James Dooley: Running AI agents simultaneously and having multiple AI agents all working for you 24/7. Today I am joined with Dennis Yu, who uses so many different LLMs and is using so many different AI agents. Dennis Yu, what I want you to do, if possible, is share your screen and show one or two examples where you have multiple AI agents all working simultaneously, and explain what people can be doing with regard to AI. I have quite a lot of followers that are using ChatGPT just for going back and forth, and they think they are quite advanced with how they prompt AI, but obviously there is so much more when you can be running multiple AI agents. So I just want to show people what can be done, what you recommend for contractors or SEO agencies, and whether they should be using all these different LLMs or just focusing on one. What are your thoughts on the different LLMs? Dennis Yu: Yes. So, James Dooley, we could certainly debate the nuances between the different LLMs and who is better at image generation versus memory versus writing blog posts and all that, but I think it is just better, if you are not spending 16 hours a day like I am, to start with Claude. If SEO or digital marketing or doing something in business is your main thing, I would start with Claude. The beauty of Claude, as you can see here, is that you have got chat, co-work and code all together. If you do not know what these things are, just think of them as different ways of working. You can have conversations, or you can have the thing actually work on your computer, including giving remote control directions from your phone, which is Dispatch, and saving things into projects and even turning them into infographics or building apps on the fly, which are called Artifacts. All these different things are there. Then, of course, when you want to scale something and have a job that kicks off every Monday at 5am or whatever, that is part of code. The beauty is that a lot of people do not even need WordPress any more. Even Yoast, the guy who built the big plugin, said he is done with WordPress. So anyway, here is how I think about it. A few minutes ago, I said, James Dooley and I made a lot of content. Can you take these YouTube videos and turn them into articles? You can see it has already started. It has gone through 116 steps. While it is doing this work, you can see it has opened a whole bunch of tabs. Do you see these tab groups? The way I like to think about this is that now, yes, it looks crazy because there are about 70 tabs, but what is actually going on is that some of these tabs here on the left are for Dennis Yu, me as a human. That is totally up to you, but if you are running multiple agents, I like to have my tabs for me over here on the left. I might have about 10 tabs. Then everything to the right of that are agents. So they are agents that think of these as departments. There are agents that are processing YouTube videos, writing blog posts, sending emails to clients, updating the project management system, running ads, writing books and editing videos. I view these as teams of agents. Here is one where it is building a website right now for my friend Jason Amato. As it is doing stuff, it will say, do you want me to do this next? I will be like, yes, do that. Then it will say, yes, I did this. Then it will say, the biggest remaining gap is the analytics tracking installation. Okay, well, the agent cannot do that, so I need to, or one of our guys needs to. So maybe I could say, for the Google Tag Manager and Analytics and Search Console and all that, can you just send a note to web@blitzmetrics.com summarising what we did here so they can go and add the tags and Tag Manager and all that kind of stuff, and then get back to you so you can continue what you talked about here. Right, so it will go ahead and do that. I am talking to it like a human. So I do not need to remember this because I can go say, go do this thing and then if you do not hear back from so and so by Monday, then let me know and send them another email, because sometimes they do not reply. James Dooley: Just a quick one on that, Dennis Yu. You mentioned Dispatch. So let us say I am out of the office. Let us say I am having a game of golf and in between holes five and six I quickly check my phone. Can I, using Claude Dispatch on the phone, respond to that and then say go, go, go and contact web, go and do this, so then the different AI agents can continue as well? Dennis Yu: Yes. So when you have longer projects, like this one, this is American Dumpsters, and these guys have a conference and they have a lot of dumpster companies in here. You can see right here it is working on a really large data set. This guy has got a ton of YouTube videos. We have to prepare for the conference and get people to sign up and all this and that. So as it is working, it might get stuck, or I might have an idea. Maybe I gave it some initial thoughts, but then later I had an idea and thought, I forgot to tell it this thing and that thing. I can go into Dispatch and say, by the way, can you also do this and that, so that way I do not have to go back to my laptop. I have always been used to doing work on my laptop because the phone is just not conducive to doing great work. But now with Dispatch, the moving things along, the little adjustments along the way, I do on my phone, and it has freed up so much of my time because I was that kind of person who would open up my laptop in a restaurant because all of my tools and everything else was there. But now it is able to work. I am able to just talk to it from the phone, and it is a walkie-talkie to my computer. James Dooley: Yes, it is incredible. It is so good. Dennis Yu: You see the little spinning orange thing? It is doing all this stuff right now. James Dooley: With regard to Claude Code, how many different AI agents can you have working simultaneously? Dennis Yu: As many as you want. It is limited by your own human memory, not by the context or memory limits of the tool itself. The people I know who have gone deep on this, James Dooley, say that the limitation is their ability to project manage or multitask across too many projects. Even I find that if I have more than seven or eight projects going at the same time, I start to lose track. James Dooley: Yes. Then with regard to this, with running these multiple AI agents simultaneously, how different is this? Because there are certain people that are using workflows like n8n or Make. How much different is this versus n8n or Make? Dennis Yu: I think you can replace all of those. I just feel like we should have fewer and fewer systems because it is just too much friction. James Dooley: Yes, I agree. Dennis Yu: Why not have all your logic centralised? James Dooley: This is my concern, because I am getting quite a few different contractors, customers and friends reaching out, and they are basically saying, oh, I am using Open Claw, oh, I am using n8n, oh, I am using Make, oh, I have got this workflow, oh, I am using Perplexity, oh, I am using ChatGPT. I feel like the memory is all over the place and there are bits going on that are just not centralised into one place. I feel like now I should be telling people, especially from what you have been educating me on, that you should have a centralised system using Claude. There are so many things that you can be doing within that that just do not need all this mess, because otherwise people are getting shiny object syndrome and I just think things are becoming too scattered. Dennis Yu: I will give you an example. I have been crazy about WordPress plugins. We built our own. We use a lot of them. I love WordPress. I have just been one of those committed WordPress people. But I have since been convinced by Yoast that WordPress is made for humans, but if you do not need humans to log into an admin or have a workflow, then why not just have the agent do everything? So I did a test for the last year with Link Whisper, which is a link-building plugin for WordPress, and I have had three meetings with the CEO. I paid them a lot of money and had them optimise some of our sites that were medium-sized. We were not going to let them touch our big sites. Then I told them we were going to have Claude do the internal link building on some other sites and we were just going to see who did a better job. We absolutely crushed them and our agents did it quickly, and it took Link Whisper over a year and they made lots of mistakes. Then the funny thing, and this really annoyed their whole team, was that I had Claude come in and audit the work they did and find all the mistakes, and then showed that to them and they got all defensive. I am like, how are you going to argue with the facts? The old way of doing things, which is manually linking, or their thing was, our AI agent is so smart, it will automatically find which orphan pages need to be linked to what and all that. It sounds good, but those same instructions, because they are mechanical and rules-based, can be done by an agent. I think that whole thing is being collapsed. You do not need Microsoft Word any more. You do not need all these other tools. You can just use one tool to do all of it. Then the beauty is you have centralised memory. So you do not have to deal with these other apps not talking to each other. So you have this fragmentation. James Dooley: So if Yoast is saying WordPress is not needed any more because users do not need to log in and the agents can be doing it, what would the AI agents then be using? Would it literally just be raw HTML and CSS, and then you do not have to mess with JavaScript? Dennis Yu: You do not have to mess with plugins. The sites load three times faster. It is like the whole point of a headless CMS, but even better because you do not have a security concern. You do not have all these different vectors where you can be attacked, because it is all just HTML. James Dooley: Yes, that is crazy. Anyone who is watching this and thinks they are quite advanced with prompting AI but is not using AI agents, I would strongly recommend going and following Dennis Yu. He is doing a lot of testing. He says he is doing 18 hours a day. I believe some days he is doing 20 hours plus. He is split testing these LLMs like there is no tomorrow. I think having these AI agents running simultaneously is going to be the future and what you need to do. I think Claude is the first step, from what Dennis Yu is saying. Dennis Yu, I appreciate everything you do for everybody and I hope to have you on again soon. Dennis Yu: Thank you, James Dooley. And guys, I want to see you kick some butt here. This is so awesome. We have got to jump on this.