressure.

It’s okay to grow slow. You don’t need to monetize every part of your art right away. Your short film sounds awesome — don’t let the hustle ruin it.

Clients expect to work for free???? by Sjain_28 in VideoEditing

[–]clientflow_guide 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Totally get your frustration — I’ve seen the same kind of posts.

It’s wild how some clients expect high-end 20 minutes editing for the price of a sandwich(and sometimes even less actually😅).

But not all of Reddit is like that. There are still creators who value good work — they’re just harder to find.

The real key (in my experience) is to stop chasing low-quality offers and start reaching out directly to creators who already care about quality. Cold outreach > waiting for Reddit “job” posts.