Free funnel builders compared: which one actually works?

Free funnel builders compared: which one actually works? Everyone says you need ClickFunnels ($97/month) or Kajabi ($149/month) to build a funnel. You don’t. There are free funnel builders that do 90% of what the paid ones do. I tested the most popular ones. Here’s what actually works — and what doesn’t. The comparison Builder Free Plan Limits Best For Verdict Systeme.io 2,000 contacts, 3 funnels, unlimited emails Beginners, all-in-one Best overall Carrd 3 sites, no custom domain One-page landing pages Best for simplicity MailerLite 1,000 subscribers, 12,000 emails/mo Email-first funnels Best for newsletters ConvertKit 1,000 subscribers, 1 visual automation Creators, bloggers Best for content creators GoHighLevel 14-day trial only Agencies Best if you have clients Systeme.io — the one I’d pick Systeme.io is the only free plan that includes everything: funnels, email marketing, courses, communities, and automation. All on the free tier. No credit card required. No expiration. ...

May 13, 2026 · 4 min · 793 words · NCR

The AI tools with the highest satisfaction rates you've never heard of

The AI tools with the highest satisfaction rates you’ve never heard of Every “best AI tools” list is the same: ChatGPT, Midjourney, Notion AI, Jasper. You’ve seen them. You’ve probably tried them. They’re fine. But the tools with the highest satisfaction rates aren’t on those lists. Not because they’re bad — because nobody makes money promoting them. Here’s why: most “AI tool” content is written by people who earn affiliate commissions. They recommend tools that pay the highest commission, not the tools that actually work best. The best tools often have no affiliate program at all. So nobody talks about them. ...

May 13, 2026 · 6 min · 1233 words · NCR

How to actually make money with AI tools

How to actually make money with AI tools Every “make money with AI” article says the same thing: sell AI art on Etsy, start a dropshipping store, or become an AI consultant. None of those work if you’ve never sold anything before. Here’s what actually works for regular people — specific methods, real tools, actual numbers. No hype. No “passive income while you sleep” garbage. Method 1: Freelance content creation (faster, not lazier) What you do: Write blog posts, social media captions, email sequences, or product descriptions for businesses. Use AI to draft, then edit and personalize. ...

May 12, 2026 · 4 min · 835 words · NCR

Build a tool that actually does something

Build a tool that actually does something Most AI tutorials end with “and now you have a chatbot!” Congratulations. You built something that answers questions nobody asked. Here’s a different idea: build something that solves an actual problem. Something that runs while you sleep. Something that saves you time every single day — not just once. That’s a tool. Not a chatbot. A tool. The difference between playing and building Playing with AI: “Let me see what ChatGPT says about this topic.” ...

May 11, 2026 · 4 min · 812 words · NCR

AI music: I made an album without knowing theory

AI music: I made an album without knowing theory I can’t play guitar. I can’t read music. I took piano lessons for three weeks when I was 12 and quit because I couldn’t figure out what “allegro” meant. Last weekend I made an album. Seven tracks. Vocals, instruments, production. The whole thing. No studio. No producer. No music theory. Just AI and about 6 hours of my time. The tool I used: Suno Suno is the one. I tested three tools — Suno, Udio, and AIVA — and for someone with zero musical background, Suno wins by a mile. ...

May 10, 2026 · 5 min · 946 words · NCR

Best AI dictation apps — tested and ranked

Best AI dictation apps — tested and ranked I stopped typing my blog posts 3 months ago. I talk them out loud, then edit. It’s faster. It’s more natural. And my writing sounds like me instead of like a robot trying to sound like me. But the dictation app matters. A lot. I tested 6 of them with the same voice, same sentences, same background noise. Here’s what actually worked. ...

May 9, 2026 · 5 min · 947 words · NCR

Build your own AI chatbot in 30 minutes

Build your own AI chatbot in 30 minutes I built my first AI chatbot thinking it would take all day. It took 12 minutes. No coding. No developer. No $5,000 agency quote. Just a tool, a goal, and 30 minutes of my time. Here are three ways to do it — pick based on how much time you have and how much control you want. Option 1: The 5-minute chatbot (ChatBotBuilder.ai) This is the fastest path. You paste your website URL, it crawls your content, and builds a chatbot that knows your stuff. ...

May 9, 2026 · 4 min · 777 words · NCR
Woman at laptop comparing AI image generator outputs from Midjourney, DALL-E, and Flux on screen

AI images: which tool actually works?

I needed images for blog posts, social media, and thumbnails. Stock photos look like stock photos. Hiring a designer costs $50-200 per image. So I tested 5 AI image generators with the exact same prompts. Here’s what actually happened. Midjourney V7 — the artist What it is: Midjourney. The OG of AI image generation. Started in Discord, now has a web app. What it made: Stunning. Every single time. Midjourney understands composition, lighting, and mood better than anything else I tested. The images look designed, not generated. ...

May 8, 2026 · 5 min · 984 words · NCR

The one prompt that changed everything

The one prompt that changed everything I spent months typing into ChatGPT like I was texting a friend. Short. Vague. Hoping for the best. And I’d get short, vague, garbage back. Then I tried something called meta-prompting. It’s not my invention — it was popularized by Dharmesh Shah, the founder of HubSpot. The idea is dead simple: instead of trying to write the perfect prompt yourself, you ask the AI to ask you questions first. ...

May 7, 2026 · 6 min · 1086 words · NCR

I tested 10 AI writing tools so you don't have to

I tested 10 AI writing tools so you don’t have to Every “best AI writing tools” article lists the same 10 tools with the same feature tables. ChatGPT is “versatile.” Claude is “nuanced.” Jasper is “for marketing.” Cool. But which one actually writes like a human? I gave each tool the same task: write a 200-word introduction for a blog post about why people wake up at 3am. Same prompt, same instructions. Here’s what actually came out. ...

May 5, 2026 · 7 min · 1480 words · NCR

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