Greg Robinson
Founder of Audelalia — The only human in a team of 20
"I don't build products. I build systems that build products."
My story
"I discovered code at 18. At 40, I created and manage 19 employees who don't exist."
The night everything changed
I was living in a movie, dreaming of becoming an actor. But I never took that flight to Hollywood. I fell in love, stayed in France, and fate decided to show me a different path.
One evening, my girlfriend's father had been struggling for three weeks with a PowerPoint for an English client. I'm English. I translated his 15 pages in 20 minutes. The next day, he asked me to come to the presentation. I went, chatted with the client... and at some point, I stopped translating. I was selling. I closed the deal.
He ran an IT services company. He offered me a business degree through an apprenticeship and asked me to translate the entire website. That's when I opened Dreamweaver for the first time. While selecting text, an entire paragraph vanished. I discovered <span> tags. I discovered that a script could generate a page. I fell in love with code.
10 years of detours
After my degree, I spent 9 years in sales. Real estate, advertising, IT, telecom... I was good at it, but bored out of my mind. In 2008, I quit everything to go back to school. Web Project Management degree. The school taught me nothing — I learned everything on my own, late at night, in PHP, MySQL, HTML, CSS.
I built my first platform: a site where you could find your party photos from the night before, book VIP tables at clubs, and we'd take our cut. I developed the whole thing myself. The project didn't survive a falling-out with my partner — but the bug had bitten.
Photographer, filmmaker, visual entrepreneur
In 2010, I changed my life. I became a professional photographer. I worked with Bryan Peterson, built a casting platform, shot architecture, events, weddings. In Montpellier, under the name Conjugo, I became one of the top photographers in the region.
In 2018, I got into virtual tours. I negotiated a contract with Carrefour France. The Yellow Vest protests emptied the shelves and killed the deal. We relaunched negotiations... and then Covid hit.
The wall
2020. Zero income. Nothing. The only businesses open in France were pharmacies. To survive, I started optimizing their Google Business profiles. Nearly 500 of them. It wasn't glamorous, but it kept me afloat — and it gave me an expertise nobody else had.
May 2024 — "Try AI"
That's what my wife told me. Three words that changed everything.
I discovered ChatGPT. And instead of asking it for recipes, I asked it to help me build a SaaS. Feature by feature. It recommended Laravel — I'd never heard of it. It recommended a VPS — I didn't know what that was. I relearned how to code through AI, after 14 years away from pure development.
VoiciMonAvis, my first customer review management platform, was live in 2 months. I'd spend entire nights coding. Code had that same taste of magic it had when I was 18, discovering <span> tags for the first time.
The explosion
From there, everything snowballed. PharmaFame in 3 months. Club NeXusPro in 3 months. A YouTube channel on AI automation — 1,000 subscribers in 3 months. And then October-November 2025: in the span of two months, I built Botlers, AutomateHub, ExpertComptia, i-Notaire, Acaduring and Audelalia. Six platforms. Alone.
Over the Christmas holidays, I turned Botlers into Acasia in 15 days. I rebuilt PharmacyLounge from scratch — migrating from Symfony 4 to Laravel 12, every controller, service and WebSocket. I learned to manage iOS and Android apps along the way. Everything was live by February.
Today
I have 19 employees. None of them are human. I'm the only human being in a team of 20, and that's exactly how I designed it. Each AI agent has a name, a personality, specialties. Some do research, others code, others test, others deploy. I orchestrate.
Audelalia, my AI agency, delivers business solutions to companies that don't have the time or budget to hire a tech team. Acasia, my SAS company, turns this method into a platform so every SMB can have its own team of AI agents. i-Notaire will do the same for notaries.
7 SaaS products built in under 18 months. 3 companies being incorporated. All by a single human assisted by 19 AIs.
The performer
There's something most tech entrepreneurs don't have: stage presence.
I've spent 15 years in front of cameras and audiences. From YouTube videos to talks at Google Digital Workshops, live concerts with my band, and a performance at the RockStore in Montpellier in front of 600 people — with lyrics I'd learned that very morning.
That stage confidence, rare among developers, is what I now bring to AI keynotes that look nothing like what you've seen before. No Comic Sans slides. No incomprehensible jargon. Real stories, live demos, and opinions that get a reaction.
My vision
AI shouldn't be reserved for Big Tech and Silicon Valley startups. French SMBs deserve AI tools that generate real ROI — not academic research, not gimmicky chatbots, but real solutions that save time and money.
That's what I'm building. Systems that build products. And in 2 years, every SMB will have its own AI team. The question isn't if, but when.
My companies
Audelalia
SASUAI Agency — Artificial intelligence solutions for businesses
audelalia.frAcasia
SASAI agent platform for SMBs — Accessible intelligent automation
In developmenti-Notaire
SAS planned July 2026AI copilot for notaries — Deed drafting and legal research
In designInvite me
Conferences, keynotes, panels, workshops and podcasts on business AI.
"I hired 19 AI employees"
How I built a tech agency with a 100% AI team (except me).
Executives / Entrepreneurs"From code to business: Vibe-Coding"
Live demo included. Coding at the speed of thought with AI.
Tech / Startups"AI for SMBs: where to start?"
Practical guide for leaders who want to integrate AI without breaking the bank.
TPE/PME"Enterprise RAG: AI that knows your business"
How to connect AI to your business data for expert answers.
Tech / DSI"The Tech One Man Show"
Theatrical keynote. The story of a dev who replaced his team with AIs.
General audienceAvailable formats
In the media
Section under construction — first articles coming soon
My takes
"AI doesn't replace developers. It replaces developers who don't know how to use it."
— Greg Robinson
"Vibe-Coding isn't no-code. It's code at the speed of thought."
— Greg Robinson
"An AI employee at 8,000€ working 24/7 is the best ROI an SMB can get."
— Greg Robinson
"In 2 years, every SMB will have its own AI team. The question isn't if, but when."
— Greg Robinson