Kevin Diaz

Link AI - The Agentic Business Suite that replaces your entire stack

byβ€’
We built the Agentic Business Suite so you can stop duct-taping your tools together. Link AI gives you AI agents on voice, WhatsApp, Instagram, and chat. Workflows to automate your internal processes. And Ally, your personal AI agent included in every plan, so you can run your whole business from WhatsApp without ever opening a dashboard. This is our first public launch. We are just getting started.

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Kevin Diaz
Maker
πŸ“Œ
Hey Product Hunt! I'm Kevin, founder of Link AI. πŸ‘‹ Today is a double launch. We went public AND shipped Workflows in the same day. Here's why I built this: I kept watching businesses juggle five or six disconnected tools just to talk to customers and run their operations. A chatbot here, a voice system there, a spreadsheet for workflows. It was exhausting and expensive. Link AI is the Agentic Business Suite that brings it all together. You get AI agents across voice, WhatsApp, SMS, and web chat, plus workflow automation to run your internal processes, plus Ally, your personal AI agent that manages the whole thing from WhatsApp or Slack. We're already live with enterprise clients including government accounts and the Puerto Rico Convention Center. This is our first public launch. Honest question for you: if you could hand ONE business process over to an AI agent today, what would it be? I'm reading and responding to every comment.
Taimur Haider

Hello @hikevindiaz, happy launch day. Two products at once is impressive.

I like The Puerto Rico Convention Center case study. A government client using RAG to give event planners real info. That's real work.


However, one thing I kept thinking while reading. You have a lot of products. Calendar. Orders. Phone. Forms. Tickets. Workflows. That's a full stack. But on the homepage, it feels like a list. Isn't that so? A person landing there might not know where to start. Just shared what I noticed.

Hope people like it.

Kevin Diaz

@taimur_haider1Β thank you! We've been actually privately live since about 6 months ago with some enterprise clients. We just wanted to make sure everything was great before launching publicly. Specially the security aspect.

I have to say, I 100% agree with you. We tested about 3 different layouts of presenting the platform and ended up with this one. Still, although the design looks amazing, I feel we have a lot of information that might scare some users away.

I do think we nailed here in Product Hunt with the images showcase. Maybe this general way of presenting (non-feature-specific) might be a better way to present the business. What do you think?

We also thought about adding a simple text-to-agent feature directly inside the landing page so users might go directly to use the platform. This might be a better UX.

Loved your feedback, thank you for your time.

Taimur Haider

@hikevindiazΒ Hello Kevin, I appreciate you taking the time to write all that. Means a lot.


To answer your question: yes, I think the Product Hunt showcase works better because it focuses on outcomes... not features. The homepage tries to show everything at once. The PH page shows what actually happens.

And the Text-to-Agent is a bold move.... but it might just add more noise if the core narrative isn't locked in first. Understand?

That image showcase worked because it sold the result. By the way I have a way to make your homepage do the same without making it feel like a manual.

Dropping you a note on LinkedIn!

Julian Francis

The insight that people are exhausted from duct-taping tools together is real. But I'm curious about the human side of it β€” when "Ally" manages everything from WhatsApp, what happens to the intention behind the message? The person sending it still needs to feel heard, not just processed. How do you think about preserving that layer?

Kevin Diaz

@julian_francisΒ Thank you for your comment! I appreciate you taking the time.

So the way we view Ally is not a "Jarvis" style assistant. It's inspired in the OpenClaw approach but for business. The reality is that we see hundreds of startups launching everyday because UI is getting easier to code. This means its value goes down and ultimately as we've seen in the past few years, people prefer to explain what they want instead of configuring it themselves.

With Ally, our goal is for users to visit the dashboard as little as possible because Ally can basically manage the dashboard for you. For example, enhancing an agent's knowledge periodically with updates can be redundant task, so users might just tell Ally "hey, add these weekly specials to the knowledge base of X agent" and Ally would simply add a text insert.

When it comes to other areas like reaching out to people, it always requires user authorization and it learns from the user's tone and personality for future reach outs.

I hope this answers your questions and give you an inside to what the future of Link AI.

Julian Francis

@hikevindiazΒ  This is a really thoughtful framing, Kevin.

The shift from "configure it yourself" to "just tell it what you want" sounds like a UI evolution. But what's actually happening underneath is a trust transfer β€” from a system you control to a system you converse with.

That's a fundamentally different cognitive contract. And the teams that get that right won't just win on efficiency. They'll win on adoption, because they're reducing the invisible friction most users can't name but always feel.