I moved Eidetic off managed platforms and onto our own servers. Not because it's easier — it isn't — but because when you promise clients their data is isolated, you should actually control the infrastructure.
Retrieval-Augmented Generation is a useful technique. But it's not memory. Here's what real persistent memory looks like — and why the distinction matters for AI agents.
A recruiting agency and a real estate brokerage have almost nothing in common — except that both are drowning in operational work their founders shouldn't be doing.
The biggest fear about AI agents isn't that they won't work — it's that they'll do something you didn't authorize. Here's how Eidetic handles autonomy without losing control.
You're not paying for the work that gets done. You're paying for the work that falls through the cracks — the follow-ups that never happen, the leads that go cold, the context that gets lost between conversations.
Onboarding an AI agent isn't like installing software. It's more like onboarding a new hire — one that learns fast, never forgets, and starts contributing on day one.
Most AI tools forget you the moment the conversation ends. Eidetic doesn't. Here's a look inside the four-layer memory system that makes persistent intelligence possible.
When you hand an AI agent your client list, your emails, and your business workflows, you're trusting it with everything. Here's exactly how we handle that trust.
Most startups hire salespeople first. Eidetic built an AI agent instead. Not because we couldn't hire — because we wanted to prove that what we sell actually works.
When people hear 'AI Chief of Staff,' they usually picture a fancy autocomplete. What they get — when it's built right — is closer to a senior operator who never sleeps, never forgets, and never drops the ball.
You've probably tried a chatbot. Maybe it answered a few FAQs, maybe it frustrated your customers, and maybe it's collecting dust now. That's not AI. That's a script with a chat bubble.