3-Day AI Agents Replay

Day 2: Make your website agent-ready

Codex becomes much more valuable when it can work inside the places your business already runs: your website, email, files, storefront, CRM, and customer history.

Watch the Day 2 replay, then use the guide below to audit your website stack and decide whether Codex should work with what you have or help move it somewhere more agent-friendly.

Executive summary

Your website cannot stay a locked brochure.

  • Claire Davis shared how she went from fearing AI as a creative business owner to using Codex for the non-creative overhead: proposals, websites, data organization, and platform cleanup.
  • Heather Mackay shared how a Codex goal test sold 490 dahlia tubers over Mother's Day weekend, responded personally to buyers, and even flagged a fake Shopify email before she clicked it.
  • The website lesson was practical: audit your current platform first. If the site has strong SEO and years of content, you may keep it. If it is mostly informational, hard to update, or not ranking, GitHub plus Cloudflare may be a cleaner agent-friendly home.

Action guide

Run the website audit first.

  1. Ask Codex to audit your website platform, current rankings, content history, and how easy it is for Codex to update pages without slow browser clicking.
  2. If Codex recommends staying on WordPress, Squarespace, Kajabi, Replit, or Vercel, ask what credentials, plugins, or API access it needs to make safe updates.
  3. If Codex recommends moving, create GitHub and Cloudflare accounts, keep the repository private, and have Codex help you connect both before touching DNS.
  4. Scan the site at isitagentready.com. Use the results to fix crawler access, robots rules, agent-readable files, structured content, and the public proof agents need to understand your expertise.
  5. Turn live video, LinkedIn newsletters, YouTube replays, offers, and useful public skills into website assets so both humans and agents can verify what you know.
  6. Keep owner approval in place for DNS, payments, customer outreach, deletion, publishing, and any sensitive data movement.

Back to Learn