// transcript — 1835 segments
0:00 Welcome to SaaStr AI London 2025
0:01 So I know a lot of folks again going to the service company want to turn on an
0:05 AI SDR and have it magically create revenue. Another way is understand
0:09 calmly which [music] parts of your funnel, which parts of your go to market
0:14 Deep Dive into AI Agents
0:14 process is not even happening. Is it even remotely optimized? Where are the
0:17 leads where it's just not like your team says they want to do them, but they
0:20 don't want to do the small leads. They want to do the the lowcored leads, you
0:25 know, and that's what that 15% is. And everyone like you're going to say they
0:29 don't do it. Every salesperson is managing their time. They're going to
0:31 they're going to force rank their leads in their head. They're going to put all
0:34 their effort into that one big deal that's going to close this quarter, a
0:38 little bit effort into the small ones, and nothing to the bottom. So, if you
0:42 can put AI into that scenario, or the ones that wasn't worth their time, 70%
0:46 Addressing Common Concerns
0:46 open rate, even if you grow 15 [music] or 20% faster in 2026 because of AI,
0:58 Hey Sasser, imagine having agents for every support task. One that triages
1:02 tickets, [music] another that catches duplicates, one that spots churn risk.
1:06 That'd be pretty amazing, right? Happy Fox just made it real with autopilot.
1:08 [music] These pre-built AI agents deploy in about 60 seconds and run for as low as 2
1:15 cents per [music] successful action. All of it sits inside the Happy Fox omni
1:19 channel AI first support stack. [music] Chatbot, Copilot, and Autopilot working
1:23 as one. Check them out at >> Hey everybody, Saster Annual will be
1:32 back May 2026, [music] the world's largest SAS and AI gathering
1:37 for executives. Just this last May, we hosted 10,000 attendees [music] with 68
1:42 VP level and above attendees, 36% CEOs and founders, [music] and 25% were AI
1:47 first professionals. It's the very best of STER attendees and decision makers
1:51 that [music] come to SAT annual and AI summit each and every year. But here's
1:55 the reality, folks. The longer you wait, the higher ticket prices get. They're
1:58 cheap [music] now. They're cheap. So just get them early. Lock in your spot
2:02 today. Use my code Jason 100 for exclusive [music] savings. Get your
2:06 tickets at podcast.sanual.com or just use code Jason100 when you check
2:10 out. See you there. Saster annual and All right, good morning everybody.
2:22 Thanks for coming back to Saster AI London 2025. We really appreciate it.
2:26 So, we have a full day, so we're just going to keep going. I know some folks
2:29 are going to stream in, so folks are going to have coffee. This first session we will go deep on
2:39 our agents our 20 agent in particular the core ones we use for outbound
2:45 inbound leftbound rightbound and sales and is going to drive this we will do
2:49 this for about 45 minutes with one thing I want to give folks context on we have
2:53 if you guys have followed us maybe you've even seen a version of this
2:56 content we're updating it all with all the latest data all the emails we've
2:59 sent all the performance everything that our AI SDRs and agents do. So you'll get
3:04 all the latest data that Amelia has aggregated. The one thing I want to
3:07 bring up because we've heard it online and then I've heard it at this event
3:10 already is a lot of folks are like, "Well, that's great. This stuff works
3:13 for SAS. It doesn't, but it won't work for me. I'm not as big. I don't have
3:16 your scale. I don't have your data. I don't have your history." Amelia will
3:21 dig in here. It's not true. All of this will work for you to some to some
3:26 degree. Why? All of you have data. All of you have leads. All of you have a
3:30 database. Very few people here at this event have zero in revenue. Very few
3:34 people here have zero customers and zero prospects. Those guys go to websummit.
3:40 Okay, this is Saster AI. You guys have customers and revenue. So agents will
3:44 work for you whether you have to train them or tune them differently. A millia
3:49 dig maybe. So maybe you don't have 10 years of data, but you don't need as
3:51 much data as you think and you don't need as much trailing data as you think
3:55 for agents to work. Here's the simple aha moment. And and I know a lot of you know this so it sounds
4:00 captain obvious then I will let Amelia drive this to simplify a lot of
4:05 complexity. The mistake that everyone made in AI SDRs and AI sales agents in
4:12 2024 into this year and even through today and even conversations we have
4:16 today but especially is they would buy a product do nothing and expected to get
4:20 you millions of revenue. It don't work that way. Ameilia will dive into it. It
4:25 didn't work that way before Cloud 4 when none of these products work. It didn't
4:28 work that way after Q1 this year when they started to get good and it don't
4:32 work that way today. The way an AI agent works for sales for GTM is you figure
4:38 out something that works with your team with humans. You figure out an email, an
4:42 outreach, a script, a set of objections that you overcome, a set of questions.
4:46 You you nail it yourself just like it has always been a disaster since the
4:50 beginning. humans figure it out and then you take what worked and you give it to
4:54 the agent and you train it for a month and then every day after and you take
4:58 what worked and you do it at scale. That's all these products do. Like
5:01 listen, there's a lot of AI, there's a lot of LM, a lot of sophistication,
5:04 you're going to learn about it all day. But at the end of the day, if you want
5:07 to simplify cuz all these products are good, take what humans have nailed,
5:11 document it, and then train an agent with what works. If you're expecting an
5:16 agent to sell when you can't sell, that's never worked. You got to go back
5:20 to the old days of founder sales, but instead of giving it to that first human
5:24 you hired, you give it to the first agent you hired, but basically the same
5:28 thing. So with that, Ailia, we'll we'll dive into our data. >> Okay. Well, let's do it. Well, I wanted
5:33 to focus today just for some of you that have been to like our podcast for swap
5:37 Wednesday. I aggregated a lot of our data. I put in some new data and I'm
5:41 going to focus a lot on hyper customizing at scale. If you haven't
5:47 seen this yet, these are our 20 plus agents. we've deployed. You can go to
5:51 saster.ai/agents. A lot of these agents I'm going to talk about today because this whole guide is
5:57 up. I'm not going to mention too many of the vendors cuz I aggregated a lot of
6:01 the data. I'll talk about some of them, but they're all in depth here. So,
6:09 A lot of them are third party. Some are ones that we vibe coded. Some of these
6:13 agents have sub agents, which I'll talk about in a little bit. But these are our
6:17 20 plus agents that we have currently right now at Saster. We do also have
6:23 more agents than humans. So I literally just saw someone we know yesterday and
6:27 was like, "Oh, Sask in London looks so great. This is my first time here. How
6:32 many SAS employees did this?" I was like, "Well, there's two on this stage
6:38 there. One more full-time employee. We've got a few contractors trusted that
6:41 we brought here to London. And then we have all of our agents. So we have more
6:47 agents than humans. But on today's topic of hype for customizing GTM at scale. So
6:53 this is just in the last 6ish months. So after SAS in May so basically post
6:58 annual for us we really started going deep on this AI journey deploying our
7:02 agents and we wanted to see what would work in different use cases is as we did
7:08 that we deployed more agents and more use cases more sub agents and that's how
7:13 we ended up with this hyper customized AI emails and messages at scale in the
7:20 last 6 months so our just to give you context our personalized outbound 6
7:24 months ago when we still had people before all the agents. The average SDR we had here as a human
7:33 would send you know on the low end maybe 75 emails a month per rep and at the
7:40 high end maybe somewhere like two 280s 300s right per rep per month. So if you
7:45 look at this total over the last six months almost, you know, 60,000. So
7:51 let's say 10k a month, that's 32x the max output that those human SDRs
7:57 were doing in a very short amount of time. I'll talk about the ramp time of
8:00 these agents, which was a little bit different than humans. But if you think
8:04 about this, that means we were also only doing about 3% hyperpersonalized emails
8:10 at scale before this. Because the other thing I'll show you right now is the
8:13 consistency between our customization of our agents versus on humans, very hit or
8:17 miss, right? You have one SDR that's maybe really good. They send really good
8:21 high-quality emails. You get another SDR, they're just not getting it. And
8:25 the email's terrible. Like you wouldn't buy from them. You're embarrassed that
8:29 they sent this email and you wish you could unend it. So this is how you can
8:35 get hyper customized at scale. And a majority of these target accounts are
8:39 receiving, you know, highly customized messages and reply on the first send. So
8:43 that's something I think that is also a big learning is if you do this right and
8:47 train the agents the right way, not only is it different from a human AI like a
8:52 human SDR, but I think on most human sequences it takes a few messages
8:56 whereas on ours because it's so custom usually on the first email or first
9:01 message we get a reply. So a lot of change to encapsulate here.
9:04 >> This is really good. Do they first of all these the timing
9:07 here is really interesting. Maybe we're going to get to it. But this if I see
9:12 this so these are three >> these are our three main >> artisan qualified agent force.
9:16 >> Correct. >> And if I'm looking at and that's the the
9:22 sequent that's the we artisan first then qualified then agent force. Right.
9:25 >> Correct. So in the sequence of time we did artisan first and qualified than
9:28 Asian force but actually qualified's done more because it's on the website so
9:33 it's cheating a little and then artisans in the middle and then agent forces our
9:36 newest at the bottom. >> Got it. >> Okay. I thought it's a good chart. I
9:40 thought some of the things you're saying is by the time you get to your third
9:44 agent you can also roll it out more quickly. Maybe I wasn't reading that
9:45 into the chart but >> you can. Yeah. >> The other other thing and then and keep
9:51 going. The other thing and Millie will show you examples of the emails and
9:56 communications our agents are selling. Another sort of criticism that I hear
10:02 from folks criticism in air quotes is oh those emails are only pretty good. Like
10:05 you talk about hyper customization but this isn't going back to the 1980s when
10:10 you bought this and you did this. Like they're good but they're not the bar.
10:14 This is important when folks say oh I can't do this. The bar is as good or
10:19 better than like your average human SDR. Yep. So you will see these emails are
10:22 customized depending on we do them. We we have more data to pull from. If you
10:26 were s three years ago, we know about you. They get better, but but your jaw
10:29 is not going to fall on the floor when you see these emails. You're going to
10:32 see they're pretty good. They get as good or a higher or equivalent response
10:36 rate to humans. Correct. >> But they're not the most that the
10:40 customization on a scale of 1, I'd say, varies from a three to a six.
10:43 >> Yeah. And I'll actually show you all >> it's not in a 12. This isn't an email
10:46 that someone spent equivalent to spending a month of deep clawed research
10:51 crafting. >> They're just like here's it. They're just pretty good.
10:56 >> But the average human and then and a lot of folks on the internet are like well I
11:00 could do better than this if I hired 30 top tier SDRs. Maybe we're going to find
11:07 30 top tier Oxford graduated SDRs that want to carefully craft an email each
11:11 day. And if they're that good, they want to be promoted at AE in like 3 months.
11:14 So, they're going to cycle out a lead. So, the real bar is better than the
11:19 average human with 247 consistency. And that's what squint and that's what
11:22 you're going to see in these emails. Like pretty good with not a lot of
11:26 errors. That's that's good enough to to crush it. >> Yeah. The 24/7 thing I'll get to and
11:31 it's part of why it works. So at scale you'll see in those in that chart I just
11:35 showed. So I'll break it out a little bit. Artisan overall and we're live
11:39 streaming by the way guys. So if you want the slides and all the data you can
11:43 also go on our live stream but you can also keep taking photos. Then for
11:48 artisan that one has it actually went up. It's about a 6% overall response
11:53 right now. You know average for normal STR is 2 to four. Qualified has inbound.
11:59 So that's about the same at 6%. And then Asian Force, we've said this has a
12:03 higher open rate. I'll tell you why. It's our newest agent. It's also people
12:08 we ghosted. So it kind of makes sense that they were like, "You finally
12:12 followed up with me." I'm like, "Sorry, my human wouldn't, but my AI agent
12:16 would." So also more importantly, I feel like I see people getting this wrong, is not
12:23 empowering their agents to sell. Especially if you have something that is
12:28 a low ASP, something like a ticket to SAS for London is a great example. between our
12:35 two agents that I empowered to sell, they sold 15% of the ticket revenue for
12:40 this event, which is kind of crazy cuz in the past when we've had human SDRs
12:45 try and sell tickets, I think they sold like literally I could count on one
12:48 hand. So at that volume and at that scale, I see people getting this wrong a lot,
12:53 which I'll get into. But why does this work, right? It's because all of these
12:57 different platforms have different things that they're using to
13:00 contextualize to add value back to the prospect. So instead of making it too
13:05 much about SAS, we really try and tune up our agents and train them so that all
13:09 the value is about their company, what they're doing, and why they should be at
13:13 something like a SAS. I think that's also important as you're training your
13:16 agents or thinking about rolling this out is that it should be about adding
13:20 value, right? I don't I feel like somehow that got lost in all the
13:24 outbound madness, but that should have always been the case and it's definitely
13:28 the case with AI. AI will also know your product a lot better than most entry level a like SVRs
13:35 and so whatever you tell it about the product it will contextualize for them
13:41 and add value. So AI does this in a way you know obviously 60,000 messages we
13:46 couldn't do ourselves beforehand. So it's really crazy to see which we'll
13:49 dive into. And maybe one thing to add on that data. I I I wrote a sastaster post
13:54 on this recently, but the agent force 70% open rate, which on
13:58 its surface is jaw-droppingly high, right? Let me dig into that for just one
14:01 second. And the 15% of revenue from London, this is a theme I call having
14:05 agents do the work humans don't want to do or unwilling to do. Okay. So, the 15%
14:11 of ticket revenue folks coming here, we for 6 years on and off, we tried to get our
14:18 human SDRs to help us reach out to return attendees to get them to come to
14:22 SAS London. They just wouldn't do it. It wasn't worth their time. They wanted to
14:25 hunt a six-f figureure sponsorship. So, we'd ask them, we'd give them
14:29 incentives. We'd give them Starbucks cards. We'd beg them. They wouldn't do
14:33 it. And they said they'd do it. And then finally, we would use tools like
14:35 momentum and attentive. And we see they didn't actually do it. and they lied.
14:40 Okay, so that 15% here's the point. It's a lift. A lift. Without the Asian we
14:45 wouldn't have gotten. Yes. >> So I know a lot of folks again going to
14:48 the service that want to turn on an AI SDR and have it magically create
14:52 revenue. Another way is understand calmly which parts of your funnel, which
14:57 parts of your go to market process is not even happening. Is it even remotely
15:01 optimized? Were the leads where it's just not like your team says they want
15:04 to do them, but they don't want to do the small leads. They want to do the the
15:08 lowcored leads, you know, and that's what that 15% is. The agent force one,
15:13 if if you didn't read this or catch it, that why this is a amazing and a tragedy
15:19 at the same time. These are folks who reached out to us and said they wanted
15:23 to sponsor SAS for five or six figure tickets and we did not respond to them
15:28 as our human team. Not because we didn't like round robin it. Not because crying.
15:35 It's just cuz our STRs just said >> it wasn't worth their time.
15:39 >> They they mentally and everyone like you're going to say they don't do it.
15:42 Every salesperson is managing their time. They're going to they're going to
15:45 they're going to they're going to force rank their leads in their head. They're
15:48 going to put all their effort into that one big deal that's going to close this
15:52 quarter. A little bit of effort into the small ones and nothing to the bottom. I
15:55 mean, literally, while we're here in London about 5 days ago, I wrote this on
15:59 Twitter yesterday. I reached out to a vendor for a $10,000 product and I said,
16:03 "I want to buy it while we're here. I don't have a lot of time. We're here at
16:06 Saster London. I have two questions." I didn't hear back till yesterday
16:10 afternoon. I was handed to another rep because it wasn't worth the first rep's
16:14 time for $10,000. And that rep said, "Let's get on the phone and talk about
16:19 your questions." 5day response. Get on. I mean, you lost the deal, right? So, if
16:23 you can put AI into that scenario or the ones that wasn't worth their time, 70%
16:29 open rate, even if you grow 15 or 20% faster in 2026 because of AI, it's a
16:35 gift from heaven, right? And that's what a lot of this is. Figure out, you know,
16:40 it's not it's it's not all magic, but it is magical if you can get a lift out of
16:45 the folks that just aren't being touched in your funnel. And and I'll keep going.
16:48 I don't want to take all your time, but don't assume if you're not deep on your
16:52 funnel. Don't assume every lead is being touched optimally. Don't assume every
16:56 lead I have an old sister post that every lead should be treated like a
17:00 queen or king. Every lead is precious. I reached out that $10,000 is a lot of
17:03 money to me. Okay, maybe it's not a lot of money to be that would be a Neil and
17:07 I basically spend it out of her own pocket. That's not nothing. Okay, even
17:08 Implementing AI SDRs
1:43 Simplifying AI Sales Agents
1:47 first professionals. It's the very best of STER attendees and decision makers
1:51 that [music] come to SAT annual and AI summit each and every year. But here's
1:55 the reality, folks. The longer you wait, the higher ticket prices get. They're
1:58 cheap [music] now. They're cheap. So just get them early. Lock in your spot
2:02 today. Use my code Jason 100 for exclusive [music] savings. Get your
2:06 tickets at podcast.sanual.com or just use code Jason100 when you check
2:10 out. See you there. Saster annual and All right, good morning everybody.
2:22 Thanks for coming back to Saster AI London 2025. We really appreciate it.
2:26 So, we have a full day, so we're just going to keep going. I know some folks
2:29 are going to stream in, so folks are going to have coffee. This first session we will go deep on
2:39 our agents our 20 agent in particular the core ones we use for outbound
2:45 inbound leftbound rightbound and sales and is going to drive this we will do
2:49 this for about 45 minutes with one thing I want to give folks context on we have
2:53 if you guys have followed us maybe you've even seen a version of this
2:56 content we're updating it all with all the latest data all the emails we've
2:59 sent all the performance everything that our AI SDRs and agents do. So you'll get
3:04 all the latest data that Amelia has aggregated. The one thing I want to
3:07 bring up because we've heard it online and then I've heard it at this event
3:10 already is a lot of folks are like, "Well, that's great. This stuff works
3:13 for SAS. It doesn't, but it won't work for me. I'm not as big. I don't have
3:16 your scale. I don't have your data. I don't have your history." Amelia will
3:21 dig in here. It's not true. All of this will work for you to some to some
3:26 degree. Why? All of you have data. All of you have leads. All of you have a
3:30 database. Very few people here at this event have zero in revenue. Very few
3:34 people here have zero customers and zero prospects. Those guys go to websummit.
3:40 Okay, this is Saster AI. You guys have customers and revenue. So agents will
3:44 work for you whether you have to train them or tune them differently. A millia
3:49 dig maybe. So maybe you don't have 10 years of data, but you don't need as
3:51 much data as you think and you don't need as much trailing data as you think
3:55 for agents to work. Here's the simple aha moment. And and I know a lot of you know this so it sounds
4:00 captain obvious then I will let Amelia drive this to simplify a lot of
4:05 complexity. The mistake that everyone made in AI SDRs and AI sales agents in
4:12 2024 into this year and even through today and even conversations we have
4:16 today but especially is they would buy a product do nothing and expected to get
4:20 you millions of revenue. It don't work that way. Ameilia will dive into it. It
4:25 didn't work that way before Cloud 4 when none of these products work. It didn't
4:28 work that way after Q1 this year when they started to get good and it don't
4:32 work that way today. The way an AI agent works for sales for GTM is you figure
4:38 out something that works with your team with humans. You figure out an email, an
4:42 outreach, a script, a set of objections that you overcome, a set of questions.
4:46 You you nail it yourself just like it has always been a disaster since the
4:50 beginning. humans figure it out and then you take what worked and you give it to
4:54 the agent and you train it for a month and then every day after and you take
4:58 what worked and you do it at scale. That's all these products do. Like
5:01 listen, there's a lot of AI, there's a lot of LM, a lot of sophistication,
5:04 you're going to learn about it all day. But at the end of the day, if you want
5:07 to simplify cuz all these products are good, take what humans have nailed,
5:11 document it, and then train an agent with what works. If you're expecting an
5:16 agent to sell when you can't sell, that's never worked. You got to go back
5:20 to the old days of founder sales, but instead of giving it to that first human
5:24 you hired, you give it to the first agent you hired, but basically the same
5:28 thing. So with that, Ailia, we'll we'll dive into our data. >> Okay. Well, let's do it. Well, I wanted
5:33 to focus today just for some of you that have been to like our podcast for swap
5:37 Wednesday. I aggregated a lot of our data. I put in some new data and I'm
5:41 going to focus a lot on hyper customizing at scale. If you haven't
5:47 seen this yet, these are our 20 plus agents. we've deployed. You can go to
5:51 saster.ai/agents. A lot of these agents I'm going to talk about today because this whole guide is
5:57 up. I'm not going to mention too many of the vendors cuz I aggregated a lot of
6:01 the data. I'll talk about some of them, but they're all in depth here. So,
6:09 A lot of them are third party. Some are ones that we vibe coded. Some of these
6:13 agents have sub agents, which I'll talk about in a little bit. But these are our
6:17 20 plus agents that we have currently right now at Saster. We do also have
6:23 more agents than humans. So I literally just saw someone we know yesterday and
6:27 was like, "Oh, Sask in London looks so great. This is my first time here. How
6:32 many SAS employees did this?" I was like, "Well, there's two on this stage
6:38 there. One more full-time employee. We've got a few contractors trusted that
6:41 we brought here to London. And then we have all of our agents. So we have more
6:47 agents than humans. But on today's topic of hype for customizing GTM at scale. So
6:53 this is just in the last 6ish months. So after SAS in May so basically post
6:58 annual for us we really started going deep on this AI journey deploying our
7:02 agents and we wanted to see what would work in different use cases is as we did
7:08 that we deployed more agents and more use cases more sub agents and that's how
7:13 we ended up with this hyper customized AI emails and messages at scale in the
7:20 last 6 months so our just to give you context our personalized outbound 6
7:24 months ago when we still had people before all the agents. The average SDR we had here as a human
7:33 would send you know on the low end maybe 75 emails a month per rep and at the
7:40 high end maybe somewhere like two 280s 300s right per rep per month. So if you
7:45 look at this total over the last six months almost, you know, 60,000. So
7:51 let's say 10k a month, that's 32x the max output that those human SDRs
7:57 were doing in a very short amount of time. I'll talk about the ramp time of
8:00 these agents, which was a little bit different than humans. But if you think
8:04 about this, that means we were also only doing about 3% hyperpersonalized emails
8:10 at scale before this. Because the other thing I'll show you right now is the
8:13 consistency between our customization of our agents versus on humans, very hit or
8:17 miss, right? You have one SDR that's maybe really good. They send really good
8:21 high-quality emails. You get another SDR, they're just not getting it. And
8:25 the email's terrible. Like you wouldn't buy from them. You're embarrassed that
8:29 they sent this email and you wish you could unend it. So this is how you can
8:35 get hyper customized at scale. And a majority of these target accounts are
8:39 receiving, you know, highly customized messages and reply on the first send. So
8:43 that's something I think that is also a big learning is if you do this right and
8:47 train the agents the right way, not only is it different from a human AI like a
8:52 human SDR, but I think on most human sequences it takes a few messages
8:56 whereas on ours because it's so custom usually on the first email or first
9:01 message we get a reply. So a lot of change to encapsulate here.
9:04 >> This is really good. Do they first of all these the timing
9:07 here is really interesting. Maybe we're going to get to it. But this if I see
9:12 this so these are three >> these are our three main >> artisan qualified agent force.
9:16 >> Correct. >> And if I'm looking at and that's the the
9:22 sequent that's the we artisan first then qualified then agent force. Right.
9:25 >> Correct. So in the sequence of time we did artisan first and qualified than
9:28 Asian force but actually qualified's done more because it's on the website so
9:33 it's cheating a little and then artisans in the middle and then agent forces our
9:36 newest at the bottom. >> Got it. >> Okay. I thought it's a good chart. I
9:40 thought some of the things you're saying is by the time you get to your third
9:44 agent you can also roll it out more quickly. Maybe I wasn't reading that
9:45 into the chart but >> you can. Yeah. >> The other other thing and then and keep
9:51 going. The other thing and Millie will show you examples of the emails and
9:56 communications our agents are selling. Another sort of criticism that I hear
10:02 from folks criticism in air quotes is oh those emails are only pretty good. Like
10:05 you talk about hyper customization but this isn't going back to the 1980s when
10:10 you bought this and you did this. Like they're good but they're not the bar.
10:14 This is important when folks say oh I can't do this. The bar is as good or
10:19 better than like your average human SDR. Yep. So you will see these emails are
10:22 customized depending on we do them. We we have more data to pull from. If you
10:26 were s three years ago, we know about you. They get better, but but your jaw
10:29 is not going to fall on the floor when you see these emails. You're going to
10:32 see they're pretty good. They get as good or a higher or equivalent response
10:36 rate to humans. Correct. >> But they're not the most that the
10:40 customization on a scale of 1, I'd say, varies from a three to a six.
10:43 >> Yeah. And I'll actually show you all >> it's not in a 12. This isn't an email
10:46 that someone spent equivalent to spending a month of deep clawed research
10:51 crafting. >> They're just like here's it. They're just pretty good.
10:56 >> But the average human and then and a lot of folks on the internet are like well I
11:00 could do better than this if I hired 30 top tier SDRs. Maybe we're going to find
11:07 30 top tier Oxford graduated SDRs that want to carefully craft an email each
11:11 day. And if they're that good, they want to be promoted at AE in like 3 months.
11:14 So, they're going to cycle out a lead. So, the real bar is better than the
11:19 average human with 247 consistency. And that's what squint and that's what
11:22 you're going to see in these emails. Like pretty good with not a lot of
11:26 errors. That's that's good enough to to crush it. >> Yeah. The 24/7 thing I'll get to and
11:31 it's part of why it works. So at scale you'll see in those in that chart I just
11:35 showed. So I'll break it out a little bit. Artisan overall and we're live
11:39 streaming by the way guys. So if you want the slides and all the data you can
11:43 also go on our live stream but you can also keep taking photos. Then for
11:48 artisan that one has it actually went up. It's about a 6% overall response
11:53 right now. You know average for normal STR is 2 to four. Qualified has inbound.
11:59 So that's about the same at 6%. And then Asian Force, we've said this has a
12:03 higher open rate. I'll tell you why. It's our newest agent. It's also people
12:08 we ghosted. So it kind of makes sense that they were like, "You finally
12:12 followed up with me." I'm like, "Sorry, my human wouldn't, but my AI agent
12:16 would." So also more importantly, I feel like I see people getting this wrong, is not
12:23 empowering their agents to sell. Especially if you have something that is
12:28 a low ASP, something like a ticket to SAS for London is a great example. between our
12:35 two agents that I empowered to sell, they sold 15% of the ticket revenue for
12:40 this event, which is kind of crazy cuz in the past when we've had human SDRs
12:45 try and sell tickets, I think they sold like literally I could count on one
12:48 hand. So at that volume and at that scale, I see people getting this wrong a lot,
12:53 which I'll get into. But why does this work, right? It's because all of these
12:57 different platforms have different things that they're using to
13:00 contextualize to add value back to the prospect. So instead of making it too
13:05 much about SAS, we really try and tune up our agents and train them so that all
13:09 the value is about their company, what they're doing, and why they should be at
13:13 something like a SAS. I think that's also important as you're training your
13:16 agents or thinking about rolling this out is that it should be about adding
13:20 value, right? I don't I feel like somehow that got lost in all the
13:24 outbound madness, but that should have always been the case and it's definitely
13:28 the case with AI. AI will also know your product a lot better than most entry level a like SVRs
13:35 and so whatever you tell it about the product it will contextualize for them
13:41 and add value. So AI does this in a way you know obviously 60,000 messages we
13:46 couldn't do ourselves beforehand. So it's really crazy to see which we'll
13:49 dive into. And maybe one thing to add on that data. I I I wrote a sastaster post
13:54 on this recently, but the agent force 70% open rate, which on
13:58 its surface is jaw-droppingly high, right? Let me dig into that for just one
14:01 second. And the 15% of revenue from London, this is a theme I call having
14:05 agents do the work humans don't want to do or unwilling to do. Okay. So, the 15%
14:11 of ticket revenue folks coming here, we for 6 years on and off, we tried to get our
14:18 human SDRs to help us reach out to return attendees to get them to come to
14:22 SAS London. They just wouldn't do it. It wasn't worth their time. They wanted to
14:25 hunt a six-f figureure sponsorship. So, we'd ask them, we'd give them
14:29 incentives. We'd give them Starbucks cards. We'd beg them. They wouldn't do
14:33 it. And they said they'd do it. And then finally, we would use tools like
14:35 momentum and attentive. And we see they didn't actually do it. and they lied.
14:40 Okay, so that 15% here's the point. It's a lift. A lift. Without the Asian we
14:45 wouldn't have gotten. Yes. >> So I know a lot of folks again going to
14:48 the service that want to turn on an AI SDR and have it magically create
14:52 revenue. Another way is understand calmly which parts of your funnel, which
14:57 parts of your go to market process is not even happening. Is it even remotely
15:01 optimized? Were the leads where it's just not like your team says they want
15:04 to do them, but they don't want to do the small leads. They want to do the the
15:08 lowcored leads, you know, and that's what that 15% is. The agent force one,
15:13 if if you didn't read this or catch it, that why this is a amazing and a tragedy
15:19 at the same time. These are folks who reached out to us and said they wanted
15:23 to sponsor SAS for five or six figure tickets and we did not respond to them
15:28 as our human team. Not because we didn't like round robin it. Not because crying.
15:35 It's just cuz our STRs just said >> it wasn't worth their time.
15:39 >> They they mentally and everyone like you're going to say they don't do it.
15:42 Every salesperson is managing their time. They're going to they're going to
15:45 they're going to they're going to force rank their leads in their head. They're
15:48 going to put all their effort into that one big deal that's going to close this
15:52 quarter. A little bit of effort into the small ones and nothing to the bottom. I
15:55 mean, literally, while we're here in London about 5 days ago, I wrote this on
15:59 Twitter yesterday. I reached out to a vendor for a $10,000 product and I said,
16:03 "I want to buy it while we're here. I don't have a lot of time. We're here at
16:06 Saster London. I have two questions." I didn't hear back till yesterday
16:10 afternoon. I was handed to another rep because it wasn't worth the first rep's
16:14 time for $10,000. And that rep said, "Let's get on the phone and talk about
16:19 your questions." 5day response. Get on. I mean, you lost the deal, right? So, if
16:23 you can put AI into that scenario or the ones that wasn't worth their time, 70%
16:29 open rate, even if you grow 15 or 20% faster in 2026 because of AI, it's a
16:35 gift from heaven, right? And that's what a lot of this is. Figure out, you know,
16:40 it's not it's it's not all magic, but it is magical if you can get a lift out of
16:45 the folks that just aren't being touched in your funnel. And and I'll keep going.
16:48 I don't want to take all your time, but don't assume if you're not deep on your
16:52 funnel. Don't assume every lead is being touched optimally. Don't assume every
16:56 lead I have an old sister post that every lead should be treated like a
17:00 queen or king. Every lead is precious. I reached out that $10,000 is a lot of
17:03 money to me. Okay, maybe it's not a lot of money to be that would be a Neil and
17:07 I basically spend it out of her own pocket. That's not nothing. Okay, even
17:11 in London like 10,000 you can get buy something nice for 10. That's like a lot
17:15 of what's the steak place? >> Flat irons. We got a lot of flat irons
17:20 for $10,000. Okay. It wasn't even worth their time to get back to us. It's
17:23 always worth the AI's time to get back to them. It's always worth and your
17:27 leads deserve it. So, keep going. But that's why there's some of this magical
17:29 raid is because humans wouldn't do the work. >> Yeah. But your AI isn't picky. So, just
17:34 on that on that point, why is this so great? Right. Like why were human STRs when we
17:41 had them only 3% doing of what we did now? Part of that is what you're talking
17:46 about, right? There's downtime, there's holidays, okay? You know, you have
17:51 planned time off. Sure. But then somehow when it comes to STRs, there's always a
17:56 lot of unplanned downtime for all the humans. And so I think
18:01 that's something where since the AI works 24/7, I was actually just talking
18:05 to Phipe who's presenting later. We were saying once you get a few
18:08 agents, actually your problem becomes not having agents. Your problem is
18:11 keeping up with your agents. So we'll talk about that a little bit later when
18:14 you guys come back for his noon session. But because it works 24/7, this is now
18:20 our biggest issue is actually keeping up with our agents. Like I get constant
18:24 slacks, notifications, your AI is doing this, your AI is doing that. And we try
18:29 and watch it all, right? Like we want to make sure our AI is saying the right
18:33 things, treating people properly. So many people yesterday were coming into
18:36 disaster saying like, "Oh, hey Amelia, thanks for your help." I was like, "Did
18:41 I help you? Oh, Ameilia AI helped me or Jason AI helped me." I'm like,
18:46 "Fantastic. This is real Amelia. And I'm glad my AI agent could be there. When I
18:50 was either sleeping or walking my dog, so it's it is it's you'll enter a new
18:55 world quickly where you have to learn to actually keep up with your agents once
18:59 you get the hang of them. But it is also part of why it works so
19:04 well. I put an example here. Think of which one's this from. It doesn't even
19:08 matter. But you'll see here, this is an example of like a highly customized
19:12 email. Again, it's tying back value to the person versus it being too much
19:16 about disaster. I think in this case, it's using some website authorization of
19:20 what they were looking at and tied it back to them and what they were posting
19:23 about. And then this one had a meetings link as well. So, there's a few things I
19:28 want to get into. I want to get into this one because a few folks have asked
19:32 us on our previous webinars to create like a a mind map, which I didn't have
19:38 previously, so I made one for this. A lot of people ask me like how did you
19:42 think about like the roll out right of AI SDRs? I'm like well we had SAS annual
19:49 we had a few human SDRs and after SAS reanual they quit and so instead of
19:55 replacing them with another human I replaced them with AI. So this is how I
20:02 started to do that. I split up basically the lowest hanging fruit right. So I
20:08 took into our cuz it had just been SAS or annual. So you can take something
20:11 equivalent for your company. Maybe you've just done a new product release.
20:15 The new year is coming up. You can do something that adds value and say okay
20:19 I've got all these contacts. So let's say I want to follow up with them in my
20:23 agent. I'm going to train my agent on these specific contacts. So it should be
20:27 a subset. You should never just unleash an AI agent on your entire entire
20:33 database. Like do not do that. It will not be customized. It's not going to
20:37 work like this. Like you do need to train either sub agents depending on
20:41 what platform you use or do like sub campaigns, however they call it. But
20:44 basically, you want to make sure that each like thing you're deploying in your
20:50 AISDR is specifically trained and tuned for that persona that you're going to go
20:54 after. So, you're going to make little sub personas, right, of your target
20:58 buyers. Is it a CRO? Has the CRO done something with us? Is it a CMO? Is it
21:02 have they been to our website? have they churned or do I feel like their usage is
21:06 down and they're about to churn? Like you can also use this for CS use cases
21:10 and marketing. Like all of this starts to converge. But basically all of these
21:13 things are things you can put into different sub aents, train it, make it
21:18 personalized to those leads. I usually keep it in batches of like 800 to a,000.
21:24 I don't try and do more than that. I try and get that hyper customized on who I'm
21:29 targeting with each of our sub aents. And then I'll pick which in our case we
21:34 have more than one outbound AISR. And so I'll pick which agent I think is the
21:38 best one for that. I'll pop it into that agent, train it, fire it up, and then
21:42 give it the sequence that I want of, okay, I want you to maybe I want this
21:45 one to book a meeting. I want this one to sell a ticket. I want this one to
21:48 follow up with a lead we never followed up with. I want this one to book a
21:51 meeting. And so I'll also give a different goals for each of those
21:54 personas. So that's how I kind of start to map it out. Important to know though,
21:58 I did not start with all of these, right? I actually have more than this,
22:02 but it's important to stair step it, right? So, start with one. Like a really
22:07 good one is people you might have ghosted or didn't know that you could
22:11 ghost it. Another one is if you're getting really good inbound, but you're
22:14 not able to completely follow up or maybe you can't follow up after the
22:17 first meeting. That's a good use case. Like, don't start with something mission
22:20 critical. Like, you're going to be disappointed if you can't get it to work
22:24 really quickly. A lot of these have ramp time, which I think is on the next
22:27 slide. So don't start with something that's too mission critical because then you might
22:32 set yourself up for failure. >> A who would who do you think
22:39 can implement something like this? >> That's a good question. I have that
22:41 later. >> Oh, you do. All right. Keep going. Yeah. >> All right. These are a few more
22:47 examples. The other thing I'll say too, and the reason why I put these examples,
22:50 hopefully you guys can see. So the first one, this one's an example from Artisan.
22:55 I think this person came here, but literally the top is to Jason's point. I
22:59 was like it's it's an okay like is it the greatest email on planet earth? It's
23:03 pretty good. Would I have written this? Maybe I'll give myself a 50/50. This
23:08 one's inviting them to come to SAS annual. And literally this says on the
23:13 bottom, hey, I'm a fan. I'm going to see if I can come attend. Did your AISDR
23:16 Enhancing Inbound Flow with AI
23:17 write this because it got my attention versus trash. Which just real Ameilia
23:21 answered. So I was like it's a mystery for you. on the next sample. Let me try and go
23:30 ahead. Okay, then there's another example where like just because it's an
23:34 AISDR and you're going to have all these hyperpersonalized emails, don't expect
23:39 that every response will be positive. Like most of the time I get like a
23:44 response like the last one. Sometimes I get a response that's like this that's
23:47 like very nice, but I'm not going to be there. And I'm like cool, I'm going to
23:50 follow up with this guy later. Like not everything is going to be an instant
23:54 yes. Like I think that's another fallacy of like the AISDRs is like if you're
23:58 trying to get into book meetings, sell something, it may not do that on the
24:03 first action almost like that was true before the AISDR with regular SDRs. So
24:09 all those things you know to be true are still true even with the AMA.
24:14 >> Okay, I want to talk about this one. You know, just on those examples,
24:21 >> one, you know, a lot of folks ask us, >> do they know it's an AI? Do they mind
24:26 that it's an AI? I think even just in these two examples, you'll see a
24:30 spectrum here. You'll see, is it an AI was the question. So, I guess we're not
24:34 always clear whether it is or isn't. >> I think the biggest, but a big takeaway
24:38 is as long as the communication is reasonably good, adds some value, right?
24:43 And even just a discount is value, okay? and a little bit of connection. What you
24:47 can see from the three emails you've already seen is people don't mind.
24:49 >> They don't mind. >> They don't mind. And and they don't they
24:53 Streamlining Meetings with AI
24:53 what they want is help. And I really think especially in 2026, we're all
24:57 going to work in these heterogeneous worlds where we mix AIs and humans. And
25:02 imagining that I somehow mind talking to a great AI is backwards. A great AI is
25:06 often going to add more value than a mediocre human. So like don't I think my
25:11 The Future of AI in Prospect Qualification
25:11 my metal learning it's a learning. Don't worry about that. Don't worry about
25:15 people talking to an AI. Worry about if it's good. >> Yep.
25:18 >> And adds value. And people are h they don't mind. In fact, they don't mind
25:21 talking back to the AI. Forget about chat even by email. They're happy to do
25:25 it, right? You might be happy to do it, too. It might be a relief to talk to an
25:29 AI rather than the human that took 5 days to get back to me this week. Like,
25:32 it's not a negative. >> I don't think it's a negative. To that
25:37 point, we did hyperchange our inbound flow because of AI as well. So, that was
25:42 mostly out. For inbound, we use a tool called qualified on our website. Our old
25:46 flow six months ago used to be you have to fill out a form on our website, but a
25:49 lot of people still have that flow today. Then we would get alerted via
25:53 email and then I would manually route it to whoever I thought was the best AE
25:58 based on like the company size. We don't really do territory company
26:01 Implementing AI on Your Website
26:03 size, category of company, like okay, do they rep any competitors, things like
26:07 that. So we would route it and then the AE depending on who it was would take
26:12 about two or 24 hours to get back to them and it'd always be like you know oh
26:16 hey it's so and so from saw you were interested let's book a meeting like the
26:21 simplest maybe worst email response to no fury to those inbound leads and now this is a
26:28 screenshot of Ameilia AI if you want to try it it's on sastasterennon.com
26:34 you can talk to sheme and you can instantly talk to Amelia. You can book a meeting with her. So, she
26:40 The Role of AI in Sales and SDRs
26:40 instantly books meetings for our team. Honestly, a lot of the time she books
26:43 meetings while I'm asleep. So, I'll wake up and I'll be like, "Okay." And the
26:48 meetings booked are I'll just go through all the meetings that have been booked
26:51 overnight instantly. I didn't have to worry about waking up in the morning,
26:55 routing any leads I might have missed or whoever's in charge of your routing
26:58 might have missed and then follow up with them and then hope that the AE then
27:02 also follows up with them to book the meeting. So now what I do instead, it's
27:06 already pre-booked. I wake up in the morning, I talk to Dave and our sales
27:09 team. I'm like, "Hey, these people booked. Here's the context of the
27:12 conversation. Here's what we already know about them. Now you can have a
27:15 better meeting with this person." You can literally skip like steps one
27:20 through five and just go to meeting like just pass go. >> Yeah. If you if you and there's a lot of
27:25 vendors that can do this pretty well today. If this if this is already well
27:28 understood to you and you've already implemented this, great. Okay. But if in
27:33 2026 you're still having humans qualify a lot of your prospects and wait,
27:37 there's no need with AI. You and and Millie will talk about training. You are
27:40 going to have to pick a vendor and you're going to have to train it for 30
27:43 days with your data. But there's no reason a prospect shouldn't be able to
27:48 interact fluidly with an AI, not even know they're being qualified. Okay? Not
27:52 in this yucky, objectionable, dated way of whether you're worth someone that
27:56 just graduated from college's time, which was which has always been kind of
28:00 gross and uncomfortable if you've been through it on the other side.
28:03 >> The agent should do it elegantly. Great to hear from you. Glad you're
28:07 interested. Tell me about your team. Tell me about what your goals are. Talk
28:12 in English through video, audio, typing. Great. You know who would be perfect for
28:15 you? Let me set something up with David. He's free tomorrow at 11. Does it work
28:19 for you right now at night when you're ready? If you don't have that on your
28:24 website, implement it this like maybe before the end of the year. This is
28:28 lowhanging fruit. The products with AI after after the fours, after Claude 4
28:31 Voice, Chat, and Video: Choosing the Right Medium
28:33 and open and and Chetchi before, they've all gotten really good. They can all do
28:37 this. Callum Lee on steroids in instantly qualified. It all works today.
28:42 There's no excuse to not do this. And there's no excuse to have yucky
28:45 qualification. like there may maybe if you have a seven figure product and
28:49 there's a lot of but even there the AI can qualify a seven figure product what
28:52 department are you in what are you trying to get going >> who's on the buying committee
28:56 >> there's just no excuse to have yucky qualification just eliminate it and I
29:01 really think most SDRs will die next year but the me and I know we we throw
29:05 around these terms differently the BDR that sort of smarmy qualifies you that
29:10 that that's going to die like we just there's no need for that with these
29:13 tools so this is low hanging fruit to implement and you If you if a prospect can have a
29:17 wonderful time, get their questions answered for real without a used car
29:21 salesman, and book a meeting in real time, you're going to close more,
29:25 whether it's 1% more or 20% more, it's much better. >> Yeah. The other thing I'll say real
29:30 quick on that point, too, is that these folks actually like that they got to
29:34 book instantly. Like to your point of like beforehand, right, we'd had to
29:37 round robin it and then do all this other thing and route it and then
29:39 finally book the meeting, connect the Zoom. Sometimes the Zoom doesn't work.
29:43 Like it's so instant. It's not like we're getting messages like, "Okay, AI,
29:47 like you didn't really answer my questions and so I had to book a
29:50 meeting." They're like, it it's literally like qualifying them. That's
29:54 why it's in the name of this one, but it's literally qualifying them while
29:57 they're on the site. So, to your point, it does all that for you. Obviously, you
30:03 have to train it and are qualified. Um, maybe it's on this slide.
30:06 >> That was 130 meetings booked that you had, right? >> 100. Yes. 130 meetings booked in we've
30:12 had qualified since August >> and going up right >> yeah and going up so August was our
30:16 first month so you can see we rolled out at the end of the months before
30:21 Dreamforce and then September October November there was a lot of in November
30:25 honestly I was like I don't think between David and myself is our AE I was
30:30 like I don't think we would have booked we definitely wouldn't have booked this
30:32 Training and Deploying AI Effectively
30:33 many without the AI cuz we would have missed them and they were high followed
30:36 we were like okay we can see what they said to a million AI we can have a
30:40 better meeting and like now we have a lot of pipe in December Jan because of
30:43 it. So >> one other thing on that chart is a lot of folks ask us and and it's all over
30:51 social media. This is the age of voice. Is voice better? Is chat better? Is
30:54 video agents better? >> People can pick. >> Yeah, they can pick. Don't try to answer
30:59 this question. You're going to find everyone is different and and different
31:04 types of prospects are different. I I I like to chat, you know. I like to clack.
31:10 Other folks really like to talk. I I can tell you on our on our first agent deli
31:15 where we've done like 150,000 chats, the ratio is about 8020 80 maybe it's 8515.
31:22 85% people like to chat. 15% like voice, but there may be different buyers. You
31:25 may have more traditional buyers that want to pick up the phone. Chat
31:30 obviously is the easiest to implement. Voice is so easy. It it takes the most
31:32 Avoiding Common Pitfalls in AI Implementation
31:35 work. Okay. video is a lot of work >> and we've just launched it. We actually
31:39 don't know how well it will perform yet, I don't think. Right.
31:43 >> But some people metric. Yeah. Some people like it. >> They they like that it's part of why we
31:49 made it video was cuz so many people used our inbound agent and it does a
31:54 little bit of outbound that I wanted to start it to ramp to literally ramp our
31:58 AI like a human to be able to start to sell more. So that's why we added the
32:02 video because I was like, "Okay, I need it to add a layer of trust where I feel
32:07 like on a chat. I I wouldn't I wouldn't buy something on a chat necessarily."
32:10 >> It might add a layer of trust for some people. >> But yeah, it might add a layer of trust
32:13 of like this is literally me. I went to qualified for a whole day and filmed
32:16 this. I think the video is dropping later today. So you can see how I did
32:19 this. It was a whole day. >> Yeah. >> I had to like look at the camera like
32:24 blink slowly and like say weird words. But it was like it was fun for me. But
32:29 like this is why I like this obviously too. But I was like okay like it's a AI
32:34 some people know me from SAS or like the pod and like it just builds trust where
32:38 I was like okay if I want her to try to qualify people even more for our
32:42 meetings I feel like the video will add an extra layer where they're like oh I
32:45 know Amelia. She spends a lot of time with her AI. I might trust that to like
32:50 get me maybe even further down the funnel. >> But you don't have for for if you're
32:53 deploying you haven't done it yet or you're in the midst of it. You don't
32:56 have to overanalyze this like on social media. Okay, just do it. Like just do
33:02 it. Like the whole theme of this is pick an agent at some level. It doesn't
33:05 matter which one as long as it's a wellrusted vendor for your use case and
33:10 train it. And then don't over analyze is voice better, video or chat or is this
33:15 creepy or good or weird? Just do it. And you're probably going to find chat's the
33:18 easiest to do first because it it's the like it just works out of the box. voice
33:23 really I mean literally for the openers for this event and nearly did it on 11
33:26 labs in about 5 minutes in the green room yesterday voice is not a lot of
33:29 work to train on your voice it's a little bit of work and video is two
33:33 orders of magnitude more work so just sequence them in >> y
33:36 >> don't overanalyze a lot of the stuff just a leader train and go and then sequence
33:41 they all they all work >> yes I will say though it does take a lot
33:45 of time I would not leave your agents to their own devices so I'm going to get
33:49 into our top learnings here because this ties into a lot of what we have here.
33:54 So, just this last week, I was talking to a goto market company in the SAS
33:58 community. We all know it if I said it, but they're at a billion in revenue, not
34:03 in valuation, revenue. And I was talking to their head of go to market, who's now
34:08 also their head of AI, and their head of sales. And they were like, "Oh, you
34:12 know, we're we're looking at all these different AI SDRs. We want to roll it
34:19 out. We want to pair it with each human Str on this sales team. I said,
34:25 "Godspeed. I don't think that will work. I don't think you should just unleash an
34:30 AI you do not know how to use." They were literally calling me to ask me how
34:33 we do all this. I was like, "Okay, so let me get this straight. You don't know
34:36 The Importance of Human Oversight in AI
3:12 Introduction to SaaStr AI Agents
3:13 for SAS. It doesn't, but it won't work for me. I'm not as big. I don't have
3:16 your scale. I don't have your data. I don't have your history." Amelia will
3:21 dig in here. It's not true. All of this will work for you to some to some
3:26 degree. Why? All of you have data. All of you have leads. All of you have a
3:30 database. Very few people here at this event have zero in revenue. Very few
3:34 people here have zero customers and zero prospects. Those guys go to websummit.
3:40 Okay, this is Saster AI. You guys have customers and revenue. So agents will
3:44 work for you whether you have to train them or tune them differently. A millia
3:49 dig maybe. So maybe you don't have 10 years of data, but you don't need as
3:51 much data as you think and you don't need as much trailing data as you think
3:55 for agents to work. Here's the simple aha moment. And and I know a lot of you know this so it sounds
4:00 captain obvious then I will let Amelia drive this to simplify a lot of
4:05 complexity. The mistake that everyone made in AI SDRs and AI sales agents in
4:12 2024 into this year and even through today and even conversations we have
4:16 today but especially is they would buy a product do nothing and expected to get
4:20 you millions of revenue. It don't work that way. Ameilia will dive into it. It
4:25 didn't work that way before Cloud 4 when none of these products work. It didn't
4:28 work that way after Q1 this year when they started to get good and it don't
4:32 work that way today. The way an AI agent works for sales for GTM is you figure
4:38 out something that works with your team with humans. You figure out an email, an
4:42 outreach, a script, a set of objections that you overcome, a set of questions.
4:46 You you nail it yourself just like it has always been a disaster since the
4:50 beginning. humans figure it out and then you take what worked and you give it to
4:54 the agent and you train it for a month and then every day after and you take
4:58 what worked and you do it at scale. That's all these products do. Like
5:01 listen, there's a lot of AI, there's a lot of LM, a lot of sophistication,
5:04 you're going to learn about it all day. But at the end of the day, if you want
5:07 to simplify cuz all these products are good, take what humans have nailed,
5:11 document it, and then train an agent with what works. If you're expecting an
5:16 agent to sell when you can't sell, that's never worked. You got to go back
5:20 to the old days of founder sales, but instead of giving it to that first human
5:24 you hired, you give it to the first agent you hired, but basically the same
5:28 thing. So with that, Ailia, we'll we'll dive into our data. >> Okay. Well, let's do it. Well, I wanted
5:33 to focus today just for some of you that have been to like our podcast for swap
5:37 Wednesday. I aggregated a lot of our data. I put in some new data and I'm
5:41 going to focus a lot on hyper customizing at scale. If you haven't
5:47 seen this yet, these are our 20 plus agents. we've deployed. You can go to
5:51 saster.ai/agents. A lot of these agents I'm going to talk about today because this whole guide is
5:57 up. I'm not going to mention too many of the vendors cuz I aggregated a lot of
6:01 the data. I'll talk about some of them, but they're all in depth here. So,
6:09 A lot of them are third party. Some are ones that we vibe coded. Some of these
6:13 agents have sub agents, which I'll talk about in a little bit. But these are our
6:17 20 plus agents that we have currently right now at Saster. We do also have
6:23 more agents than humans. So I literally just saw someone we know yesterday and
6:27 was like, "Oh, Sask in London looks so great. This is my first time here. How
6:32 many SAS employees did this?" I was like, "Well, there's two on this stage
6:38 there. One more full-time employee. We've got a few contractors trusted that
6:41 we brought here to London. And then we have all of our agents. So we have more
6:47 agents than humans. But on today's topic of hype for customizing GTM at scale. So
6:53 this is just in the last 6ish months. So after SAS in May so basically post
6:58 annual for us we really started going deep on this AI journey deploying our
7:02 agents and we wanted to see what would work in different use cases is as we did
7:08 that we deployed more agents and more use cases more sub agents and that's how
7:13 we ended up with this hyper customized AI emails and messages at scale in the
7:20 last 6 months so our just to give you context our personalized outbound 6
7:24 months ago when we still had people before all the agents. The average SDR we had here as a human
7:33 would send you know on the low end maybe 75 emails a month per rep and at the
7:40 high end maybe somewhere like two 280s 300s right per rep per month. So if you
7:45 look at this total over the last six months almost, you know, 60,000. So
7:51 let's say 10k a month, that's 32x the max output that those human SDRs
7:57 were doing in a very short amount of time. I'll talk about the ramp time of
8:00 these agents, which was a little bit different than humans. But if you think
8:04 about this, that means we were also only doing about 3% hyperpersonalized emails
8:10 at scale before this. Because the other thing I'll show you right now is the
8:13 consistency between our customization of our agents versus on humans, very hit or
8:17 miss, right? You have one SDR that's maybe really good. They send really good
8:21 high-quality emails. You get another SDR, they're just not getting it. And
8:25 the email's terrible. Like you wouldn't buy from them. You're embarrassed that
8:29 they sent this email and you wish you could unend it. So this is how you can
8:35 get hyper customized at scale. And a majority of these target accounts are
8:39 receiving, you know, highly customized messages and reply on the first send. So
8:43 that's something I think that is also a big learning is if you do this right and
8:47 train the agents the right way, not only is it different from a human AI like a
8:52 human SDR, but I think on most human sequences it takes a few messages
8:56 whereas on ours because it's so custom usually on the first email or first
9:01 message we get a reply. So a lot of change to encapsulate here.
9:04 >> This is really good. Do they first of all these the timing
9:07 here is really interesting. Maybe we're going to get to it. But this if I see
9:12 this so these are three >> these are our three main >> artisan qualified agent force.
9:16 >> Correct. >> And if I'm looking at and that's the the
9:22 sequent that's the we artisan first then qualified then agent force. Right.
9:25 >> Correct. So in the sequence of time we did artisan first and qualified than
9:28 Asian force but actually qualified's done more because it's on the website so
9:33 it's cheating a little and then artisans in the middle and then agent forces our
9:36 newest at the bottom. >> Got it. >> Okay. I thought it's a good chart. I
9:40 thought some of the things you're saying is by the time you get to your third
9:44 agent you can also roll it out more quickly. Maybe I wasn't reading that
9:45 into the chart but >> you can. Yeah. >> The other other thing and then and keep
9:51 going. The other thing and Millie will show you examples of the emails and
9:56 communications our agents are selling. Another sort of criticism that I hear
10:02 from folks criticism in air quotes is oh those emails are only pretty good. Like
10:05 you talk about hyper customization but this isn't going back to the 1980s when
10:10 you bought this and you did this. Like they're good but they're not the bar.
10:14 This is important when folks say oh I can't do this. The bar is as good or
10:19 better than like your average human SDR. Yep. So you will see these emails are
10:22 customized depending on we do them. We we have more data to pull from. If you
10:26 were s three years ago, we know about you. They get better, but but your jaw
10:29 is not going to fall on the floor when you see these emails. You're going to
10:32 see they're pretty good. They get as good or a higher or equivalent response
10:36 rate to humans. Correct. >> But they're not the most that the
10:40 customization on a scale of 1, I'd say, varies from a three to a six.
10:43 >> Yeah. And I'll actually show you all >> it's not in a 12. This isn't an email
10:46 that someone spent equivalent to spending a month of deep clawed research
10:51 crafting. >> They're just like here's it. They're just pretty good.
10:56 >> But the average human and then and a lot of folks on the internet are like well I
11:00 could do better than this if I hired 30 top tier SDRs. Maybe we're going to find
11:07 30 top tier Oxford graduated SDRs that want to carefully craft an email each
11:11 day. And if they're that good, they want to be promoted at AE in like 3 months.
11:14 So, they're going to cycle out a lead. So, the real bar is better than the
11:19 average human with 247 consistency. And that's what squint and that's what
11:22 you're going to see in these emails. Like pretty good with not a lot of
11:26 errors. That's that's good enough to to crush it. >> Yeah. The 24/7 thing I'll get to and
11:31 it's part of why it works. So at scale you'll see in those in that chart I just
11:35 showed. So I'll break it out a little bit. Artisan overall and we're live
11:39 streaming by the way guys. So if you want the slides and all the data you can
11:43 also go on our live stream but you can also keep taking photos. Then for
11:48 artisan that one has it actually went up. It's about a 6% overall response
11:53 right now. You know average for normal STR is 2 to four. Qualified has inbound.
11:59 So that's about the same at 6%. And then Asian Force, we've said this has a
12:03 higher open rate. I'll tell you why. It's our newest agent. It's also people
12:08 we ghosted. So it kind of makes sense that they were like, "You finally
12:12 followed up with me." I'm like, "Sorry, my human wouldn't, but my AI agent
12:16 would." So also more importantly, I feel like I see people getting this wrong, is not
12:23 empowering their agents to sell. Especially if you have something that is
12:28 a low ASP, something like a ticket to SAS for London is a great example. between our
12:35 two agents that I empowered to sell, they sold 15% of the ticket revenue for
12:40 this event, which is kind of crazy cuz in the past when we've had human SDRs
12:45 try and sell tickets, I think they sold like literally I could count on one
12:48 hand. So at that volume and at that scale, I see people getting this wrong a lot,
12:53 which I'll get into. But why does this work, right? It's because all of these
12:57 different platforms have different things that they're using to
13:00 contextualize to add value back to the prospect. So instead of making it too
13:05 much about SAS, we really try and tune up our agents and train them so that all
13:09 the value is about their company, what they're doing, and why they should be at
13:13 something like a SAS. I think that's also important as you're training your
13:16 agents or thinking about rolling this out is that it should be about adding
13:20 value, right? I don't I feel like somehow that got lost in all the
13:24 outbound madness, but that should have always been the case and it's definitely
13:28 the case with AI. AI will also know your product a lot better than most entry level a like SVRs
13:35 and so whatever you tell it about the product it will contextualize for them
13:41 and add value. So AI does this in a way you know obviously 60,000 messages we
13:46 couldn't do ourselves beforehand. So it's really crazy to see which we'll
13:49 dive into. And maybe one thing to add on that data. I I I wrote a sastaster post
13:54 on this recently, but the agent force 70% open rate, which on
13:58 its surface is jaw-droppingly high, right? Let me dig into that for just one
14:01 second. And the 15% of revenue from London, this is a theme I call having
14:05 agents do the work humans don't want to do or unwilling to do. Okay. So, the 15%
14:11 of ticket revenue folks coming here, we for 6 years on and off, we tried to get our
14:18 human SDRs to help us reach out to return attendees to get them to come to
14:22 SAS London. They just wouldn't do it. It wasn't worth their time. They wanted to
14:25 hunt a six-f figureure sponsorship. So, we'd ask them, we'd give them
14:29 incentives. We'd give them Starbucks cards. We'd beg them. They wouldn't do
14:33 it. And they said they'd do it. And then finally, we would use tools like
14:35 momentum and attentive. And we see they didn't actually do it. and they lied.
14:40 Okay, so that 15% here's the point. It's a lift. A lift. Without the Asian we
14:45 wouldn't have gotten. Yes. >> So I know a lot of folks again going to
14:48 the service that want to turn on an AI SDR and have it magically create
14:52 revenue. Another way is understand calmly which parts of your funnel, which
14:57 parts of your go to market process is not even happening. Is it even remotely
15:01 optimized? Were the leads where it's just not like your team says they want
15:04 to do them, but they don't want to do the small leads. They want to do the the
15:08 lowcored leads, you know, and that's what that 15% is. The agent force one,
15:13 if if you didn't read this or catch it, that why this is a amazing and a tragedy
15:19 at the same time. These are folks who reached out to us and said they wanted
15:23 to sponsor SAS for five or six figure tickets and we did not respond to them
15:28 as our human team. Not because we didn't like round robin it. Not because crying.
15:35 It's just cuz our STRs just said >> it wasn't worth their time.
15:39 >> They they mentally and everyone like you're going to say they don't do it.
15:42 Every salesperson is managing their time. They're going to they're going to
15:45 they're going to they're going to force rank their leads in their head. They're
15:48 going to put all their effort into that one big deal that's going to close this
15:52 quarter. A little bit of effort into the small ones and nothing to the bottom. I
15:55 mean, literally, while we're here in London about 5 days ago, I wrote this on
15:59 Twitter yesterday. I reached out to a vendor for a $10,000 product and I said,
16:03 "I want to buy it while we're here. I don't have a lot of time. We're here at
16:06 Saster London. I have two questions." I didn't hear back till yesterday
16:10 afternoon. I was handed to another rep because it wasn't worth the first rep's
16:14 time for $10,000. And that rep said, "Let's get on the phone and talk about
16:19 your questions." 5day response. Get on. I mean, you lost the deal, right? So, if
16:23 you can put AI into that scenario or the ones that wasn't worth their time, 70%
16:29 open rate, even if you grow 15 or 20% faster in 2026 because of AI, it's a
16:35 gift from heaven, right? And that's what a lot of this is. Figure out, you know,
16:40 it's not it's it's not all magic, but it is magical if you can get a lift out of
16:45 the folks that just aren't being touched in your funnel. And and I'll keep going.
16:48 I don't want to take all your time, but don't assume if you're not deep on your
16:52 funnel. Don't assume every lead is being touched optimally. Don't assume every
16:56 lead I have an old sister post that every lead should be treated like a
17:00 queen or king. Every lead is precious. I reached out that $10,000 is a lot of
17:03 money to me. Okay, maybe it's not a lot of money to be that would be a Neil and
17:07 I basically spend it out of her own pocket. That's not nothing. Okay, even
17:11 in London like 10,000 you can get buy something nice for 10. That's like a lot
17:15 of what's the steak place? >> Flat irons. We got a lot of flat irons
17:20 for $10,000. Okay. It wasn't even worth their time to get back to us. It's
17:23 always worth the AI's time to get back to them. It's always worth and your
17:27 leads deserve it. So, keep going. But that's why there's some of this magical
17:29 raid is because humans wouldn't do the work. >> Yeah. But your AI isn't picky. So, just
17:34 on that on that point, why is this so great? Right. Like why were human STRs when we
17:41 had them only 3% doing of what we did now? Part of that is what you're talking
17:46 about, right? There's downtime, there's holidays, okay? You know, you have
17:51 planned time off. Sure. But then somehow when it comes to STRs, there's always a
17:56 lot of unplanned downtime for all the humans. And so I think
18:01 that's something where since the AI works 24/7, I was actually just talking
18:05 to Phipe who's presenting later. We were saying once you get a few
18:08 agents, actually your problem becomes not having agents. Your problem is
18:11 keeping up with your agents. So we'll talk about that a little bit later when
18:14 you guys come back for his noon session. But because it works 24/7, this is now
18:20 our biggest issue is actually keeping up with our agents. Like I get constant
18:24 slacks, notifications, your AI is doing this, your AI is doing that. And we try
18:29 and watch it all, right? Like we want to make sure our AI is saying the right
18:33 things, treating people properly. So many people yesterday were coming into
18:36 disaster saying like, "Oh, hey Amelia, thanks for your help." I was like, "Did
18:41 I help you? Oh, Ameilia AI helped me or Jason AI helped me." I'm like,
18:46 "Fantastic. This is real Amelia. And I'm glad my AI agent could be there. When I
18:50 was either sleeping or walking my dog, so it's it is it's you'll enter a new
18:55 world quickly where you have to learn to actually keep up with your agents once
18:59 you get the hang of them. But it is also part of why it works so
19:04 well. I put an example here. Think of which one's this from. It doesn't even
19:08 matter. But you'll see here, this is an example of like a highly customized
19:12 email. Again, it's tying back value to the person versus it being too much
19:16 about disaster. I think in this case, it's using some website authorization of
19:20 what they were looking at and tied it back to them and what they were posting
19:23 about. And then this one had a meetings link as well. So, there's a few things I
19:28 want to get into. I want to get into this one because a few folks have asked
19:32 us on our previous webinars to create like a a mind map, which I didn't have
19:38 previously, so I made one for this. A lot of people ask me like how did you
19:42 think about like the roll out right of AI SDRs? I'm like well we had SAS annual
19:49 we had a few human SDRs and after SAS reanual they quit and so instead of
19:55 replacing them with another human I replaced them with AI. So this is how I
20:02 started to do that. I split up basically the lowest hanging fruit right. So I
20:08 took into our cuz it had just been SAS or annual. So you can take something
20:11 equivalent for your company. Maybe you've just done a new product release.
20:15 The new year is coming up. You can do something that adds value and say okay
20:19 I've got all these contacts. So let's say I want to follow up with them in my
20:23 agent. I'm going to train my agent on these specific contacts. So it should be
20:27 a subset. You should never just unleash an AI agent on your entire entire
20:33 database. Like do not do that. It will not be customized. It's not going to
20:37 work like this. Like you do need to train either sub agents depending on
20:41 what platform you use or do like sub campaigns, however they call it. But
20:44 basically, you want to make sure that each like thing you're deploying in your
20:50 AISDR is specifically trained and tuned for that persona that you're going to go
20:54 after. So, you're going to make little sub personas, right, of your target
20:58 buyers. Is it a CRO? Has the CRO done something with us? Is it a CMO? Is it
21:02 have they been to our website? have they churned or do I feel like their usage is
21:06 down and they're about to churn? Like you can also use this for CS use cases
21:10 and marketing. Like all of this starts to converge. But basically all of these
21:13 things are things you can put into different sub aents, train it, make it
21:18 personalized to those leads. I usually keep it in batches of like 800 to a,000.
21:24 I don't try and do more than that. I try and get that hyper customized on who I'm
21:29 targeting with each of our sub aents. And then I'll pick which in our case we
21:34 have more than one outbound AISR. And so I'll pick which agent I think is the
21:38 best one for that. I'll pop it into that agent, train it, fire it up, and then
21:42 give it the sequence that I want of, okay, I want you to maybe I want this
21:45 one to book a meeting. I want this one to sell a ticket. I want this one to
21:48 follow up with a lead we never followed up with. I want this one to book a
21:51 meeting. And so I'll also give a different goals for each of those
21:54 personas. So that's how I kind of start to map it out. Important to know though,
21:58 I did not start with all of these, right? I actually have more than this,
22:02 but it's important to stair step it, right? So, start with one. Like a really
22:07 good one is people you might have ghosted or didn't know that you could
22:11 ghost it. Another one is if you're getting really good inbound, but you're
22:14 not able to completely follow up or maybe you can't follow up after the
22:17 first meeting. That's a good use case. Like, don't start with something mission
22:20 critical. Like, you're going to be disappointed if you can't get it to work
22:24 really quickly. A lot of these have ramp time, which I think is on the next
22:27 slide. So don't start with something that's too mission critical because then you might
22:32 set yourself up for failure. >> A who would who do you think
22:39 can implement something like this? >> That's a good question. I have that
22:41 later. >> Oh, you do. All right. Keep going. Yeah. >> All right. These are a few more
22:47 examples. The other thing I'll say too, and the reason why I put these examples,
22:50 hopefully you guys can see. So the first one, this one's an example from Artisan.
22:55 I think this person came here, but literally the top is to Jason's point. I
22:59 was like it's it's an okay like is it the greatest email on planet earth? It's
23:03 pretty good. Would I have written this? Maybe I'll give myself a 50/50. This
23:08 one's inviting them to come to SAS annual. And literally this says on the
23:13 bottom, hey, I'm a fan. I'm going to see if I can come attend. Did your AISDR
23:17 write this because it got my attention versus trash. Which just real Ameilia
23:21 answered. So I was like it's a mystery for you. on the next sample. Let me try and go
23:30 ahead. Okay, then there's another example where like just because it's an
23:34 AISDR and you're going to have all these hyperpersonalized emails, don't expect
23:39 that every response will be positive. Like most of the time I get like a
23:44 response like the last one. Sometimes I get a response that's like this that's
23:47 like very nice, but I'm not going to be there. And I'm like cool, I'm going to
23:50 follow up with this guy later. Like not everything is going to be an instant
23:54 yes. Like I think that's another fallacy of like the AISDRs is like if you're
23:58 trying to get into book meetings, sell something, it may not do that on the
24:03 first action almost like that was true before the AISDR with regular SDRs. So
24:09 all those things you know to be true are still true even with the AMA.
24:14 >> Okay, I want to talk about this one. You know, just on those examples,
24:21 >> one, you know, a lot of folks ask us, >> do they know it's an AI? Do they mind
24:26 that it's an AI? I think even just in these two examples, you'll see a
24:30 spectrum here. You'll see, is it an AI was the question. So, I guess we're not
24:34 always clear whether it is or isn't. >> I think the biggest, but a big takeaway
24:38 is as long as the communication is reasonably good, adds some value, right?
24:43 And even just a discount is value, okay? and a little bit of connection. What you
24:47 can see from the three emails you've already seen is people don't mind.
24:49 >> They don't mind. >> They don't mind. And and they don't they
24:53 what they want is help. And I really think especially in 2026, we're all
24:57 going to work in these heterogeneous worlds where we mix AIs and humans. And
25:02 imagining that I somehow mind talking to a great AI is backwards. A great AI is
25:06 often going to add more value than a mediocre human. So like don't I think my
25:11 my metal learning it's a learning. Don't worry about that. Don't worry about
25:15 people talking to an AI. Worry about if it's good. >> Yep.
25:18 >> And adds value. And people are h they don't mind. In fact, they don't mind
25:21 talking back to the AI. Forget about chat even by email. They're happy to do
25:25 it, right? You might be happy to do it, too. It might be a relief to talk to an
25:29 AI rather than the human that took 5 days to get back to me this week. Like,
25:32 it's not a negative. >> I don't think it's a negative. To that
25:37 point, we did hyperchange our inbound flow because of AI as well. So, that was
25:42 mostly out. For inbound, we use a tool called qualified on our website. Our old
25:46 flow six months ago used to be you have to fill out a form on our website, but a
25:49 lot of people still have that flow today. Then we would get alerted via
25:53 email and then I would manually route it to whoever I thought was the best AE
25:58 based on like the company size. We don't really do territory company
26:03 size, category of company, like okay, do they rep any competitors, things like
26:07 that. So we would route it and then the AE depending on who it was would take
26:12 about two or 24 hours to get back to them and it'd always be like you know oh
26:16 hey it's so and so from saw you were interested let's book a meeting like the
26:21 simplest maybe worst email response to no fury to those inbound leads and now this is a
26:28 screenshot of Ameilia AI if you want to try it it's on sastasterennon.com
26:34 you can talk to sheme and you can instantly talk to Amelia. You can book a meeting with her. So, she
26:40 instantly books meetings for our team. Honestly, a lot of the time she books
26:43 meetings while I'm asleep. So, I'll wake up and I'll be like, "Okay." And the
26:48 meetings booked are I'll just go through all the meetings that have been booked
26:51 overnight instantly. I didn't have to worry about waking up in the morning,
26:55 routing any leads I might have missed or whoever's in charge of your routing
26:58 might have missed and then follow up with them and then hope that the AE then
27:02 also follows up with them to book the meeting. So now what I do instead, it's
27:06 already pre-booked. I wake up in the morning, I talk to Dave and our sales
27:09 team. I'm like, "Hey, these people booked. Here's the context of the
27:12 conversation. Here's what we already know about them. Now you can have a
27:15 better meeting with this person." You can literally skip like steps one
27:20 through five and just go to meeting like just pass go. >> Yeah. If you if you and there's a lot of
27:25 vendors that can do this pretty well today. If this if this is already well
27:28 understood to you and you've already implemented this, great. Okay. But if in
27:33 2026 you're still having humans qualify a lot of your prospects and wait,
27:37 there's no need with AI. You and and Millie will talk about training. You are
27:40 going to have to pick a vendor and you're going to have to train it for 30
27:43 days with your data. But there's no reason a prospect shouldn't be able to
27:48 interact fluidly with an AI, not even know they're being qualified. Okay? Not
27:52 in this yucky, objectionable, dated way of whether you're worth someone that
27:56 just graduated from college's time, which was which has always been kind of
28:00 gross and uncomfortable if you've been through it on the other side.
28:03 >> The agent should do it elegantly. Great to hear from you. Glad you're
28:07 interested. Tell me about your team. Tell me about what your goals are. Talk
28:12 in English through video, audio, typing. Great. You know who would be perfect for
28:15 you? Let me set something up with David. He's free tomorrow at 11. Does it work
28:19 for you right now at night when you're ready? If you don't have that on your
28:24 website, implement it this like maybe before the end of the year. This is
28:28 lowhanging fruit. The products with AI after after the fours, after Claude 4
28:33 and open and and Chetchi before, they've all gotten really good. They can all do
28:37 this. Callum Lee on steroids in instantly qualified. It all works today.
28:42 There's no excuse to not do this. And there's no excuse to have yucky
28:45 qualification. like there may maybe if you have a seven figure product and
28:49 there's a lot of but even there the AI can qualify a seven figure product what
28:52 department are you in what are you trying to get going >> who's on the buying committee
28:56 >> there's just no excuse to have yucky qualification just eliminate it and I
29:01 really think most SDRs will die next year but the me and I know we we throw
29:05 around these terms differently the BDR that sort of smarmy qualifies you that
29:10 that that's going to die like we just there's no need for that with these
29:13 tools so this is low hanging fruit to implement and you If you if a prospect can have a
29:17 wonderful time, get their questions answered for real without a used car
29:21 salesman, and book a meeting in real time, you're going to close more,
29:25 whether it's 1% more or 20% more, it's much better. >> Yeah. The other thing I'll say real
29:30 quick on that point, too, is that these folks actually like that they got to
29:34 book instantly. Like to your point of like beforehand, right, we'd had to
29:37 round robin it and then do all this other thing and route it and then
29:39 finally book the meeting, connect the Zoom. Sometimes the Zoom doesn't work.
29:43 Like it's so instant. It's not like we're getting messages like, "Okay, AI,
29:47 like you didn't really answer my questions and so I had to book a
29:50 meeting." They're like, it it's literally like qualifying them. That's
29:54 why it's in the name of this one, but it's literally qualifying them while
29:57 they're on the site. So, to your point, it does all that for you. Obviously, you
30:03 have to train it and are qualified. Um, maybe it's on this slide.
30:06 >> That was 130 meetings booked that you had, right? >> 100. Yes. 130 meetings booked in we've
30:12 had qualified since August >> and going up right >> yeah and going up so August was our
30:16 first month so you can see we rolled out at the end of the months before
30:21 Dreamforce and then September October November there was a lot of in November
30:25 honestly I was like I don't think between David and myself is our AE I was
30:30 like I don't think we would have booked we definitely wouldn't have booked this
30:33 many without the AI cuz we would have missed them and they were high followed
30:36 we were like okay we can see what they said to a million AI we can have a
30:40 better meeting and like now we have a lot of pipe in December Jan because of
30:43 it. So >> one other thing on that chart is a lot of folks ask us and and it's all over
30:51 social media. This is the age of voice. Is voice better? Is chat better? Is
30:54 video agents better? >> People can pick. >> Yeah, they can pick. Don't try to answer
30:59 this question. You're going to find everyone is different and and different
31:04 types of prospects are different. I I I like to chat, you know. I like to clack.
31:10 Other folks really like to talk. I I can tell you on our on our first agent deli
31:15 where we've done like 150,000 chats, the ratio is about 8020 80 maybe it's 8515.
31:22 85% people like to chat. 15% like voice, but there may be different buyers. You
31:25 may have more traditional buyers that want to pick up the phone. Chat
31:30 obviously is the easiest to implement. Voice is so easy. It it takes the most
31:35 work. Okay. video is a lot of work >> and we've just launched it. We actually
31:39 don't know how well it will perform yet, I don't think. Right.
31:43 >> But some people metric. Yeah. Some people like it. >> They they like that it's part of why we
31:49 made it video was cuz so many people used our inbound agent and it does a
31:54 little bit of outbound that I wanted to start it to ramp to literally ramp our
31:58 AI like a human to be able to start to sell more. So that's why we added the
32:02 video because I was like, "Okay, I need it to add a layer of trust where I feel
32:07 like on a chat. I I wouldn't I wouldn't buy something on a chat necessarily."
32:10 >> It might add a layer of trust for some people. >> But yeah, it might add a layer of trust
32:13 of like this is literally me. I went to qualified for a whole day and filmed
32:16 this. I think the video is dropping later today. So you can see how I did
32:19 this. It was a whole day. >> Yeah. >> I had to like look at the camera like
32:24 blink slowly and like say weird words. But it was like it was fun for me. But
32:29 like this is why I like this obviously too. But I was like okay like it's a AI
32:34 some people know me from SAS or like the pod and like it just builds trust where
32:38 I was like okay if I want her to try to qualify people even more for our
32:42 meetings I feel like the video will add an extra layer where they're like oh I
32:45 know Amelia. She spends a lot of time with her AI. I might trust that to like
32:50 get me maybe even further down the funnel. >> But you don't have for for if you're
32:53 deploying you haven't done it yet or you're in the midst of it. You don't
32:56 have to overanalyze this like on social media. Okay, just do it. Like just do
33:02 it. Like the whole theme of this is pick an agent at some level. It doesn't
33:05 matter which one as long as it's a wellrusted vendor for your use case and
33:10 train it. And then don't over analyze is voice better, video or chat or is this
33:15 creepy or good or weird? Just do it. And you're probably going to find chat's the
33:18 easiest to do first because it it's the like it just works out of the box. voice
33:23 really I mean literally for the openers for this event and nearly did it on 11
33:26 labs in about 5 minutes in the green room yesterday voice is not a lot of
33:29 work to train on your voice it's a little bit of work and video is two
33:33 orders of magnitude more work so just sequence them in >> y
33:36 >> don't overanalyze a lot of the stuff just a leader train and go and then sequence
33:41 they all they all work >> yes I will say though it does take a lot
33:45 of time I would not leave your agents to their own devices so I'm going to get
33:49 into our top learnings here because this ties into a lot of what we have here.
33:54 So, just this last week, I was talking to a goto market company in the SAS
33:58 community. We all know it if I said it, but they're at a billion in revenue, not
34:03 in valuation, revenue. And I was talking to their head of go to market, who's now
34:08 also their head of AI, and their head of sales. And they were like, "Oh, you
34:12 know, we're we're looking at all these different AI SDRs. We want to roll it
34:19 out. We want to pair it with each human Str on this sales team. I said,
34:25 "Godspeed. I don't think that will work. I don't think you should just unleash an
34:30 AI you do not know how to use." They were literally calling me to ask me how
34:33 we do all this. I was like, "Okay, so let me get this straight. You don't know
34:37 how to use it." No. You know, we're learning. We're like figuring this out.
34:40 I was like, "Valid, but also if you don't know how to use it, why do you
34:46 expect that your brand new BDRs and SDRs that you literally just hired in the
34:52 last 0 to 3 months will know how to use the AI version." >> In all fairness, it sounds silly to us,
35:00 okay? But if we think preai in the old days, you might buy outreach or sales
35:05 loft and you should and you should put processes in place and you should build
35:08 templates for your team, but a lot of small would just hand it to their SDR
35:12 teams. Pick your pick the tool. In fact, a lot of them would even give them
35:15 budget. Pick the tool you like. Pick the mix or outreach and sales loft,
35:19 whichever one you like. Write your own kind of crummy cadences and set them
35:23 loose. It doesn't work in AI. >> It doesn't work. And so their idea, this
35:27 was a a very strong, wellrespected billion-dollar AI B2B company. They
35:31 wanted to do the same here. They wanted to just hand the tool to their brand new
35:35 SDRs, let them train it and figure it out, do all that segmentation and
35:38 sequencing a millad and figured it would just magically work. It's if you compare
35:42 it to like the old days, it's not that silly. Actually, >> it's not silly at all. And I actually I
35:46 tal like when I walked them through why they shouldn't do that, they were like,
35:49 "Oh, you're totally right." Like they're like, "Okay, we like now we're almost a
35:52 little embarrassed. We thought we wouldn't just unleash it on all of our a
35:57 like bs and SDRs that were humans cuz now it makes sense. So like we need to
36:01 feed it like we need to figure out pick who's going to feed it contacts. Is it
36:06 sales, marketing, CS? Okay, which contacts? Okay, once it gets a response,
36:11 who does that go to? And they were like, oh, we haven't thought about these
36:14 things yet. I was like, okay, think about those things first. Maybe do like
36:18 a little map of how you're going to use the contacts and then roll it out. like
36:23 roll it out with contacts right now that no one's touching. I'm like whatever AI
36:28 agent SDR thing you're looking at and just buy one. Like you're looking at
36:32 three. Just pick one. Just pick the best one you think. Yeah.
36:35 >> And like roll out one where you're like, "Okay." They were like, "No, no, no. We
36:39 literally have this set of everyone has this set of leads no one is touching."
36:44 >> I was like, "All right, do that first." And then when that works and you've got
36:47 it figured out and you've got it tuned in like you know six weeks then you can
36:52 start to roll it out to like the leads and then the you know stair step it go
36:56 from there. Also why this worked is we have a single source of truth. And
37:00 that's what I told this company as well. I go you need to have one single source
37:05 of truth of which agents get which contacts what follow-up are they
37:09 getting? What CTA are they getting? What do we do with them when they close? you
37:13 know, the AI doesn't really ask for a lot of commissions, so you got to figure
37:17 that part out. Who handles the renewals if the AI closes the entire thing by
37:21 itself, right? And these are all things you should think about as you're
37:25 deploying it. So, that's part of why ours worked so well. I don't really like
37:29 to say orchestrating, but it is true. We do orchestrate all of our agents through
37:33 the two people on this stage here and decide which contacts go to which people
37:37 on the amount of time it takes to get these set up. So each of these took
37:42 about 2 weeks except for the video thing I just showed you. And that's on
37:47 purpose. Like if you get frustrated in a cycle cuz you're like, "Oh, all these AI
37:51 companies are like, "You need two weeks. You need a month. You need six weeks."
37:55 I'm like, "It takes time." Like literally people give you out like, "Oh,
37:58 can I set it up in a day and it'll just work. I'm too busy." I'm like, "You got
38:01 to make the time. Otherwise, it's not going to work. Otherwise, it's not going to work." Each
38:08 of them require maybe different things for you to do while you're warming up
38:12 and tuning the different AIs. But again, a lot of this is also on you to see,
38:16 okay, like in the early days, like we read every single message, every little
38:22 thing that our AI was saying, we would read. Now, I spot check and I have like
38:26 flags in play. Like basically, it'll like throw a flag on the field if it
38:30 needs me. And a lot of the times if it again, if it books a meeting, it's
38:33 automatic. I don't need to read it. So you can start to build trust with your
38:39 agents the more you get into it. I mentioned this a little bit earlier,
38:42 but I think for self-s served models or things that have a lower ASP, I think
38:46 it's a big oversight that I see a lot of companies, they roll out things like a
38:50 qualified even or like an artisan and they don't let it sell. They're like,
38:53 "Oh, you know, I'm going to I'm going to book a meeting for every $500 thing cuz
38:57 I don't trust the AI." I'm like, "Have you tried to trust the AI? Have you
39:02 tried to give your agent something where it can sell within like certain bounds
39:06 like ours has? I was like it works pretty good. Like if you give it certain
39:11 guard rails and you let it sell, it's actually a pretty good seller.
39:15 >> There's two things to to I know you get >> Who do you need to I know you're going
39:23 to get to next one. So let me summarize it quick and then this last point on
39:27 lower ASPs. Who do you need to have success? I know you're going to get to
39:31 it. I think you need two people to make this success. One, you need someone
39:36 >> generally speaking at the vendor to help you deploy it. A forward deployed
39:41 engineer, solution architect, they go by different names. Everyone on social
39:46 media, everyone is for startups is talking about forward deployed
39:49 engineers. And what that term can mean a lot of things. It probably doesn't mean
39:53 for you what it mean meant to palunteer where they invented it, but it means
39:56 someone that can work with you in your training and get it into production.
39:59 >> Yep. >> That's why a lot of these tool That's
40:02 why self-s serve doesn't work that well. And that's why a lot of one reason some
40:05 of these tools are relatively more expensive. >> Yes. >> Is because you need a human helping you
40:12 onboard your product. Okay. You need one. And Ameilia will touch on that. If
40:16 you can't get that help, don't buy the vendor. >> Don't buy it.
40:19 >> Don't buy the vendor. No matter how slick the salesperson is, AI or human,
40:24 if you're not going to get the help to train and deploy, I'd rather have a
40:29 worse vendor that will give me the help day and night >> and I trust.
40:32 >> Okay. And then the second point is, okay then then and then on your side, this is
40:37 Well, we're running out of time to talk about it today. We'll talk about it
40:38 more. Yeah. >> One way or another, you need a GTM engineer in house.
40:42 >> Yeah. >> Now, is is are there a million of these
40:46 folks running around that you can hire on Craigslist? No. Okay. And does that
40:50 mean different things? I mean, we'll have Clay here later with Anilia. For
40:54 them, GTM engineering is kind of an onboarding sales role. That's different.
40:58 In-house, you need a nerd. You need an AI nerd. Okay. They they could come out
41:02 of marketing because, you know, obviously a lot of this is an overlap
41:06 between marketing, sales. So, you have a technical marketer. If you have someone
41:10 with a little bit of BTOC background or a a HubSpot nerd or someone like that,
41:13 they can probably do this. Yep. >> Anyone that's built mult complex
41:17 campaigns can do this. Anyone in the market that's senior enough, they just
41:20 built a lot of campaigns. This is basically a lot of campaigns with AI.
41:26 Okay. Can someone on RevOps do this? If they're techy, can your average RevOps
41:31 person do this? No. Can almost anyone on your sales team that is not in RevOps do
41:36 this? No. Okay. So, slow it down. Try to find the one like GTM nerd on your team.
41:42 Promote them and have them own this. But you need it needs to be that nerdy
41:46 person that can implement software. It's not new, but you need that. You need the
41:50 vendor to help you and one person in house. Yes. And the last one on selfs
41:54 serve. Look, a lot of the vendors that are out here and will be at annual and
41:57 that they're they're they're rolling out more self-s serve, but it's early
42:00 because of training. >> It's for early. And I just did I did a I
42:07 did a with G2 maybe three or four weeks ago. It's on G2's website. I did a deep
42:12 dive with the co of Zenesk. And Zenesk has obviously a lot of AI and they do
42:16 have a low-end self-s serve version. This is interesting. You said with our
42:20 top customers at Zenesk, we can automate 60 to 80% of support and related
4:27 Hyper Customizing GTM at Scale
4:28 work that way after Q1 this year when they started to get good and it don't
4:32 work that way today. The way an AI agent works for sales for GTM is you figure
4:38 out something that works with your team with humans. You figure out an email, an
4:42 outreach, a script, a set of objections that you overcome, a set of questions.
4:46 You you nail it yourself just like it has always been a disaster since the
4:50 beginning. humans figure it out and then you take what worked and you give it to
4:54 the agent and you train it for a month and then every day after and you take
4:58 what worked and you do it at scale. That's all these products do. Like
5:01 listen, there's a lot of AI, there's a lot of LM, a lot of sophistication,
5:04 you're going to learn about it all day. But at the end of the day, if you want
5:07 to simplify cuz all these products are good, take what humans have nailed,
5:11 document it, and then train an agent with what works. If you're expecting an
5:16 agent to sell when you can't sell, that's never worked. You got to go back
5:20 to the old days of founder sales, but instead of giving it to that first human
5:24 you hired, you give it to the first agent you hired, but basically the same
5:28 thing. So with that, Ailia, we'll we'll dive into our data. >> Okay. Well, let's do it. Well, I wanted
5:33 to focus today just for some of you that have been to like our podcast for swap
5:37 Wednesday. I aggregated a lot of our data. I put in some new data and I'm
5:41 going to focus a lot on hyper customizing at scale. If you haven't
5:47 seen this yet, these are our 20 plus agents. we've deployed. You can go to
5:51 saster.ai/agents. A lot of these agents I'm going to talk about today because this whole guide is
5:57 up. I'm not going to mention too many of the vendors cuz I aggregated a lot of
6:01 the data. I'll talk about some of them, but they're all in depth here. So,
6:09 A lot of them are third party. Some are ones that we vibe coded. Some of these
6:13 agents have sub agents, which I'll talk about in a little bit. But these are our
6:17 20 plus agents that we have currently right now at Saster. We do also have
6:23 more agents than humans. So I literally just saw someone we know yesterday and
6:27 was like, "Oh, Sask in London looks so great. This is my first time here. How
6:32 many SAS employees did this?" I was like, "Well, there's two on this stage
6:38 there. One more full-time employee. We've got a few contractors trusted that
6:41 we brought here to London. And then we have all of our agents. So we have more
6:47 agents than humans. But on today's topic of hype for customizing GTM at scale. So
6:53 this is just in the last 6ish months. So after SAS in May so basically post
6:58 annual for us we really started going deep on this AI journey deploying our
7:02 agents and we wanted to see what would work in different use cases is as we did
7:08 that we deployed more agents and more use cases more sub agents and that's how
7:13 we ended up with this hyper customized AI emails and messages at scale in the
7:20 last 6 months so our just to give you context our personalized outbound 6
7:24 months ago when we still had people before all the agents. The average SDR we had here as a human
7:32 Real-World Examples and Results
7:33 would send you know on the low end maybe 75 emails a month per rep and at the
7:40 high end maybe somewhere like two 280s 300s right per rep per month. So if you
7:45 look at this total over the last six months almost, you know, 60,000. So
7:51 let's say 10k a month, that's 32x the max output that those human SDRs
7:57 were doing in a very short amount of time. I'll talk about the ramp time of
8:00 these agents, which was a little bit different than humans. But if you think
8:04 about this, that means we were also only doing about 3% hyperpersonalized emails
8:10 at scale before this. Because the other thing I'll show you right now is the
8:13 consistency between our customization of our agents versus on humans, very hit or
8:17 miss, right? You have one SDR that's maybe really good. They send really good
8:21 high-quality emails. You get another SDR, they're just not getting it. And
8:25 the email's terrible. Like you wouldn't buy from them. You're embarrassed that
8:29 they sent this email and you wish you could unend it. So this is how you can
8:35 get hyper customized at scale. And a majority of these target accounts are
8:39 receiving, you know, highly customized messages and reply on the first send. So
8:43 that's something I think that is also a big learning is if you do this right and
8:47 train the agents the right way, not only is it different from a human AI like a
8:52 human SDR, but I think on most human sequences it takes a few messages
8:56 whereas on ours because it's so custom usually on the first email or first
9:01 message we get a reply. So a lot of change to encapsulate here.
9:04 >> This is really good. Do they first of all these the timing
9:07 here is really interesting. Maybe we're going to get to it. But this if I see
9:12 this so these are three >> these are our three main >> artisan qualified agent force.
9:16 >> Correct. >> And if I'm looking at and that's the the
9:22 sequent that's the we artisan first then qualified then agent force. Right.
9:25 >> Correct. So in the sequence of time we did artisan first and qualified than
9:28 Asian force but actually qualified's done more because it's on the website so
9:33 it's cheating a little and then artisans in the middle and then agent forces our
9:36 newest at the bottom. >> Got it. >> Okay. I thought it's a good chart. I
9:40 thought some of the things you're saying is by the time you get to your third
9:44 agent you can also roll it out more quickly. Maybe I wasn't reading that
9:45 into the chart but >> you can. Yeah. >> The other other thing and then and keep
9:51 going. The other thing and Millie will show you examples of the emails and
9:56 communications our agents are selling. Another sort of criticism that I hear
10:02 from folks criticism in air quotes is oh those emails are only pretty good. Like
10:05 you talk about hyper customization but this isn't going back to the 1980s when
10:10 you bought this and you did this. Like they're good but they're not the bar.
10:14 This is important when folks say oh I can't do this. The bar is as good or
10:19 better than like your average human SDR. Yep. So you will see these emails are
10:22 customized depending on we do them. We we have more data to pull from. If you
10:26 were s three years ago, we know about you. They get better, but but your jaw
10:29 is not going to fall on the floor when you see these emails. You're going to
10:32 see they're pretty good. They get as good or a higher or equivalent response
10:36 rate to humans. Correct. >> But they're not the most that the
10:40 customization on a scale of 1, I'd say, varies from a three to a six.
10:43 >> Yeah. And I'll actually show you all >> it's not in a 12. This isn't an email
10:46 that someone spent equivalent to spending a month of deep clawed research
10:51 crafting. >> They're just like here's it. They're just pretty good.
10:56 >> But the average human and then and a lot of folks on the internet are like well I
11:00 could do better than this if I hired 30 top tier SDRs. Maybe we're going to find
11:07 30 top tier Oxford graduated SDRs that want to carefully craft an email each
11:11 day. And if they're that good, they want to be promoted at AE in like 3 months.
11:14 So, they're going to cycle out a lead. So, the real bar is better than the
11:19 average human with 247 consistency. And that's what squint and that's what
11:22 you're going to see in these emails. Like pretty good with not a lot of
11:26 errors. That's that's good enough to to crush it. >> Yeah. The 24/7 thing I'll get to and
11:31 it's part of why it works. So at scale you'll see in those in that chart I just
11:35 showed. So I'll break it out a little bit. Artisan overall and we're live
11:39 streaming by the way guys. So if you want the slides and all the data you can
11:43 also go on our live stream but you can also keep taking photos. Then for
11:48 artisan that one has it actually went up. It's about a 6% overall response
11:53 right now. You know average for normal STR is 2 to four. Qualified has inbound.
11:59 So that's about the same at 6%. And then Asian Force, we've said this has a
12:03 higher open rate. I'll tell you why. It's our newest agent. It's also people
12:08 we ghosted. So it kind of makes sense that they were like, "You finally
12:12 followed up with me." I'm like, "Sorry, my human wouldn't, but my AI agent
12:16 would." So also more importantly, I feel like I see people getting this wrong, is not
12:23 empowering their agents to sell. Especially if you have something that is
12:28 a low ASP, something like a ticket to SAS for London is a great example. between our
12:35 two agents that I empowered to sell, they sold 15% of the ticket revenue for
12:40 this event, which is kind of crazy cuz in the past when we've had human SDRs
12:45 try and sell tickets, I think they sold like literally I could count on one
12:48 hand. So at that volume and at that scale, I see people getting this wrong a lot,
12:53 which I'll get into. But why does this work, right? It's because all of these
12:57 different platforms have different things that they're using to
13:00 contextualize to add value back to the prospect. So instead of making it too
13:05 much about SAS, we really try and tune up our agents and train them so that all
13:09 the value is about their company, what they're doing, and why they should be at
13:13 something like a SAS. I think that's also important as you're training your
13:16 agents or thinking about rolling this out is that it should be about adding
13:20 value, right? I don't I feel like somehow that got lost in all the
13:24 outbound madness, but that should have always been the case and it's definitely
13:28 the case with AI. AI will also know your product a lot better than most entry level a like SVRs
13:35 and so whatever you tell it about the product it will contextualize for them
13:41 and add value. So AI does this in a way you know obviously 60,000 messages we
13:46 couldn't do ourselves beforehand. So it's really crazy to see which we'll
13:49 dive into. And maybe one thing to add on that data. I I I wrote a sastaster post
13:54 on this recently, but the agent force 70% open rate, which on
13:58 its surface is jaw-droppingly high, right? Let me dig into that for just one
14:01 second. And the 15% of revenue from London, this is a theme I call having
14:05 agents do the work humans don't want to do or unwilling to do. Okay. So, the 15%
14:11 of ticket revenue folks coming here, we for 6 years on and off, we tried to get our
14:18 human SDRs to help us reach out to return attendees to get them to come to
14:22 SAS London. They just wouldn't do it. It wasn't worth their time. They wanted to
14:25 hunt a six-f figureure sponsorship. So, we'd ask them, we'd give them
14:29 incentives. We'd give them Starbucks cards. We'd beg them. They wouldn't do
14:33 it. And they said they'd do it. And then finally, we would use tools like
14:35 momentum and attentive. And we see they didn't actually do it. and they lied.
14:40 Okay, so that 15% here's the point. It's a lift. A lift. Without the Asian we
14:45 wouldn't have gotten. Yes. >> So I know a lot of folks again going to
14:48 the service that want to turn on an AI SDR and have it magically create
14:52 revenue. Another way is understand calmly which parts of your funnel, which
14:57 parts of your go to market process is not even happening. Is it even remotely
15:01 optimized? Were the leads where it's just not like your team says they want
15:04 to do them, but they don't want to do the small leads. They want to do the the
15:08 lowcored leads, you know, and that's what that 15% is. The agent force one,
15:13 if if you didn't read this or catch it, that why this is a amazing and a tragedy
15:19 at the same time. These are folks who reached out to us and said they wanted
15:23 to sponsor SAS for five or six figure tickets and we did not respond to them
15:28 as our human team. Not because we didn't like round robin it. Not because crying.
15:35 It's just cuz our STRs just said >> it wasn't worth their time.
15:39 >> They they mentally and everyone like you're going to say they don't do it.
15:42 Every salesperson is managing their time. They're going to they're going to
15:45 they're going to they're going to force rank their leads in their head. They're
15:48 going to put all their effort into that one big deal that's going to close this
15:52 quarter. A little bit of effort into the small ones and nothing to the bottom. I
15:55 mean, literally, while we're here in London about 5 days ago, I wrote this on
15:59 Twitter yesterday. I reached out to a vendor for a $10,000 product and I said,
16:03 "I want to buy it while we're here. I don't have a lot of time. We're here at
16:06 Saster London. I have two questions." I didn't hear back till yesterday
16:10 afternoon. I was handed to another rep because it wasn't worth the first rep's
16:14 time for $10,000. And that rep said, "Let's get on the phone and talk about
16:19 your questions." 5day response. Get on. I mean, you lost the deal, right? So, if
16:23 you can put AI into that scenario or the ones that wasn't worth their time, 70%
16:29 open rate, even if you grow 15 or 20% faster in 2026 because of AI, it's a
16:35 gift from heaven, right? And that's what a lot of this is. Figure out, you know,
16:40 it's not it's it's not all magic, but it is magical if you can get a lift out of
16:45 the folks that just aren't being touched in your funnel. And and I'll keep going.
16:48 I don't want to take all your time, but don't assume if you're not deep on your
16:52 funnel. Don't assume every lead is being touched optimally. Don't assume every
16:56 lead I have an old sister post that every lead should be treated like a
17:00 queen or king. Every lead is precious. I reached out that $10,000 is a lot of
17:03 money to me. Okay, maybe it's not a lot of money to be that would be a Neil and
17:07 I basically spend it out of her own pocket. That's not nothing. Okay, even
17:11 in London like 10,000 you can get buy something nice for 10. That's like a lot
17:15 of what's the steak place? >> Flat irons. We got a lot of flat irons
17:20 for $10,000. Okay. It wasn't even worth their time to get back to us. It's
17:23 always worth the AI's time to get back to them. It's always worth and your
17:27 leads deserve it. So, keep going. But that's why there's some of this magical
17:29 raid is because humans wouldn't do the work. >> Yeah. But your AI isn't picky. So, just
17:34 on that on that point, why is this so great? Right. Like why were human STRs when we
17:41 had them only 3% doing of what we did now? Part of that is what you're talking
17:46 about, right? There's downtime, there's holidays, okay? You know, you have
17:51 planned time off. Sure. But then somehow when it comes to STRs, there's always a
17:56 lot of unplanned downtime for all the humans. And so I think
18:01 that's something where since the AI works 24/7, I was actually just talking
18:05 to Phipe who's presenting later. We were saying once you get a few
18:08 agents, actually your problem becomes not having agents. Your problem is
18:11 keeping up with your agents. So we'll talk about that a little bit later when
18:14 you guys come back for his noon session. But because it works 24/7, this is now
18:20 our biggest issue is actually keeping up with our agents. Like I get constant
18:24 slacks, notifications, your AI is doing this, your AI is doing that. And we try
18:29 and watch it all, right? Like we want to make sure our AI is saying the right
18:33 things, treating people properly. So many people yesterday were coming into
18:36 disaster saying like, "Oh, hey Amelia, thanks for your help." I was like, "Did
18:41 I help you? Oh, Ameilia AI helped me or Jason AI helped me." I'm like,
18:46 "Fantastic. This is real Amelia. And I'm glad my AI agent could be there. When I
18:50 was either sleeping or walking my dog, so it's it is it's you'll enter a new
18:55 world quickly where you have to learn to actually keep up with your agents once
18:59 you get the hang of them. But it is also part of why it works so
19:04 well. I put an example here. Think of which one's this from. It doesn't even
19:08 matter. But you'll see here, this is an example of like a highly customized
19:12 email. Again, it's tying back value to the person versus it being too much
19:16 about disaster. I think in this case, it's using some website authorization of
19:20 what they were looking at and tied it back to them and what they were posting
19:23 about. And then this one had a meetings link as well. So, there's a few things I
19:28 want to get into. I want to get into this one because a few folks have asked
19:32 us on our previous webinars to create like a a mind map, which I didn't have
19:38 previously, so I made one for this. A lot of people ask me like how did you
19:42 think about like the roll out right of AI SDRs? I'm like well we had SAS annual
19:49 we had a few human SDRs and after SAS reanual they quit and so instead of
19:55 replacing them with another human I replaced them with AI. So this is how I
20:02 started to do that. I split up basically the lowest hanging fruit right. So I
20:08 took into our cuz it had just been SAS or annual. So you can take something
20:11 equivalent for your company. Maybe you've just done a new product release.
20:15 The new year is coming up. You can do something that adds value and say okay
20:19 I've got all these contacts. So let's say I want to follow up with them in my
20:23 agent. I'm going to train my agent on these specific contacts. So it should be
20:27 a subset. You should never just unleash an AI agent on your entire entire
20:33 database. Like do not do that. It will not be customized. It's not going to
20:37 work like this. Like you do need to train either sub agents depending on
20:41 what platform you use or do like sub campaigns, however they call it. But
20:44 basically, you want to make sure that each like thing you're deploying in your
20:50 AISDR is specifically trained and tuned for that persona that you're going to go
20:54 after. So, you're going to make little sub personas, right, of your target
20:58 buyers. Is it a CRO? Has the CRO done something with us? Is it a CMO? Is it
21:02 have they been to our website? have they churned or do I feel like their usage is
21:06 down and they're about to churn? Like you can also use this for CS use cases
21:10 and marketing. Like all of this starts to converge. But basically all of these
21:13 things are things you can put into different sub aents, train it, make it
21:18 personalized to those leads. I usually keep it in batches of like 800 to a,000.
21:24 I don't try and do more than that. I try and get that hyper customized on who I'm
21:29 targeting with each of our sub aents. And then I'll pick which in our case we
21:34 have more than one outbound AISR. And so I'll pick which agent I think is the
21:38 best one for that. I'll pop it into that agent, train it, fire it up, and then
21:42 give it the sequence that I want of, okay, I want you to maybe I want this
21:45 one to book a meeting. I want this one to sell a ticket. I want this one to
21:48 follow up with a lead we never followed up with. I want this one to book a
21:51 meeting. And so I'll also give a different goals for each of those
21:54 personas. So that's how I kind of start to map it out. Important to know though,
21:58 I did not start with all of these, right? I actually have more than this,
22:02 but it's important to stair step it, right? So, start with one. Like a really
22:07 good one is people you might have ghosted or didn't know that you could
22:11 ghost it. Another one is if you're getting really good inbound, but you're
22:14 not able to completely follow up or maybe you can't follow up after the
22:17 first meeting. That's a good use case. Like, don't start with something mission
22:20 critical. Like, you're going to be disappointed if you can't get it to work
22:24 really quickly. A lot of these have ramp time, which I think is on the next
22:27 slide. So don't start with something that's too mission critical because then you might
22:32 set yourself up for failure. >> A who would who do you think
22:39 can implement something like this? >> That's a good question. I have that
22:41 later. >> Oh, you do. All right. Keep going. Yeah. >> All right. These are a few more
22:47 examples. The other thing I'll say too, and the reason why I put these examples,
22:50 hopefully you guys can see. So the first one, this one's an example from Artisan.
22:55 I think this person came here, but literally the top is to Jason's point. I
22:59 was like it's it's an okay like is it the greatest email on planet earth? It's
23:03 pretty good. Would I have written this? Maybe I'll give myself a 50/50. This
23:08 one's inviting them to come to SAS annual. And literally this says on the
23:13 bottom, hey, I'm a fan. I'm going to see if I can come attend. Did your AISDR
23:17 write this because it got my attention versus trash. Which just real Ameilia
23:21 answered. So I was like it's a mystery for you. on the next sample. Let me try and go
23:30 ahead. Okay, then there's another example where like just because it's an
23:34 AISDR and you're going to have all these hyperpersonalized emails, don't expect
23:39 that every response will be positive. Like most of the time I get like a
23:44 response like the last one. Sometimes I get a response that's like this that's
23:47 like very nice, but I'm not going to be there. And I'm like cool, I'm going to
23:50 follow up with this guy later. Like not everything is going to be an instant
23:54 yes. Like I think that's another fallacy of like the AISDRs is like if you're
23:58 trying to get into book meetings, sell something, it may not do that on the
24:03 first action almost like that was true before the AISDR with regular SDRs. So
24:09 all those things you know to be true are still true even with the AMA.
24:14 >> Okay, I want to talk about this one. You know, just on those examples,
24:21 >> one, you know, a lot of folks ask us, >> do they know it's an AI? Do they mind
24:26 that it's an AI? I think even just in these two examples, you'll see a
24:30 spectrum here. You'll see, is it an AI was the question. So, I guess we're not
24:34 always clear whether it is or isn't. >> I think the biggest, but a big takeaway
24:38 is as long as the communication is reasonably good, adds some value, right?
24:43 And even just a discount is value, okay? and a little bit of connection. What you
24:47 can see from the three emails you've already seen is people don't mind.
24:49 >> They don't mind. >> They don't mind. And and they don't they
24:53 what they want is help. And I really think especially in 2026, we're all
24:57 going to work in these heterogeneous worlds where we mix AIs and humans. And
25:02 imagining that I somehow mind talking to a great AI is backwards. A great AI is
25:06 often going to add more value than a mediocre human. So like don't I think my
25:11 my metal learning it's a learning. Don't worry about that. Don't worry about
25:15 people talking to an AI. Worry about if it's good. >> Yep.
25:18 >> And adds value. And people are h they don't mind. In fact, they don't mind
25:21 talking back to the AI. Forget about chat even by email. They're happy to do
25:25 it, right? You might be happy to do it, too. It might be a relief to talk to an
25:29 AI rather than the human that took 5 days to get back to me this week. Like,
25:32 it's not a negative. >> I don't think it's a negative. To that
25:37 point, we did hyperchange our inbound flow because of AI as well. So, that was
25:42 mostly out. For inbound, we use a tool called qualified on our website. Our old
25:46 flow six months ago used to be you have to fill out a form on our website, but a
25:49 lot of people still have that flow today. Then we would get alerted via
25:53 email and then I would manually route it to whoever I thought was the best AE
25:58 based on like the company size. We don't really do territory company
26:03 size, category of company, like okay, do they rep any competitors, things like
26:07 that. So we would route it and then the AE depending on who it was would take
26:12 about two or 24 hours to get back to them and it'd always be like you know oh
26:16 hey it's so and so from saw you were interested let's book a meeting like the
26:21 simplest maybe worst email response to no fury to those inbound leads and now this is a
26:28 screenshot of Ameilia AI if you want to try it it's on sastasterennon.com
26:34 you can talk to sheme and you can instantly talk to Amelia. You can book a meeting with her. So, she
26:40 instantly books meetings for our team. Honestly, a lot of the time she books
26:43 meetings while I'm asleep. So, I'll wake up and I'll be like, "Okay." And the
26:48 meetings booked are I'll just go through all the meetings that have been booked
26:51 overnight instantly. I didn't have to worry about waking up in the morning,
26:55 routing any leads I might have missed or whoever's in charge of your routing
26:58 might have missed and then follow up with them and then hope that the AE then
27:02 also follows up with them to book the meeting. So now what I do instead, it's
27:06 already pre-booked. I wake up in the morning, I talk to Dave and our sales
27:09 team. I'm like, "Hey, these people booked. Here's the context of the
27:12 conversation. Here's what we already know about them. Now you can have a
27:15 better meeting with this person." You can literally skip like steps one
27:20 through five and just go to meeting like just pass go. >> Yeah. If you if you and there's a lot of
27:25 vendors that can do this pretty well today. If this if this is already well
27:28 understood to you and you've already implemented this, great. Okay. But if in
27:33 2026 you're still having humans qualify a lot of your prospects and wait,
27:37 there's no need with AI. You and and Millie will talk about training. You are
27:40 going to have to pick a vendor and you're going to have to train it for 30
27:43 days with your data. But there's no reason a prospect shouldn't be able to
27:48 interact fluidly with an AI, not even know they're being qualified. Okay? Not
27:52 in this yucky, objectionable, dated way of whether you're worth someone that
27:56 just graduated from college's time, which was which has always been kind of
28:00 gross and uncomfortable if you've been through it on the other side.
28:03 >> The agent should do it elegantly. Great to hear from you. Glad you're
28:07 interested. Tell me about your team. Tell me about what your goals are. Talk
28:12 in English through video, audio, typing. Great. You know who would be perfect for
28:15 you? Let me set something up with David. He's free tomorrow at 11. Does it work
28:19 for you right now at night when you're ready? If you don't have that on your
28:24 website, implement it this like maybe before the end of the year. This is
28:28 lowhanging fruit. The products with AI after after the fours, after Claude 4
28:33 and open and and Chetchi before, they've all gotten really good. They can all do
28:37 this. Callum Lee on steroids in instantly qualified. It all works today.
28:42 There's no excuse to not do this. And there's no excuse to have yucky
28:45 qualification. like there may maybe if you have a seven figure product and
28:49 there's a lot of but even there the AI can qualify a seven figure product what
28:52 department are you in what are you trying to get going >> who's on the buying committee
28:56 >> there's just no excuse to have yucky qualification just eliminate it and I
29:01 really think most SDRs will die next year but the me and I know we we throw
29:05 around these terms differently the BDR that sort of smarmy qualifies you that
29:10 that that's going to die like we just there's no need for that with these
29:13 tools so this is low hanging fruit to implement and you If you if a prospect can have a
29:17 wonderful time, get their questions answered for real without a used car
29:21 salesman, and book a meeting in real time, you're going to close more,
29:25 whether it's 1% more or 20% more, it's much better. >> Yeah. The other thing I'll say real
29:30 quick on that point, too, is that these folks actually like that they got to
29:34 book instantly. Like to your point of like beforehand, right, we'd had to
29:37 round robin it and then do all this other thing and route it and then
29:39 finally book the meeting, connect the Zoom. Sometimes the Zoom doesn't work.
29:43 Like it's so instant. It's not like we're getting messages like, "Okay, AI,
29:47 like you didn't really answer my questions and so I had to book a
29:50 meeting." They're like, it it's literally like qualifying them. That's
29:54 why it's in the name of this one, but it's literally qualifying them while
29:57 they're on the site. So, to your point, it does all that for you. Obviously, you
30:03 have to train it and are qualified. Um, maybe it's on this slide.
30:06 >> That was 130 meetings booked that you had, right? >> 100. Yes. 130 meetings booked in we've
30:12 had qualified since August >> and going up right >> yeah and going up so August was our
30:16 first month so you can see we rolled out at the end of the months before
30:21 Dreamforce and then September October November there was a lot of in November
30:25 honestly I was like I don't think between David and myself is our AE I was
30:30 like I don't think we would have booked we definitely wouldn't have booked this
30:33 many without the AI cuz we would have missed them and they were high followed
30:36 we were like okay we can see what they said to a million AI we can have a
30:40 better meeting and like now we have a lot of pipe in December Jan because of
30:43 it. So >> one other thing on that chart is a lot of folks ask us and and it's all over
30:51 social media. This is the age of voice. Is voice better? Is chat better? Is
30:54 video agents better? >> People can pick. >> Yeah, they can pick. Don't try to answer
30:59 this question. You're going to find everyone is different and and different
31:04 types of prospects are different. I I I like to chat, you know. I like to clack.
31:10 Other folks really like to talk. I I can tell you on our on our first agent deli
31:15 where we've done like 150,000 chats, the ratio is about 8020 80 maybe it's 8515.
31:22 85% people like to chat. 15% like voice, but there may be different buyers. You
31:25 may have more traditional buyers that want to pick up the phone. Chat
31:30 obviously is the easiest to implement. Voice is so easy. It it takes the most
31:35 work. Okay. video is a lot of work >> and we've just launched it. We actually
31:39 don't know how well it will perform yet, I don't think. Right.
31:43 >> But some people metric. Yeah. Some people like it. >> They they like that it's part of why we
31:49 made it video was cuz so many people used our inbound agent and it does a
31:54 little bit of outbound that I wanted to start it to ramp to literally ramp our
31:58 AI like a human to be able to start to sell more. So that's why we added the
32:02 video because I was like, "Okay, I need it to add a layer of trust where I feel
32:07 like on a chat. I I wouldn't I wouldn't buy something on a chat necessarily."
32:10 >> It might add a layer of trust for some people. >> But yeah, it might add a layer of trust
32:13 of like this is literally me. I went to qualified for a whole day and filmed
32:16 this. I think the video is dropping later today. So you can see how I did
32:19 this. It was a whole day. >> Yeah. >> I had to like look at the camera like
32:24 blink slowly and like say weird words. But it was like it was fun for me. But
32:29 like this is why I like this obviously too. But I was like okay like it's a AI
32:34 some people know me from SAS or like the pod and like it just builds trust where
32:38 I was like okay if I want her to try to qualify people even more for our
32:42 meetings I feel like the video will add an extra layer where they're like oh I
32:45 know Amelia. She spends a lot of time with her AI. I might trust that to like
32:50 get me maybe even further down the funnel. >> But you don't have for for if you're
32:53 deploying you haven't done it yet or you're in the midst of it. You don't
32:56 have to overanalyze this like on social media. Okay, just do it. Like just do
33:02 it. Like the whole theme of this is pick an agent at some level. It doesn't
33:05 matter which one as long as it's a wellrusted vendor for your use case and
33:10 train it. And then don't over analyze is voice better, video or chat or is this
33:15 creepy or good or weird? Just do it. And you're probably going to find chat's the
33:18 easiest to do first because it it's the like it just works out of the box. voice
33:23 really I mean literally for the openers for this event and nearly did it on 11
33:26 labs in about 5 minutes in the green room yesterday voice is not a lot of
33:29 work to train on your voice it's a little bit of work and video is two
33:33 orders of magnitude more work so just sequence them in >> y
33:36 >> don't overanalyze a lot of the stuff just a leader train and go and then sequence
33:41 they all they all work >> yes I will say though it does take a lot
33:45 of time I would not leave your agents to their own devices so I'm going to get
33:49 into our top learnings here because this ties into a lot of what we have here.
33:54 So, just this last week, I was talking to a goto market company in the SAS
33:58 community. We all know it if I said it, but they're at a billion in revenue, not
34:03 in valuation, revenue. And I was talking to their head of go to market, who's now
34:08 also their head of AI, and their head of sales. And they were like, "Oh, you
34:12 know, we're we're looking at all these different AI SDRs. We want to roll it
34:19 out. We want to pair it with each human Str on this sales team. I said,
34:25 "Godspeed. I don't think that will work. I don't think you should just unleash an
34:30 AI you do not know how to use." They were literally calling me to ask me how
34:33 we do all this. I was like, "Okay, so let me get this straight. You don't know
34:37 how to use it." No. You know, we're learning. We're like figuring this out.
34:40 I was like, "Valid, but also if you don't know how to use it, why do you
34:46 expect that your brand new BDRs and SDRs that you literally just hired in the
34:52 last 0 to 3 months will know how to use the AI version." >> In all fairness, it sounds silly to us,
35:00 okay? But if we think preai in the old days, you might buy outreach or sales
35:05 loft and you should and you should put processes in place and you should build
35:08 templates for your team, but a lot of small would just hand it to their SDR
35:12 teams. Pick your pick the tool. In fact, a lot of them would even give them
35:15 budget. Pick the tool you like. Pick the mix or outreach and sales loft,
35:19 whichever one you like. Write your own kind of crummy cadences and set them
35:23 loose. It doesn't work in AI. >> It doesn't work. And so their idea, this
35:27 was a a very strong, wellrespected billion-dollar AI B2B company. They
35:31 wanted to do the same here. They wanted to just hand the tool to their brand new
35:35 SDRs, let them train it and figure it out, do all that segmentation and
35:38 sequencing a millad and figured it would just magically work. It's if you compare
35:42 it to like the old days, it's not that silly. Actually, >> it's not silly at all. And I actually I
35:46 tal like when I walked them through why they shouldn't do that, they were like,
35:49 "Oh, you're totally right." Like they're like, "Okay, we like now we're almost a
35:52 little embarrassed. We thought we wouldn't just unleash it on all of our a
35:57 like bs and SDRs that were humans cuz now it makes sense. So like we need to
36:01 feed it like we need to figure out pick who's going to feed it contacts. Is it
36:06 sales, marketing, CS? Okay, which contacts? Okay, once it gets a response,
36:11 who does that go to? And they were like, oh, we haven't thought about these
36:14 things yet. I was like, okay, think about those things first. Maybe do like
36:18 a little map of how you're going to use the contacts and then roll it out. like
36:23 roll it out with contacts right now that no one's touching. I'm like whatever AI
36:28 agent SDR thing you're looking at and just buy one. Like you're looking at
36:32 three. Just pick one. Just pick the best one you think. Yeah.
36:35 >> And like roll out one where you're like, "Okay." They were like, "No, no, no. We
36:39 literally have this set of everyone has this set of leads no one is touching."
36:44 >> I was like, "All right, do that first." And then when that works and you've got
36:47 it figured out and you've got it tuned in like you know six weeks then you can
36:52 start to roll it out to like the leads and then the you know stair step it go
36:56 from there. Also why this worked is we have a single source of truth. And
37:00 that's what I told this company as well. I go you need to have one single source
37:05 of truth of which agents get which contacts what follow-up are they
37:09 getting? What CTA are they getting? What do we do with them when they close? you
37:13 know, the AI doesn't really ask for a lot of commissions, so you got to figure
37:17 that part out. Who handles the renewals if the AI closes the entire thing by
37:21 itself, right? And these are all things you should think about as you're
37:25 deploying it. So, that's part of why ours worked so well. I don't really like
37:29 to say orchestrating, but it is true. We do orchestrate all of our agents through
37:33 the two people on this stage here and decide which contacts go to which people
37:37 on the amount of time it takes to get these set up. So each of these took
37:42 about 2 weeks except for the video thing I just showed you. And that's on
37:47 purpose. Like if you get frustrated in a cycle cuz you're like, "Oh, all these AI
37:51 companies are like, "You need two weeks. You need a month. You need six weeks."
37:55 I'm like, "It takes time." Like literally people give you out like, "Oh,
37:58 can I set it up in a day and it'll just work. I'm too busy." I'm like, "You got
38:01 to make the time. Otherwise, it's not going to work. Otherwise, it's not going to work." Each
38:08 of them require maybe different things for you to do while you're warming up
38:12 and tuning the different AIs. But again, a lot of this is also on you to see,
38:16 okay, like in the early days, like we read every single message, every little
38:22 thing that our AI was saying, we would read. Now, I spot check and I have like
38:26 flags in play. Like basically, it'll like throw a flag on the field if it
38:30 needs me. And a lot of the times if it again, if it books a meeting, it's
38:33 automatic. I don't need to read it. So you can start to build trust with your
38:39 agents the more you get into it. I mentioned this a little bit earlier,
38:42 but I think for self-s served models or things that have a lower ASP, I think
38:46 it's a big oversight that I see a lot of companies, they roll out things like a
38:50 qualified even or like an artisan and they don't let it sell. They're like,
38:53 "Oh, you know, I'm going to I'm going to book a meeting for every $500 thing cuz
38:57 I don't trust the AI." I'm like, "Have you tried to trust the AI? Have you
39:02 tried to give your agent something where it can sell within like certain bounds
39:06 like ours has? I was like it works pretty good. Like if you give it certain
39:11 guard rails and you let it sell, it's actually a pretty good seller.
39:15 >> There's two things to to I know you get >> Who do you need to I know you're going
39:23 to get to next one. So let me summarize it quick and then this last point on
39:27 lower ASPs. Who do you need to have success? I know you're going to get to
39:31 it. I think you need two people to make this success. One, you need someone
39:36 >> generally speaking at the vendor to help you deploy it. A forward deployed
39:41 engineer, solution architect, they go by different names. Everyone on social
39:46 media, everyone is for startups is talking about forward deployed
39:49 engineers. And what that term can mean a lot of things. It probably doesn't mean
39:53 for you what it mean meant to palunteer where they invented it, but it means
39:56 someone that can work with you in your training and get it into production.
39:59 >> Yep. >> That's why a lot of these tool That's
40:02 why self-s serve doesn't work that well. And that's why a lot of one reason some
40:05 of these tools are relatively more expensive. >> Yes. >> Is because you need a human helping you
40:12 onboard your product. Okay. You need one. And Ameilia will touch on that. If
40:16 you can't get that help, don't buy the vendor. >> Don't buy it.
40:19 >> Don't buy the vendor. No matter how slick the salesperson is, AI or human,
40:24 if you're not going to get the help to train and deploy, I'd rather have a
40:29 worse vendor that will give me the help day and night >> and I trust.
40:32 >> Okay. And then the second point is, okay then then and then on your side, this is
40:37 Well, we're running out of time to talk about it today. We'll talk about it
40:38 more. Yeah. >> One way or another, you need a GTM engineer in house.
40:42 >> Yeah. >> Now, is is are there a million of these
40:46 folks running around that you can hire on Craigslist? No. Okay. And does that
40:50 mean different things? I mean, we'll have Clay here later with Anilia. For
40:54 them, GTM engineering is kind of an onboarding sales role. That's different.
40:58 In-house, you need a nerd. You need an AI nerd. Okay. They they could come out
41:02 of marketing because, you know, obviously a lot of this is an overlap
41:06 between marketing, sales. So, you have a technical marketer. If you have someone
41:10 with a little bit of BTOC background or a a HubSpot nerd or someone like that,
41:13 they can probably do this. Yep. >> Anyone that's built mult complex
41:17 campaigns can do this. Anyone in the market that's senior enough, they just
41:20 built a lot of campaigns. This is basically a lot of campaigns with AI.
41:26 Okay. Can someone on RevOps do this? If they're techy, can your average RevOps
41:31 person do this? No. Can almost anyone on your sales team that is not in RevOps do
41:36 this? No. Okay. So, slow it down. Try to find the one like GTM nerd on your team.
41:42 Promote them and have them own this. But you need it needs to be that nerdy
41:46 person that can implement software. It's not new, but you need that. You need the
41:50 vendor to help you and one person in house. Yes. And the last one on selfs
41:54 serve. Look, a lot of the vendors that are out here and will be at annual and
41:57 that they're they're they're rolling out more self-s serve, but it's early
42:00 because of training. >> It's for early. And I just did I did a I
42:07 did a with G2 maybe three or four weeks ago. It's on G2's website. I did a deep
42:12 dive with the co of Zenesk. And Zenesk has obviously a lot of AI and they do
42:16 have a low-end self-s serve version. This is interesting. You said with our
42:20 top customers at Zenesk, we can automate 60 to 80% of support and related
42:25 interactions. Okay, makes sense. They train them for sometimes for months at
42:29 Zenes for their big customers. For our self-s serve AI, it's 20%. 20. Now, 20%
42:35 is still meaningful, right? But 20% probably isn't enough for an outbound
42:38 sales tool. You need to go further. So this is just bear in mind this is going
42:43 to come but training iterating on autopilot with no human it's not there
42:48 yet it's not it's not quite there as we record right so don't expect don't
42:53 expect that folks are going to >> they're getting there I think in 12
42:56 months it will be exciting but we're not we're you need humans on both sides yes
43:01 >> to make the AI work you need two humans >> you need two humans my point on that too
43:05 actually ties into learning number two actually is do it to humans you think
43:11 will stay at your company because literally I was talking dojo I was
43:18 talking to a CMO maybe 6 weeks ago but there were 50 million ARR they're like
43:21 he's like oh I'm going to bake off with like 10 different AISDRs I was like
43:27 first mistake don't do 10 bake offs too many like if you're going to bake off a
43:33 few AISDRs maybe pick like three at most I was like that's mistake number I was
43:38 like this guy's already doomed But guess what? I went to go look this
43:49 if you was it, if it was true before AI, it's probably still true now. So
43:54 turnover in GTM was high for AI, it's still high now. It actually might be
43:58 higher if you believe all the LinkedIn hype. So don't stake if you're a founder
44:04 here, don't stake your entire like AI go to market strategy on one person like
44:10 your CMO or CRO if you even sniff or hint that they might leave January 1,
44:15 which is not hor like you're going to spend the next four weeks arguing.
44:17 >> Yeah. >> And they're just going to leave on Janu.
44:23 So, so just make sure if you're going to stake your AI or if you're going to
44:27 build clones or frown, you know, AI agents that you deploy around clones of
44:31 your team that you're damn sure they're going to stick around and they have a
44:34 real stake in the company and a real reason to do so because otherwise you're
44:37 going to be left retraining all these agents over again when that person
44:41 leaves. And then to my last point because yeah, we got to we got to go. My
44:46 last point to yours on picking a vendor, don't too many bagos. As I just said,
44:50 when it comes to our budget, we've already touched on this, but yeah, some
44:53 of these tools are like, you know, 40 to 100K a yearish, but we replace
44:56 headcount, but some of the marketing side, which we didn't get time to today,
45:00 but we have a YouTube session about like our whole marketing go to market stack.
45:06 Some of those are $20. So, like don't fall into the trap with the
45:10 vendors who don't help you. So, this is me at Salesforce Tower before like
45:15 before I got on the plane. Here they have this giant Christmas tree. That's
45:18 me. This should be everyone's sales team now. So, it's me, my FDE,
45:23 which I didn't have, you know, a couple weeks ago. So, I now have a forward
45:27 deploy to engineer, my account manager, and my sales rep. And I'm like, that is
45:31 the nucleus now. That is the new nucleus of everyone who's on our primary account
45:35 team. It should be these three people, right? You have somebody to escalate to
45:39 as a CSM. You've got your normal sales rep, and you have your FD. And like I
45:43 know, like I literally text with all these people now. Like, I've gotten to
45:46 know them. I trust them. I trust them with our data. I mean, in this case,
45:49 it's Salesforce, so they've always had our data and they use it in agent force.
45:53 But if folks say they don't want to help you or they can't help you, I wouldn't
45:59 be too eager to give all your data to them for the AI agents. Like, just pick
46:04 folks you trust. Talk to them. Talk to the humans. Ask them for customer
46:08 references. Like, I do references for all of these folks all the time. Like,
46:12 all day long, I do like either short references, long references. Like I talk
46:16 to these people all the time to do references for some of these products
46:19 that we've mentioned. So like ask them for one. I think too often now again in
46:23 the age of AI people skip this step which is maybe now more important than
46:27 ever. Like just ask for a really good solid customer reference a logo that you
46:32 might know. See if they give you one. They don't give you one go to the next
46:36 vendor. Pick somebody you trust. And then on that since we didn't get to
46:39 all the questions. >> Yeah. >> Oh yeah. We I think we're out. We'll
46:43 we're going to take a break here and flip the room. They'll be we'll do more
46:47 on this at 10 and at 10. >> So, yeah. So, literally, we're just
46:49 going to do like a little movie >> for folks with questions. Two things.
46:52 We're going to do a follow-up session on Zoom in like two weeks. So, bring all
46:56 your questions and come live and we'll also vibe code a little thing when we
46:59 get back where you can type your questions into. We'll answer them either
47:03 in text but every it's a lot of people in this room but we will answer every single
47:08 person's question on all this when we're back and we'll do a followup or maybe
47:12 even two live for folks in [music] this room. >> Hopefully this is helpful.
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