Practical AI · The question nobody asks
What do you want your website to do for you?
Right now most owners can't even answer that. We've been trained to see our website as something to protect, not a partner to direct. Five owners, their real pains, and the new reality where the only question left is yours.
The five we're covering
Every website owner is one of these five
Size matters less than who actually touches the site and what it's for. Five types, bottom of the ladder to the top.
1
The Solo Operator
Coach, consultant, freelancer of one
2
The Local Small Business
Restaurant, dentist, plumber, salon, shop
3
The Growing SMB
Agency, e-commerce, early SaaS · 10 to 100 people
4
The Mid-Market Company
Marketing + IT + agency · 100 to 1,000 people
5
The Enterprise
Six-figure CMS, release calendars · 1,000+ people
Website type 1 of 5
SOLO OPERATOR
The one-person shop
Coach · consultant · freelancer · solo service. The site is a brochure that brings in clients.
1Scared to touch it
“A website you don't understand is a website you'll be afraid to touch.”
— Randy Dean, web educator (LinkedIn)
2The developer vanished
“They built the site, then vanished. Now something's broken, nobody knows the password, and you're afraid to touch anything.”
— BConverse, digital ops agency (describing client pain)
3Every little tweak costs
“The last straw was asking him to add one tiny button, and being told it would cost an extra $1,500.”
— small business owner, recorded by HeartComms
4Invisible to AI
ChatGPT recommends just 1.2% of business locations. The other 98.8% don't appear at all.
— SOCi Local Visibility Index, Jan 2026 (audit of multi-location brands)
5Quietly going stale
“Clients come to me with a website they struggled to even use. It had gone stagnant for years.”
— web designer, PickleWix
Website type 2 of 5
LOCAL SMALL BUSINESS
The frozen brochure
Restaurant · dentist · plumber · salon · boutique. Built once, then left untouched.
1Too much to keep up
“I neglect it because it is too much to maintain.”
— small business owner, r/smallbusiness
2Locked out of my own site
“He has all the licenses to everything on my site, even my Office365. I don't know where to start.”
— small business owner, recorded by HeartComms
3Rotting in the dark
“My sites kept getting hacked and cost a bomb to fix each time. I've had my identity stolen.”
— small business owner, recorded by HeartComms
6,700 new WordPress flaws, H1 2025
4Slow and clunky
“Each page takes about ten seconds to load. I can walk around the block in the time it takes to open and save.”
— small business owner, recorded by HeartComms
53% of mobile visits bounce after 3s
5Nobody can find me
No structure for search or reviews, so the site is invisible on Google and AI alike.
— recurring pattern across r/smallbusiness & r/GoogleMyBusiness
Website type 3 of 5
GROWING SMB
The speed tax
Agency · e-commerce · early SaaS, 10 to 100 people. The site is a revenue engine that has to move.
1A 5-minute change, a 3-week wait
“Every single change requires a dev ticket. Update a headline? Ticket. Publish a post? Ticket. We're moving at 2014 speed while competitors iterate weekly.”
— in-house marketer, r/digital_marketing
2We've stopped testing
“We tried to run simple A/B tests and hit an enormous amount of problems. None of it could be delivered effectively.”
— Steve Souders, Builder.io (on his ShopStyle years)
3Marketing stuck behind dev
“Development speed is 100% the bottleneck. Every course-correction has latency.”
— developer, Hacker News
4Downtime is real money
A store doing $30,000 a month loses about $1,000 for every single day it's down.
— Codeable (cost calculation)
5We miss the moment
Campaigns go live after the trend, the launch, or the season has already passed.
— the through-line of the quotes above
Website type 4 of 5
MID-MARKET
Ticket queue theater
100 to 1,000 people. Marketing owns the strategy; IT, brand, and legal hold the stamps.
1Change requests pile up
40% of web professionals say their dev team takes too long to make the changes they ask for.
— Lumar, State of Website Intelligence 2023 (140 pros)
2Too many cooks
“Every post needs approval at multiple levels: product teams, then the CMO, then the VP of Sales and Marketing.”
— B2B marketer, r/b2bmarketing
3The CMS is too risky to touch
“They still call me in a panic because they 'broke everything.' They changed one word in a text block.”
— WordPress developer, r/Wordpress
4Drowning in tools
“WordPress plus 17 vendors. 17 logins, 17 APIs, 17 support queues. North of $2M a year to keep it stitched together.”
— Christian Smith, SVP, Roundtable (on X)
59% juggle 5+ tools
5Always six weeks behind
Big agency retainers, slow output, and a site that never catches up to the business.
— the pattern underneath the quotes above
Website type 5 of 5
ENTERPRISE
The six-figure moat
1,000+ people. A platform that cost more than a house, run by an army of specialists.
1A six-figure software bill
“We've needed constant development support, which is expensive, and been caught out being charged for vague 'content requests.'”
— enterprise IT reviewer, Gartner Peer Insights
$150K–$500K+/yr to license
2Glacial to publish
“Making changes or new templates was prohibitively resource intensive. Our CMS held us back from doing anything creative.”
— enterprise respondent, IDC MarketScape
6–12 months to launch
3Marketers locked out
“I've worked with content in Adobe, Kentico, Sitecore and more. It was pretty painful.”
— Gireesh Sahukar, VP of Digital, Dawn Foods
4One mistake is a lawsuit
The average data breach now costs $4.88 million, the highest on record.
— IBM Cost of a Data Breach Report, 2024
5Built for the old internet
Engineered for old-school SEO and far too rigid to adapt to how AI search works.
— pattern across enterprise CMS analyses
Now zoom out
Five owners. The same five pains.
Strip away the size and the budget, and every story collapses into the same handful of problems.
01
The Wall
You're cut off from your own website.
02
The Wait
Every change is slow and gated.
03
The Fear
Touch it and something breaks.
04
The Leash
You always need someone else to act.
05
The Decay
It goes stale, unsafe, and unfindable.
Your website is a fragile thing you protect, not a living tool you use.
The paradigm shift
Stop thinking of it as a website.
For thirty years the deal was: don't touch it, don't break it, and it'll cost you either way. There's a better question now. What can it do for me, now that I can just talk to it?
It waited for visitors
→
It goes out and works while you sleep
You kept it alive
→
It heals, updates, and defends itself
It described your business
→
It answered your customers
→
It answers to you, and brings you the next move
What it becomes · 1 of 5
SOLO OPERATOR
The team you could never afford
A one-person business that runs like it has a whole staff, and a chief of staff.
→
It briefs you every morning
Who showed up, who's ready to buy, what to do today. The outreach already drafted for you to approve.
→
One idea becomes a whole launch
Say "I'm running a workshop," and the page, the emails, the checkout, and the reminders are built by dinner.
→
It closes the ones you'd drop
Every "let me think about it" gets a thoughtful follow-up, in your voice, until they decide.
→
It's you, in a hundred places at once
It learns your voice and handles the conversations, the answers, and the selling, as you.
What it becomes · 2 of 5
LOCAL SMALL BUSINESS
The storefront that runs itself
A front desk, a marketer, and a manager that never clock out.
→
It works the front desk
Answers every question, books the table, takes the deposit. The phone stops ringing off the hook.
→
True everywhere at once
Say it once and the site, Google, Maps, and the AIs all tell the same up-to-date story.
→
It fills its own empty chairs
It spots the slow night before you do and pulls past customers back in with a reason to come.
→
It tells you what to change
"Fridays are maxed, raise the price. Tuesdays are dead, here's the fix." Your manager who sees everything.
What it becomes · 3 of 5
GROWING SMB
A site that grows itself
It stops waiting for the team and starts outworking it.
→
It runs experiments you never briefed
Finds the lift while you sleep, ships the winner, and tells you what it changed and why.
→
It builds new tools on demand
"Make a quote calculator for this page," and it ships by lunch. Your site grows new limbs.
→
A custom site for every visitor
Assembled live for each human, and a clean version for every AI that comes to research you.
→
It sells to other AIs
When a buying agent shows up for a customer, your site negotiates and closes a whole new channel.
What it becomes · 4 of 5
MID-MARKET
The platform the company runs on
One brain with guardrails, instead of 17 tools and a ticket queue.
→
Anyone changes anything, by asking
With brand and legal enforced automatically, in the background. No tickets, no Carl.
→
It proposes the next move to each team
Watches every page and tells marketing, sales, and product what to fix and what to double down on.
→
One brain replaces the whole stack
Publishing, analytics, personalization, and the data, all in one place the company runs on.
→
It optimizes thousands of pages itself
Continuously and safely, every change logged and reversible, so nobody ever fears prod again.
What it becomes · 5 of 5
ENTERPRISE
Living infrastructure
A six-figure cost center becomes a revenue engine at startup speed.
→
Always fresh, always cited
Thousands of pages keep themselves accurate and chosen by AI, with no release cycle to wait on.
→
Two webs at once
One built for humans, one built for the agents now doing the research and the buying.
→
It governs and defends itself
Compliance, brand, accessibility, and security all checked before anything ever goes live.
→
A real-time sensor for leadership
The whole property tells you what the market is doing right now, not what it did last quarter.
This isn't a dream. It's the roadmap.
The people building the web already see it
Every line below is a real founder or investor, on the record. The infrastructure they're describing is already live.
→
You run at the scale of fifty
"Soon there will be one-person companies worth a billion dollars." — Sam Altman, OpenAI
→
You build by talking
"English is the hottest new programming language." — Andrej Karpathy, ex-Tesla & OpenAI
→
Describe it and it ships
"The future of software is agents all the way down." — Amjad Masad, Replit ($2.7M → $100M in 14 months)
→
ChatGPT buys from you directly
Every store is now agent-ready by default. AI-driven orders jumped 15x in 2025. — Tobi Lütke, Shopify
→
Every service becomes software you direct
"Services are the new software." A $10 trillion shift. — Sequoia Capital
The paradise
What you actually get to live in
When all of it matures, this is the daily reality. The boldest of it is real today; the rest is wiring itself up now.
→
A company of one that runs like fifty
Your site is the operating staff. Legal, finance, support, marketing, sales, all running while you make the calls.
→
The AIs everyone asks bring you the customers
Someone tells ChatGPT "find me a program like this," and your site is who it picks and buys from, at 2am, no human needed.
→
Your software builds itself
Describe a tool you wish you had, and it's live before your coffee is cold.
→
Your site hunts while you live your life
It scans the world for the people who fit, drafts the outreach, and waits for your yes.
→
You stop building pages, you make decisions
It maintains itself, flags what's not working, reinvents what does, and negotiates with other companies' AIs for you.
The part nobody pitches
It doesn't just work for your customers. It works for you.
This is the whole shift. The website stops being a thing you maintain and becomes the partner who has your back.
→
It brings you opportunities
The lead that almost booked, the deal worth chasing, surfaced with the message already written.
→
It tells you the truth
What's working, what's dying, what to price differently. Your smartest advisor, because it sees everything.
→
It does the work you hate
The follow-ups, the updates, the reconciling, the chasing. Quietly handled while you do the real work.
→
It builds whatever you dream
The tool, the page, the offer you thought up in the shower exists by the afternoon. Just say it.
But here's the catch
This is happening with or without you.
When AI gives one answer, it picks a handful and the rest disappear. Being the site AI trusts isn't a bonus anymore. Being invisible to it is the new going out of business.
ChatGPT recommends 1.2% of businesses. The other 98.8% don't exist to it.
SOCi Local Visibility Index, 2026 · audit of 350,000+ locations
The rules were never facts
It's finally yours.
The three rules you built your whole relationship to your website around were never true. They were a leash.
"Don't touch it"
→
Touch anything, anytime, just by asking.
"Don't break it"
→
You can't. Every change undoes in a click, and it heals itself.
"It's too expensive"
→
A fraction of the cost. No dev army, no retainer, no $1,500 button.
And it's yours. No hostage, no lockout. You own it, and you can walk away with it anytime.
The only thing still holding you
A circus elephant is tied to a small stake as a baby. It pulls, it can't move, and it learns one thing: I can't. It grows strong enough to uproot a tree. The rope never changes. It never pulls again. Not because it can't. Because it decided, long ago, that it couldn't.
You are the elephant. The rope came off. You just haven't tried to move yet.
The only question left
What do you want your website to do for you?
For years you weren't allowed to ask it. Now it's the only question that matters. The AIs are already choosing. Decide what yours is for, on your terms, and start dreaming like the future is already here. Because it is.