Your business should keep moving after you close the laptop, and with Ultron it does.
Most founders treat AI as something they poke at for five minutes and then close. Ultron is built the opposite way. It is an AI Business Operating System, a team of agents that run your sales, marketing, content, and operations on autopilot, including the hours you are asleep.
Below are four ways to set Ultron loose on real work overnight, plus the one habit that makes any of them actually finish the job.
Give it a goal
What it is: you hand Ultron a finish line, and it keeps working and checking its own output until it hits that goal, instead of stopping at the first draft.
Use it when: you have a batch with a clear pass or fail, like "make ten carousels and do not stop until each one passes my checklist."
Heads up: the goal has to be measurable, a number or a checklist, not "make it good," or Ultron cannot grade itself.
Example brief:
- "Make ten carousels and do not stop until each one passes my checklist."
Put it on a schedule
What it is: a standing routine that runs Ultron on a timer, say 6am daily, in the cloud, so nothing depends on your laptop being open.
Use it when: recurring work, like a morning brief pulled from your inbox and your pipeline, or a daily content drop.
Heads up: point it at the accounts and data you want it to read, then let it run and leave the result waiting for you.
Example brief:
- "Every morning at 6am, pull my overnight leads and my inbox, write the morning brief, and leave it waiting for me."
Put it on a continuous loop
What it is: Ultron re-runs the same task on an interval, say every hour, so it keeps checking for and clearing new work.
Use it when: you want new comments answered, new leads replied to, or new mentions handled as they land, not in one batch tomorrow.
Heads up: a loop repeats on a timer. It keeps clearing the queue rather than chasing a single finish line the way a goal does.
Example brief:
- "Every hour, check for new comments and messages and clear them in my voice."
Clone it into a team
What it is: instead of one agent, Ultron spins up a team of sub-agents that work at the same time.
Use it when: a big batch you want done fast, or a job that splits into parallel parts, like drafting a week of posts across three channels at once.
Heads up: give each agent a clear, separable task so they do not trip over each other.
Example brief:
- "Spin up a team of agents and draft a full week of content for all my channels in parallel."
The trick that makes it all work: a progress log
What it is: a running log Ultron keeps as it goes and re-reads to stay on track.
Use it when: any long job. On a big overnight run the earliest details are the easiest to lose, and the progress log is the part Ultron never drops.
Heads up: ask for it up front. Tell Ultron to keep a progress log and re-read it before each step so it never loses its place.
How to get the most out of it
- Always give a measurable finish line so Ultron can check its own work.
- New to this? Start with a goal on a small job you can verify by morning.
- Comfortable already? Combine a team of agents with a progress log for a big overnight batch.
- Point scheduled runs at the exact accounts and data you want read, so the output lands specific, not generic.
Run this on autopilot.
Everything in this guide becomes an agent inside Ultron: set it up once, keep it running. You review, it executes.
