I just launched this website — incomeinclick.com. Design, layout, code, 6 full blog posts, AI-generated featured images, and internal backlinks connecting everything together. All done in a single day. I didn't write a single line of code myself.
The Starting Point
I had a domain, a server, and a folder of assets — some logos, a photo, and a screenshot of my old website. That was it.
My old site was a simple "coming soon" placeholder. I'd been putting off building the real thing because, honestly, building a website from scratch felt like a big commitment. Design decisions, content writing, making everything look right — it adds up.
But then I remembered: I have Tim.
How I Built It
I opened my chat interface with Tim and started a conversation. Here's roughly how it went:
Step 1: Share the vision
I uploaded my logo files, my photo, and the screenshot of the old site. I told Tim I wanted to keep the dark theme with neon green accents — it's my brand. But I wanted it clean, content-focused, like a reference site I showed him.
I also explained the concept: a blog-style site where I document everything I do to make money online. Start with an intro about me, then lead readers into blog posts. Every post links to the next.
Step 2: Answer a few questions
Tim asked smart questions: What type of site? What sections? What language? Navigation structure? I answered in a few short messages — mostly just picking from options he suggested.
Step 3: Watch it get built
Tim built the entire site structure — HTML, CSS, responsive design. He created the homepage with my intro story, pulled from everything he knows about what I do (he's been helping me build Loom, Libra, and all my other tools). The intro wasn't generic marketing copy — it was a real description of my actual business, written by someone who understood it because he helped build it.
Step 4: Blog posts
Tim wrote 6 foundation blog posts covering the core topics of what I do:
- Running Facebook pages in multiple languages
- How my AI agent runs my business
- The automated content machine
- Creating ebooks with AI
- Facebook ads with AI
- Why I build my own tools
Each post was cross-linked to the others. Every mention of Loom links to the content machine post. Every mention of Tim links to the AI agent post. The content web was built from day one.
Step 5: AI-generated images
Every blog post needed a featured image. Tim used Google's Gemini to generate dark-themed, green-accented images that match the site's aesthetic. Six images, all consistent in style, all generated automatically.
Step 6: Review and tweak
I reviewed everything on my phone. My feedback was minimal: "Make the logo bigger." "Change the tab title." "Remove the specific languages mentioned." Tim made each change in seconds.
Why This Matters
Building a website used to be a project. You'd either spend weeks doing it yourself, or pay someone thousands to do it for you. And even then, the content — the actual writing — was always the bottleneck.
With an AI agent that knows your business, the bottleneck disappears. Tim didn't need a brief or a creative direction document. He's been working with me for weeks. He knows what I do, how I talk about it, and what matters. The website he built reflects that understanding.
This is what building your own tools enables. When your AI agent is embedded in your business — not just a chatbot you visit occasionally — the things you can build together become dramatically more ambitious.
What's Next
This site is the foundation. From here, every significant thing I do becomes a blog post. Tim and I finish a project, I turn it into a story, and it goes on the site. The blog grows organically from real work — not from a content calendar or AI-generated filler. Like when the chat interface I use to talk to Tim kept dropping the connection on mobile — that debugging session became a post too. And when I needed a portfolio page for an event, Tim built it in ten minutes — because he already knew everything about my work. The same speed applies beyond my own projects: I built a full voting web app for a BNI chapter in a single session — something that would have taken days to spec and commission before.
The social media content for my Facebook and Instagram pages gets created from the same source material, through Documentor — another tool I built. Same story, different format, different platform. Documentor has its own intelligent scheduling system that queues and spaces content automatically.
The next piece was email marketing — adding newsletter forms to the site so visitors could subscribe, with proper double opt-in and automated delivery. Another layer of the system, built the same way: I described what I wanted, Tim set it up.
Most recently, Tim automated my monthly accounting workflow — the kind of tedious task that nobody wants to do but everyone has to. That's the pattern: real problems, real solutions, documented as they happen.
And eventually, when there's enough traffic and enough trust built through real content, I'll add an offer. But that comes later. First, you build something worth visiting.
This post you're reading right now? It's the first documentary piece — a blog post about building the blog. Meta, I know. But that's the system working exactly as designed.
This whole site — the one you're reading right now — was built by an AI agent in a single day. Design, code, deployment, blog engine, everything. If you want to do the same thing, Jarvis can build you a website, a web app, a dashboard, whatever you need. Same process: you describe it, the agent builds it, and it's live by the end of the day.
— Pond
