Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Dashboard-style illustration of a business launch stack with website, store, and automation controls

Devaito Wants to Build the Boring Parts of a Business for You

Devaito pitches an all-in-one business launch stack that can spin up a website, store, app, SEO, social, support, and sales automation, then keep helping after setup.

Most AI product pages promise speed.

Devaito is promising something a little more ambitious: that you can describe your business and get a decent first version of the whole operation, not just a landing page.

On Product Hunt, the company says it can launch the essentials for you - website, store, mobile app, SEO, blog, social media, customer support, and sales automation. It also says the AI agents keep working after setup instead of disappearing once the site goes live. Source

That matters because most small businesses do not suffer from a lack of software. They suffer from too many little jobs that never stay finished.

Here is the useful version:

  • one tool to get the storefront online
  • one tool to keep content moving
  • one tool to answer questions
  • one tool to keep leads from rotting

That is not glamorous. It is also where the time goes.

The pitch is strongest for owners who are still doing everything manually or paying freelancers to stitch together the basics. If Devaito can really handle the first draft of those jobs, the value is not magic. It is fewer setup calls, fewer tabs, and fewer "we should probably fix that later" tasks that never get fixed.

The risk is obvious too.

No-code platforms love to say they launch the essentials. The real question is what happens when the business gets weird. Does the store hold up when inventory changes? Does support stay accurate when customers ask edge-case questions? Does the SEO layer help actual discovery or just generate more pages?

That is the difference between a pretty demo and a useful system.

Think of it this way: if your current setup is a pile of separate contractors, Devaito is trying to be the general contractor. That can save time. It can also hide mistakes if nobody is checking the work.

So the test is not whether Devaito can start a business. Plenty of tools can do that in a slide deck.

The test is whether it can reduce the number of loose ends a real owner has to chase after launch.

If it does, the upside is easy to understand. A small business that saves even 5 hours a week and avoids one outsourced fix a month is not buying "AI." It is buying back enough attention to run the business.

That is the whole game.

Source: Devaito on Product Hunt

Terry Blake owns a landscaping company in Charlotte with 15 employees. He was the last person to try AI. Now he writes about what actually works for people who aren't tech-savvy.

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