Ron Mitchell

Ron Mitchell is the founder of RocketSales, a consulting and implementation firm that helps businesses grow by generating qualified, booked appointments with the right decision-makers. With a focus on appointment setting strategy, outreach systems, and sales process optimization, Ron partners with organizations to design and implement predictable ways to keep their calendars full. He combines hands-on experience with a practical, results-driven approach, helping companies increase sales conversations, improve efficiency, and scale with clarity and confidence.

Microsoft’s Copilot push shows AI agents are ready for everyday business work

What happened (short summary) Microsoft has been rolling Copilot deeper into Microsoft 365, Teams, Outlook and its broader enterprise stack — and it’s building tools (like Copilot Studio) so companies and partners can create customized copilots and workflows. That means AI-driven assistants that summarize meetings, draft emails, generate reports, and trigger automated processes are moving […]

Microsoft’s Copilot push shows AI agents are ready for everyday business work Read More »

AI agents are moving from experiments to real business tools — here’s how to turn that into revenue and time saved

Quick summary AI agents — software that can act autonomously across apps and data — have moved past demos into real-world business use. New integrations and toolkits now let agents read your CRM, pull finance data, schedule work, and generate reports without constant developer hand-holding. That means teams can automate repeatable sales and ops tasks

AI agents are moving from experiments to real business tools — here’s how to turn that into revenue and time saved Read More »

Autonomous AI agents are finally practical — here’s what that means for your business

What’s new (short summary) – Over the past year we’ve seen a big shift: autonomous AI agents — tools that can plan, act, and chain tasks across systems — have moved from experiments to production-ready tools for real business workflows. – Companies are using agents to qualify leads, generate and deliver tailored reports, automate multi-step

Autonomous AI agents are finally practical — here’s what that means for your business Read More »

SEO headline: How AI agents are automating sales, reporting, and routine work — what leaders should do next

Short summary AI “agents” — автономous or semi-autonomous software that can read, act, and follow up across tools — moved from demos into real business use in 2024. Vendors (and open-source frameworks) made it much easier to connect agents to CRMs, calendars, email, and databases so they can qualify leads, draft outreach, summarize meetings, and

SEO headline: How AI agents are automating sales, reporting, and routine work — what leaders should do next Read More »

SEO headline: Why AI agents are the next big leap for business automation

Quick summary AI agents—autonomous, task-focused AI that can access apps, pull data, and complete multi-step workflows—are moving from demos into real-world business use. Instead of only generating text or insights, today’s agents can act: schedule meetings, triage support tickets, generate and deliver reports, update CRMs, and even execute parts of sales or procurement workflows with

SEO headline: Why AI agents are the next big leap for business automation Read More »

SEO headline: Why AI agents are the next tool for cutting costs and speeding sales

Short summary AI agents — software that can act on behalf of people by reading data, sending messages, calling APIs, and generating reports — are moving from experiments into real business use. Companies are now combining large language models with CRM systems, automation tools, and dashboards so agents can qualify leads, schedule meetings, auto-generate sales

SEO headline: Why AI agents are the next tool for cutting costs and speeding sales Read More »

SEO headline: Why AI agents are moving from experiments to everyday business automation

AI story summary Autonomous AI agents — software that can carry out multi-step tasks with little human prompting — have moved quickly from research demos to real business pilots. Companies are using agents to fetch and combine data, draft and send follow-ups, triage customer issues, and even generate routine reports. These agents are increasingly reliable

SEO headline: Why AI agents are moving from experiments to everyday business automation Read More »

Why AI agents are the next productivity boost for sales, reporting, and operations

Quick summary AI “agents” — autonomous workflows built from large language models that can read, act, and integrate with apps — have moved from proof-of-concept to practical business tools. Instead of one-off chat answers, these agents can qualify leads, update CRMs, generate weekly performance reports, triage support tickets, and trigger follow-up actions across systems without

Why AI agents are the next productivity boost for sales, reporting, and operations Read More »

Why AI agents are suddenly ready for real business use — and what leaders should do next

Summary AI agents — autonomous or semi-autonomous AI that can use tools, pull data, and take actions — have moved from experimental demos to practical business tools. Today’s agents can run repeatable workflows, generate and update reports, draft outreach, and integrate with CRMs and ticketing systems. That means time saved, fewer manual errors, and faster

Why AI agents are suddenly ready for real business use — and what leaders should do next Read More »

AI agents are moving from experiment to everyday business — here’s what leaders should do next

Quick summary AI agents — software that can autonomously perform tasks across apps (think: triaging leads, updating your CRM, generating weekly sales reports, booking follow-ups) — are no longer just a research buzzword. More businesses are piloting agentic workflows that combine language models, connectors to existing systems, and simple rules to automate repetitive work. Why

AI agents are moving from experiment to everyday business — here’s what leaders should do next Read More »