I Gave an AI My Website URL and Let It Run My Marketing for 30 Days - Here's What It Shipped
I Gave an AI My Website URL and Let It Run My Marketing for 30 Days
Thirty days ago I stopped writing my own marketing.
No blog posts scheduled, no social queue planned, no ad groups reviewed over the weekend. I pasted my website URL into AutoMarketer, flipped the autopilot switch to ON, and left it running. I reviewed the queue every few days, approved what looked good, and otherwise stayed out of the way.
Here is what actually happened.
Day 1: The brand profile and the plan
Within about 45 seconds of submitting my URL, AutoMarketer had read my website and built a Brand Profile. Not a template with my company name swapped in. A real summary of what I sell, who buys it, my tone of voice, my main value propositions, and the keywords my audience is searching.
Then it drafted a marketing plan: which channels to prioritize, what to do first on each, and a rationale for the order. SEO first because I had zero informational content and high-intent low-difficulty queries sitting there uncovered. Email second because I had a list and no welcome sequence. Social third to build warm audiences for retargeting.
This took it under a minute. It would have taken me three weeks to do the same thing, and I would have had half the depth.
Week 1: The content machine starts running
In the first week, the autopilot ran two SEO cycles. It generated:
- Two full blog articles (one targeting "are soy candles better than paraffin," one targeting "eco-friendly housewarming gift ideas")
- A complete keyword and content calendar with 24 target keywords grouped by intent
- An on-page SEO audit with specific, actionable findings (6 collection pages missing meta descriptions, no FAQ schema, thin content on two category pages)
- 5 Instagram posts with captions, hashtags, and image concepts
- A 3-email welcome sequence
All of it landed in my Asset Queue. I spent about 25 minutes reviewing, edited one email subject line, approved everything else, and let it go.
Week 2: Paid ads show up
I had not touched paid ads in six months because I did not have time to manage a campaign properly. In Week 2 the autopilot decided to fix that.
It built a tightly themed Google Ads ad group for my best commercial keyword, with 10 RSA headlines, 4 descriptions, a keyword list with match types and negatives, and a recommended daily budget. Then it mirrored the whole thing as a Microsoft Advertising bulk CSV.
I uploaded the Google campaign in about 8 minutes. The Bing import took 4.
CPCs on Bing ran 40% lower than Google for the same keywords. I had genuinely forgotten that Bing existed as an ad platform. The AI had not.
Week 3: Social starts to compound
By week three there were 15 social posts published across Instagram and Pinterest. Not all of them were great. Two felt a little generic and I would have written them differently. But the other 13 were on-brand, well-timed, and consistent in a way I have never been able to maintain manually.
The autopilot also generated a Meta retargeting ad set, built around the people who had visited my site but not bought. I connected my Meta account (took about 4 minutes through the OAuth flow) and approved the campaign. It went live the next morning.
Week 4: Email starts converting
The welcome sequence I approved in Week 1 had been running quietly. By Week 4 it had sent to 284 new subscribers and driven 19 first purchases at an 18% conversion rate. That is the first time my email welcome series has ever worked, because it is the first time I have had one.
The autopilot also generated a newsletter for the week and a promotional email for a seasonal product. Both went out on schedule, with subject lines that got a 41% open rate on the newsletter and a 38% rate on the promo.
What the activity log showed
Every single cycle came with a plain-language rationale. "This week I prioritized SEO because your top informational keyword had no ranking page." "I built the Google ad group because search demand for your transactional keyword is in peak season." "I refreshed two social posts that underperformed last week."
I knew exactly what it was doing and why, every time. It never felt like a black box.
The honest parts
Not everything was perfect. A couple of generated blog articles needed an extra editing pass for tone. One Meta ad had copy that was a little too promotional for my brand voice. I flagged it, edited it in the queue, and the next cycle's output was closer to what I wanted because the feedback loop was tighter.
The AI also tried to suggest an abandoned-cart email in Week 3. I do not have cart abandonment set up on my site, so that was a miss. I just rejected it and moved on.
What 30 days actually shipped
- 8 full blog articles
- 1 complete SEO audit with action plan
- 24-keyword research plan
- 2 Google Ads ad groups (8 ad variants)
- 2 Microsoft Advertising bulk campaign imports
- 1 Meta retargeting ad set (4 creative variants)
- 28 social posts across 4 platforms
- 3-email welcome sequence (sent, converting at 18%)
- 4 newsletters and promotional emails
- 1 content calendar for the next 6 weeks
At the agency rates I was quoted last year, this output would have cost somewhere between $3,500 and $7,000. AutoMarketer costs $49 to $149 depending on which plan you are on, and it runs itself.
Should you try it?
If you have a website and you are not doing your marketing consistently because you do not have time or do not know where to start, yes. The demo is free, takes 30 seconds, and shows you exactly what the AI would generate for your specific business before you sign up for anything.
The output is not magic. It is good, consistent, on-brand marketing that runs without you. That turns out to be enough.