5 AI Automation Products I Actually Use Daily (And Just Packaged for Sale)

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AI assistance: Drafted with AI assistance and edited by Auburn AI editorial.

I’ve spent the last 4 months building and running AI automation systems for my own portfolio of sites — 6 WordPress blogs, a finance site, a coloring-book KDP pipeline, and a BTC/CAD trading signal engine. Everything is built on the same stack: n8n workflows + Claude (Sonnet or Haiku depending on cost sensitivity) + a handful of APIs.

Over the last two weeks I cleaned up the pieces that were most useful and packaged them as standalone products. Below is what I shipped, what each one actually does, and why it’s priced the way it is. All are available on Gumroad now.

1. The n8n + Claude Blog Automation Stack $47

This is the big one. It’s the exact stack I use to publish 2-3 AI-written blog posts per day across 6 different WordPress sites with maybe 30 minutes of human time per day.

What’s in it: 4 complete n8n workflow JSONs (content generator, SEO metadata builder, internal linker, category auto-assigner), the Claude prompt library I actually use (not generic marketing prompts), WordPress REST API wiring, a Google Sheets keyword queue template, and a setup + troubleshooting guide.

Who it’s for: Bloggers or site operators who want to scale publication without scaling their own time. Not a “1000 posts a day AI spam” machine — the prompts are tuned to write something a human would actually pay to read.

Get it: n8n + Claude Blog Automation Stack on Gumroad

2. The AI Research Agent $9

Before I research any new product idea or book niche, I feed the topic into this n8n workflow and 5 minutes later I have a structured research doc in Notion: top 10 competitors, pricing survey, common complaints, keyword gaps, positioning angles.

What’s in it: The n8n workflow JSON, Claude prompts for three research depths (shallow / medium / deep), an output schema so Notion or Google Sheets know what to do with the result, and a 5-minute setup video.

Priced at $9 because it’s a utility product, not a business product. Impulse-buy territory on purpose.

Get it: AI Research Agent on Gumroad

3. The Solopreneur Ops Dashboard $27

I run 5 product lines as a single human. Dashboards for team-based companies are useless to me. So I built one that assumes it’s just you — no delegation fields, no Slack integrations, just the 6-7 numbers that actually matter at the end of each day.

What’s in it: A Notion dashboard template that aggregates Gumroad, KDP, AdSense, and affiliate revenue, tracks WP publication cadence per site, and surfaces a weekly “what moved, what didn’t” review.

Stack: Notion + free Zapier tier + your existing credentials. No new subscriptions required.

Get it: Solopreneur Ops Dashboard on Gumroad

4. 500 Buyer-Intent Blog Post Titles $27

I spent 6 months scraping SERPs, pulling buyer-intent modifiers, and filtering down to 500 blog post titles that have genuine commercial intent. Not “what is X” — titles like “best X for Y use case in 2026” and “X vs Y: which is better for Z”.

What’s in it: 500 titles organized into 10 niches (SaaS, AI writing, no-code, project management, email, CRM, analytics, content tools, automation, dev tools). Each includes suggested word count, primary keyword, 2-3 LSI keywords, and typical SERP difficulty. Bonus: a prompt template that turns any title into a first draft via Claude or GPT.

Get it: 500 Buyer-Intent Blog Titles on Gumroad

5. AI Agent KDP Coloring Book $5

The outlier in this lineup, and intentionally so. I publish coloring books on Amazon KDP using Claude + AI image generation. This is a 22-page AI-themed adult coloring book — futuristic robots, neural networks as mandalas, stylized AI agents.

I listed the KDP print version on Amazon and a separate $5 digital PDF on Gumroad. Different audiences. Priced at $5 as an impulse download.

Includes: The print-ready 22-page PDF at 300 DPI (8.5×11″), instructions for importing into Procreate / Photoshop / home printer, and the actual prompts I used to generate each page so you can make derivatives.

Get it: AI Agent Coloring Book on Gumroad

Why I’m launching 5 products at once

Honest answer: I wanted to see what converts. Different price points ($5 / $9 / $27 / $27 / $47) and different buyer types (digital-native download shoppers vs. serious workflow buyers vs. casual impulse-buys). By end of next week I’ll know which ones find their audience and which don’t — then I’ll focus the next build cycle on whatever worked.

If you’ve bought anything like these before and have feedback on what you wish had been included — I read every comment and DM. The next version of whichever one works best gets shaped by real buyers, not my guesses.

— Auburn AI

— Auburn AI editorial, Calgary AB

Where the real friction shows up

I’ve been running automation workflows with these tools for eight months now, and the honest version is messier than this list suggests. The products work, but not always the way marketing material implies. I want to flag where actual operator experience diverges from what you’ll read in setup guides.

The biggest gap: integration handoff delays. When you chain these tools together—pulling data from one system, transforming it, pushing to another—you’re not looking at the seamless flow the demos show. We typically see 30-second to 2-minute lag between steps depending on payload size. It’s acceptable for our use cases, but if you’re expecting real-time response, you’ll be disappointed. None of these platforms handle that at scale without custom infrastructure.

Second issue is error logging. When automations fail (and they do), the debugging experience varies wildly. One tool gives you timestamps and full API responses. Another shows you basically nothing useful—just “failed” and a generic error code. I’ve lost hours fishing through logs trying to figure out if it’s a permissions issue, a schema mismatch, or a rate limit. Test their logging dashboard before committing to heavy automation on any platform.

  • Costs scale non-linearly with task complexity, not just volume. A simple data move might cost $5/month; add conditional logic and sub-workflows, suddenly you’re at $40+
  • Vendor lock-in is real. Extracting your automation logic to switch platforms isn’t straightforward; you’ll rewrite most of it
  • Documentation gaps are common where workflows get sophisticated. You’ll hit scenarios the docs don’t cover

That said, these tools eliminated roughly 15 hours per week of manual work for us. The ROI is solid if you go in with realistic expectations about what “automation” actually means: reducing repetitive work, not eliminating human oversight. Use them for that, and they deliver.

For general informational purposes only; not professional advice. Posts may contain affiliate links. Learn more.
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