Ecomzy’s AI‑Powered Toolkit Stores: a new way to sell expertise

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Ecomzy, a startup focused on digital commerce, announced on March 11 that it will soon open AI‑powered “toolkit stores” designed for solopreneurs. According to the launch announcement, founders answer a few simple questions about their niche, and Ecomzy’s AI generates a ready‑to‑sell toolkit complete with marketing assets and automated delivery. The platform promises that sellers will not have to manage inventory, shipping or ongoing maintenance; every sale is a digital product and therefore pure profit. The initial collection will include toolkits for 100 high‑demand niches, with all marketing and order fulfillment handled by Ecomzy’s backend. Co‑founder Ilia Dolgikh said that the goal is to give solopreneurs the business model they’ve always wanted—one with no overhead and instant scaling.

For solo founders looking to monetize their knowledge, Ecomzy represents a chance to sell curated resources without building a full‑blown course or physical product. The company hasn’t released pricing yet, but early adopters can join a waitlist on its website to be notified when the toolkits go live later this year.

LinkedIn Premium All‑in‑One Plan helps small businesses do more with less

LinkedIn quietly rolled out a new Premium All‑in‑One subscription aimed at small business owners. The plan combines prospecting, marketing and hiring tools into a single dashboard. Subscribers receive daily prospect suggestions, with up to 15 leads based on target criteria, and can send 30 InMail messages per month to people outside their network. Advanced search filters let users find prospects by job function, seniority, location or company size, while personalized insights help tailor outreach. The package also includes a $50 monthly ad credit to boost posts and a job‑promotion credit for when you need to hire. LinkedIn notes that Premium All‑in‑One subscribers are 60 percent more likely to receive replies from suggested prospects, making it a compelling option for solopreneurs who rely on relationship‑building for sales.

Pricing details vary by region, but LinkedIn offers a free trial so you can test whether the additional insights and outreach credits deliver enough value to justify the monthly fee. Because all features live inside your existing LinkedIn account, there’s no new software to learn.

Meta’s Manus AI: automating ad reporting and optimization

Meta has begun rolling out Manus AI, an assistant baked into Meta Ads Manager that automates performance analysis and reporting. A detailed guide from marketing agency Blusteak explains how the tool works: after creating a Manus account and connecting your ad account, the assistant can generate campaign reports automatically, diagnose sudden performance drops and summarise results across campaigns. Manus also offers suggestions for new ad copy and visuals, checks landing pages for issues and sends real‑time alerts when your account needs attention. Set‑up only takes a few minutes—you choose the ad account(s) to connect, grant permissions and start asking questions. For busy solo advertisers, Manus AI functions like a senior ads analyst sitting next to you, surfacing insights so you can make quicker decisions.

The tool is still in beta and free for early users. According to Blusteak, you can access Manus directly inside Meta Ads Manager under the “Manage” tools menu or via the Manus website.

Tools You Can Start Using Today

With the announcements above in mind, here are four AI tools you can adopt immediately. Each one has a clear use case for one‑person businesses and comes with simple steps to get started.

1. Harness LinkedIn Premium All‑in‑One to find clients and build credibility

Use case: Prospecting, networking and hiring. This plan combines multiple LinkedIn features into a single subscription, so you can generate leads, boost posts and even hire contractors without juggling different services.

  • Activate your trial and set targets: Click “Try All‑in‑One for free” and then use advanced filters to define your ideal client (job function, seniority, location and company size).
  • Leverage daily suggestions: LinkedIn will surface up to 15 prospects every day. Save or message promising leads; subscribers are 60 % more likely to get replies.
  • Use built‑in credits: Spend the monthly ad and job‑promotion credits to promote your best posts and open roles without paying extra.

Because everything runs inside LinkedIn, you avoid the learning curve of yet another app and can focus on relationships.

2. Automate Meta campaigns with Manus AI

Use case: Automated reporting and troubleshooting. Manus integrates with Meta Ads Manager to generate campaign reports, diagnose performance drops and suggest creative improvements.

  • Connect and authorize: Create a free Manus account, choose Meta Ads Manager as a connector and grant access with your Facebook credentials.
  • Request analysis: Ask Manus to produce reports or identify why your cost per lead is spiking; the assistant flags unusual changes and proposes adjustments.
  • Refresh your creative: Use Manus’s suggested headlines and visuals to update ads quickly without reinventing the entire campaign.

With these automated insights, you can spend more time strategizing and less time poring over spreadsheets.

3. Create documents and slides at lightning speed with Google Gemini for Workspace

Use case: Drafting documents, spreadsheets and presentations. Gemini taps into your Google Drive to produce polished assets from simple prompts.

  • Enable Gemini: Upgrade to a Gemini Pro or Ultra plan and ask your Workspace admin to join the Gemini Alpha program.
  • Draft and populate: Use “Help me create” in Docs to draft proposals and “Fill with Gemini” in Sheets to categorize or summarise data—Google says this is nine times faster than manual entry.
  • Design slide decks: Let Gemini convert your notes into professional slides; soon it will create entire presentations from a single prompt.
  • Ask broader questions: Ask Gemini to synthesise information across Drive, such as comparing vendor proposals or summarising research.

With cross‑app intelligence, Gemini turns Google Workspace into an active collaborator rather than a passive repository.

4. Get ahead of launch day with Ecomzy’s AI toolkits

Use case: Productising your expertise without building courses or managing inventory.

  • Join the waitlist: Sign up on Ecomzy’s site to be notified when the toolkit store launches. Early adopters get first access.
  • Align your niche: Consider the high‑demand topics you know well—Ecomzy plans to offer 100 niches. When the platform launches, a short questionnaire tailors the toolkit to your expertise.
  • Launch and earn: After your toolkit is live, customers purchase digital downloads while Ecomzy handles marketing, payments and delivery—so each sale is pure profit.

Although the store isn’t live yet, planning now means you can go live quickly once the doors open.

What These Developments Mean for Your Business

Viewed together, these announcements reveal a trend toward agentic AI: tools that don’t just produce outputs but handle entire workflows. Ecomzy automates product creation and fulfillment; LinkedIn consolidates prospecting, marketing and hiring; Manus AI turns ad analysis into a conversation; and Google Gemini pulls data from every corner of your digital workspace to produce finished documents and presentations. For one‑person businesses, this means the line between “human” and “AI” tasks is blurring.

The payoff is significant. When marketing guru Ilia Dolgikh calls Ecomzy a business model that solopreneurs have always wanted, he is talking about a world where you can launch a profitable product with zero overhead. LinkedIn’s All‑in‑One plan demonstrates that major platforms now recognize small businesses as a distinct audience deserving tailored tools. Meta’s Manus AI and Google Gemini show how AI assistants are moving from chatbots into specialized roles like campaign analyst and document creator.

There are a few caveats. As MarketingProfs recently reported, analysts expect AI service pricing to rise as companies pursue profitability. Cheap or free tiers may disappear, so consider locking in early‑bird rates. Additionally, a survey found that many enterprises aim to become agentic within three years but lack the operational readiness to support AI agents. For solopreneurs this means you should document your processes and maintain organized data. AI tools work best when they can access clean information.

Ultimately, these announcements highlight an unprecedented opportunity for solo founders: by leveraging AI, you can operate like a much larger company without hiring staff. The key is to start experimenting now, iterate quickly, and integrate the tools that directly address your bottlenecks.

Quick Wins for the Week Ahead

  1. Try a new tool. Explore LinkedIn’s Premium All‑in‑One or Manus AI for an hour and jot down one feature that could save you time.
  2. Draft with Gemini. Use Google’s “Help me create” to produce a document or spreadsheet and compare the effort with your normal workflow.
  3. Plan a digital product. Brainstorm a toolkit idea for Ecomzy and sketch a rough outline of what it would include.
  4. Refine outreach. Use LinkedIn’s filters to target a specific client segment and send personalized messages; note response rates so you can adjust your approach.

Ready to Take the Leap?

AI isn’t just for big tech companies anymore. As this week’s news shows, a wave of new tools is democratizing automation, marketing and product creation for solopreneurs. The only question is which tools you’ll try first. Share your experiences in the comments—which AI assistant saved you the most time? And remember: SoloAITool.com is here every week with the latest AI news, tutorials and community stories to help you build a thriving, efficient business. Don’t hesitate to experiment—your future self will thank you.

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