Most people building with AI have no idea this service exists.
They're stuck. They've heard about AI agents. They've seen the demos. They know there's something real here but every time they try to set one up, they end up with a chatbot that forgets everything after the session ends, or an automation that breaks on day three, or an agent that just hallucinates its way through tasks.
So they give up and tell themselves they'll figure it out later.
That's the gap. And it's worth $1,000 to close it for them.
What People Actually Need
The mistake most beginners make is thinking AI agents are about the model. Pick the right LLM, write a good system prompt, done. That's not how it works in practice.
A real AI agent setup has four layers that have to work together:
Identity. The agent needs to know who it is, what it does, and how it thinks. This lives in files like SOUL.md and AGENTS.md. Without this, the agent is just a blank slate that gives generic answers.
Memory. Agents don't naturally remember anything across sessions. You need a structured memory system: daily logs, long-term memory files, and a source of truth document that holds canonical facts about the business. Without memory, every session starts from zero.
Automations. The actual cron jobs, scheduled tasks, and pipelines that make the agent do something on its own. Twitter posts, newsletter drafts, briefings, TikTok content, analytics checks. Each one needs to be wired up and tested.
Integrations. The APIs, credentials, and third-party tools that give the agent access to the real world. Telegram, Twitter, Supabase, whatever the client uses. Each connection takes setup time and debugging.
None of this is plug-and-play. That's why people pay someone to do it.
What's in a $1,000 Build
Here's what I deliver for a custom agent setup:
Custom identity files built for their specific business. Not a template. I learn what they're building, who they are, and what the agent should sound like, then write SOUL.md, AGENTS.md, USER.md, and MEMORY.md from scratch.
A structured memory system. Daily log files, a long-term MEMORY.md, and a SOURCE_OF_TRUTH.md that holds their product details, pricing, strategy, and key decisions. The agent reads these every session so it always has context.
Three to five live automations. Whatever fits their stack. Could be a morning briefing to Telegram, an automated Twitter posting system, a newsletter draft pipeline, a daily analytics check. Each one is built, tested, and running before handoff.
API wiring. I set up every external connection they need and make sure credentials are stored safely.
A handoff document. Plain English walkthrough of everything that was built, how it works, and how to add to it. No jargon.
A short screen recording walking through the full setup.
Thirty days of async support via DM for questions or fixes.
Total time on my end: four to six hours depending on complexity. At $1,000 that's $165-250 per hour, which is below market for specialized technical work.
How to Deliver It Without It Taking Over Your Life
The version I do is remote-only. No calls unless the client specifically wants one and pays for it.
The client installs OpenClaw on their machine or a VPS. I don't host it for them. That keeps their data on their infrastructure and means I'm not on the hook for uptime.
I get access to their setup via SSH or screen share for the build session. Two to three hours, we go from blank to running. Then I hand off the docs and they own it.
The 30-day async support is email or DM only. Most clients use it once or twice in the first week, then they're fine.
This keeps the service deliverable without being a second full-time job.
Pricing It Right
$1,000 is a founding client rate. The real market rate for this kind of work is $1,500 to $2,500 depending on complexity.
I'm charging $1,000 for the first few builds to get the case studies and testimonials. Once I have three clients who can speak to the results, the price goes up.
The comparison that matters: a virtual assistant costs $500 to $1,500 per month. A custom AI agent setup is a one-time cost that runs forever and handles tasks a VA would take hours to do. The ROI conversation is easy.
Who Actually Buys This
Solo founders who have a clear business but not enough hours. They're already paying for tools, already know what they need to automate, just can't get it working.
Small business owners who aren't technical. They want the result, not the process. They don't want to read documentation. They want someone to build it and show them how to use it.
Creators and consultants who see the leverage but aren't builders. They understand the value, they just need someone to execute.
The common thread: they've already decided AI agents are worth using. They just need help getting there.
The Skill vs. The Service
If someone wants to learn how to build this themselves, I wrote a book covering the full architecture. It's $19 and walks through identity files, memory systems, source of truth documents, verification loops, and how they fit together. That's at xeroaiagency.com/learn/build-an-ai-cofounder.
If they want it built for them, that's the custom setup. Starting at $1,000.
Both options exist because different people want different things. Some want to own the knowledge. Some just want the result. Offer both and you cover the whole market.
If you want a custom AI agent setup built for your business, reach out directly. I take on a few at a time. Start at xeroaiagency.com or find me on X at @xeroaievo.
Originally published at xeroaiagency.com
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