TL;DR. JustinHarris.AI, the Las Vegas AI Consultant, runs marketing automation as four named AI specialists: one each for SEO, ads, social, and email. Each wakes on its own published schedule, does its job, fixes what it finds, and reports back. You approve anything that reaches a client; the work happens whether or not anyone remembers it.
What marketing automation Las Vegas owners actually get here
Marketing automation Las Vegas owners are usually sold means software you log into and configure yourself: a scheduler, an email tool, a dashboard. That is not what this is. Here, automation means four named AI specialists that each own one marketing function and run it on a fixed schedule, the same way an employee would clock in, except they never forget and never take the day off. One handles SEO and content. One handles paid ads. One handles social. One handles email. Each has a written contract for how it does its job and a schedule that says exactly when it runs. You do not configure the cron, read the dashboards, or operate the platform. The specialist does. You stay on the approval gate for anything that reaches a customer.
Why recurring marketing work needs a schedule, not a to-do list
The functions that grow a local business are the ones that have to be regular. SEO research compounds only if it happens on a rhythm. An ad account left unwatched quietly wastes spend on losing campaigns. Social momentum dies after two weeks of silence. Email reputation drifts until a whole sending domain starts landing in spam. Every one of these is exactly the kind of work a busy owner drops first, because it is never urgent on any single day. Putting it on a person's to-do list is how it dies. Putting each function on its own schedule, owned by an agent whose only job is that function, is how it stays alive. The rhythm becomes a property of the system instead of a thing someone has to remember.
Meet the four specialists and their schedules
Each autopilot is a named agent with a published run schedule. Here is what each one does and when:
- SEO (Ratatoskr): a daily trend and keyword scan at 6:30am, a daily content-research brief at 7:00am, a Sunday audit that fixes SEO issues on already-published pages, and a weekly performance report on Friday afternoon.
- Ads (Vali): a weekday performance check every morning at 9am on Google and Meta, watching spend, click rate, cost per click, and return on ad spend, plus a weekly report on Friday. No autonomous spending; a person signs off on changes.
- Social (Snotra): weekly and monthly content scheduling across LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, getting finished assets live on the right platform at the right time.
- Email (Sjofn): the densest schedule of the four, eight scheduled jobs covering a daily deliverability sweep, a daily warmup-curve check, weekly blacklist and DMARC scans, A/B test reads twice a week, hot-signal triage three times every weekday, and a monthly list-hygiene prune.
How the autopilots run, and why they fix instead of just flagging
Every scheduled run is recorded in one place, a routines table that a single production scheduler reads and fires. When a specialist wakes, it authenticates as a dedicated automation account, never the operator's personal one, so running these agents around the clock does not eat anyone's interactive budget. The rule that makes this more than a status dashboard is simple: every recurring routine has to fix something, not just log it. The email specialist's warmup-curve check is the clearest example. When a sending domain drifts off its ramp, the check does not file a note for a human to read later. It corrects the daily sending cap back to the ramp value and records the drift. Logging is not the job. Detecting and correcting is.
Where the human stays in the loop
Autonomy on the recurring work does not mean nobody is watching. The specialists run the cadence, the research, the audits, and the fixes on their own, but anything that reaches a client waits at a human approval gate before it ships, and there is no autonomous ad spend. The autopilots remove the part that breaks when a person gets busy: the regular, unglamorous, easy-to-skip work. They keep the part where judgment matters firmly with a person. You are not handing your marketing to a bot that posts whatever it wants. You are putting the recurring engine on a schedule and keeping your hand on what goes out the door.
Marketing automation built for Las Vegas service businesses
This is tuned for local Las Vegas service businesses: the dentist, the law office, the clinic, the home-services company that lives and dies by the phone ringing and the calendar filling. Those owners do not need a national brand campaign. They need their SEO compounding, their ad spend watched, their social alive, and their email landing in the inbox, every week, without having to do it themselves. Marketing automation in Las Vegas, done this way, is four specialists keeping those four functions running on schedule so the owner can stay the face of the business while the engine runs behind them. The free AI Audit shows which of your functions are already running on a cadence and which have quietly gone dark.
Related work
- The 63-agent AI marketing system we run our own business on
- Valhalla: the operating system that records every run
- AI Managed Services
- See all of our work
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