Writing a book puts your mind on a shelf. Creating a digital clone scales it in real time. People don’t just read your thoughts. They interact with them.
Writing a book puts your mind on a shelf. Creating a digital clone scales it in real time. People don’t just read your thoughts. They interact with them.
My clone handles 2,000 emails a week. Not auto-replies. Real conversations. Real answers. This is what it means to scale your mind.
Your digital clone can do more than save time. It can generate revenue. Turn it into a product, a premium add-on, or a new tier in your offering. Like a course, but personalized — and scalable. Don’t just automate. Monetize.
Most AI scales content. We asked how to scale connection. Deli started with a simple question: how do you digitize human authenticity without losing it? Personalized communication at scale isn’t a feature. It’s the future.
Most people spend their careers trying to scale themselves by creating content—books, podcasts, videos—that others can consume. But that’s still passive. With Delphi, we’re pushing beyond that. Your digital clone becomes an interactive extension of your mind. Your audience doesn't just consume knowledge—they engage with it. And you show up for them, without needing to always be present. Imagine being able to mentor 100 people one-on-one simultaneously. Or answering 2,000 emails without writing a single one. Scaling yourself isn’t about volume. It’s about presence. And now that presence can be interactive, intelligent, and infinitely available.
My clone now handles over 2,000 emails a week. That’s thousands of customer questions, updates, relationship touchpoints—all handled by an AI that thinks and speaks like me. It's not just about saving time. It’s about scale, consistency, and presence. Entrepreneurs spend years trying to escape their inbox. I built a version of myself that never logs out.
You’ve already spent years building your expertise. Why not let it earn while you sleep? With Delphi, you can turn your digital clone into a monetizable product. It becomes a one-to-one scaled version of you, delivering personalized insights to your customers in real time. Think of it like packaging your brain into an interactive course—except it never goes out of date, learns continuously from your content, and scales infinitely. Some creators use their clone as an upsell next to their coaching or courses. Others skip the course entirely and just charge for direct access to the clone. This isn’t about replacing you. It’s about scaling you. The era of passive content is declining. Interactive clones are the new premium product.
Most content platforms help you broadcast your message to the world. Delphi is doing something different. Instead of one-to-many, it unlocks one-to-many-to-one. That means every single person can have a personalized interaction with you—as if you're in the room with them. That was the idea behind Delphi: how to scale human authenticity in a digital world. Not just more content. Not just louder messages. True connection. At scale. We're not replacing creators, coaches, or thought leaders. We're scaling their minds. Through AI that reflects their way of thinking—personally, contextually, and interactively. This is what the next evolution of content and communication really looks like.
We didn’t build Delphi to chase the latest tech trend. We built it because we experienced the limitations of scaling authenticity firsthand. Early on, I tried to create a clone of my grandfather. The tech wasn’t there. It was expensive and impractical. But the mission stuck. So we waited. Watched. Built. And when the moment was right, we went all in. Our first major partner turned down Google because they couldn't guarantee data privacy or authenticity. That’s the bar. We met it, and it helped us hit over $500K in ARR in 5 months—with zero marketing budget. Delphi isn’t just about automation. It’s about preserving the human behind the message. Scaling connections without losing soul. That’s what today’s tools miss—and why we’re here.
One of the most powerful use cases we’ve seen for digital clones is legacy preservation. Families are using Deli not just as a tech tool, but as a way to capture the voice, story, and wisdom of a loved one—so future generations can interact with them directly. It’s not about uploading memories. It’s about creating an experience. One where a great-grandchild can ask a digital version of their ancestor, 'What did you learn from that moment in your life?' And hear the answer in their real voice. That’s where digital cloning becomes more than software. It becomes a bridge between generations. This is the future of storytelling. And it’s deeply human.
For decades, scaling yourself meant writing a book, filming a course, or hitting record on a podcast. But all of those methods are passive. Useful, yes—but static. You can only broadcast. No one's talking back. Delphi changes that. With interactive digital clones, your audience doesn’t just consume your content, they converse with it. Now they can ask follow-up questions to something you said on a podcast. Dive deeper into ideas you wrote about years ago. Or get instant advice without waiting for calendar availability or your inbox to clear. It’s like uploading a version of your mind that’s always on and ready to help. And that shift alone is turning passive content into interactive mentorship. Coaches are cloning themselves to give tailored advice to thousands at once. CEOs are scaling their insights across entire teams without doing another Zoom. Thought leaders are capturing leads 24/7 by linking their clone under every piece of content they create. The key isn’t just saving your time. It’s multiplying your impact. This isn’t another productivity hack. It’s a new category entirely. If you’ve published anything—a blog, a podcast, a tweet—you’re already halfway there. Delphi takes you the rest of the way. You scale yourself by turning your content from information into conversation. That never existed before. It does now.
For years, digital courses and eBooks have been the go-to strategy for scaling your knowledge. But what if the next step isn't more content—it's a more intelligent version of you? Your digital clone can now sit at the bottom of your conversion funnel, doing something no traditional content ever could. It doesn't just teach, it interacts. It doesn't expire, it evolves. And most importantly, it sells—on your behalf. People are already creating direct revenue streams from their clone, treating it like a premium, interactive version of a course. Imagine a version of your book that answers readers' follow-up questions. Or an upsell that gives your community access to personalized mentorship—powered entirely by your mind. At Delphi, we built this with monetization in mind. When someone engages with your clone, it's more than content consumption. It's a micro-session. A conversion. A relationship. Which means you can finally stop thinking in terms of downloads and start thinking in terms of daily active users—of you. If you've already built intellectual assets like a YouTube channel, blog, or podcast, your clone trains on all of it. Every paragraph, every video, every episode makes your clone smarter. That means the value you’ve already created compounds, while unlocking something your content never could: one-to-one personalization, at infinite scale. Monetize your expertise through dynamic conversations, not static videos. This isn’t the future of content. It’s a whole new category—and it’s already here.
It started with a simple question that technology had never answered well: how do we scale human authenticity? In a world stuffed with automated content and templated advice, that question became the foundation of Delphi. We weren’t interested in just cloning voices or regurgitating knowledge. We wanted to encapsulate how people think, how they make decisions, how they interpret nuance—so their wisdom could scale without becoming generic. Traditional media allowed one-to-many communication. Social platforms layered on algorithmic reach. But neither captured the depth and relatability of a one-on-one connection. Delphi flipped the model: from one-to-many, to one-to-many-to-one. That means personalization at scale—interactions that feel like you’re talking directly to the expert, even though they’re not physically there. Our early adopters proved what was possible. When Brendan Burchard wanted to reach more people while honoring deep-level coaching, he saw in Delphi not just a tool—but a leap forward. Within five months, we passed half a million in ARR without marketing spend. That’s because trust, intent, and authenticity spread organically when the product delivers real value. From education and coaching to health and business growth, digital clones are transforming how we share insight. This isn’t content automation. It’s about preserving the realness of thought and making it truly accessible. In a noisy world, we didn’t want to make more noise—we built Delphi to give the right voices more reach, more context, and more staying power.
When we started Delphi, most people assumed our biggest obstacle would be getting the AI to work. It wasn't. The real challenge was building something deeply human in a category that, by default, felt robotic. Before we had funding, before we had a team, I tried to clone my grandpa. It was personal. And it failed. The tech wasn’t ready and the costs were unreal. So I shelved the idea—but I didn’t stop watching the space. When the timing aligned, I came back with a clear mission: scale authenticity. Partnering with voices like Brendon Burchard wasn’t a marketing tactic. It was proof that real impact requires real trust. He turned down an offer from Google because he didn’t want to trade privacy for reach. That same tension shaped the DNA of Delphi: personalization without compromise. Human connection at any scale. In our first five months, we hit $500k in ARR. Not because we poured money into ads or growth hacks. Because every early user felt like a partner, not a transaction. We earned our traction through word of mouth and staying relentlessly focused on delivering real value. If you're building something ambitious, remember that tech is only half the equation. The other half? Relationships, patience, and a clear sense of why it matters. And if you’re trying to scale your own voice or impact, there’s a better way forward than burning out or stretching yourself thin. Clones aren’t about replacing you—they’re about extending you.
Most people think of digital cloning as sci-fi tech—or a way to scale business conversations. But the most powerful stories we’re seeing with Deli don’t come from the boardroom. They come from the living room. One of the most meaningful use cases we’ve seen? Legacy preservation. Families are using Deli to capture the voices, values, and memories of loved ones, creating digital clones that future generations can talk to—like sitting down with your grandfather 30 years from now and being able to ask about his childhood, life choices, or the values he lived by. Interactive storytelling is another space where things are getting really creative. Users are designing choose-your-own-adventure experiences where clones drive the narrative and adapt to individual input. Imagine a children’s bedtime story that changes every time based on how the child responds—and it’s narrated by a digital version of a loved one. This isn’t about gimmicks. It’s about making memory and knowledge truly interactive. And it’s just the beginning. If you’re considering using Deli to preserve a legacy, start simple. Record audio of a relative sharing their story. Ask meaningful questions: What’s the proudest moment of your life? What advice do you wish you’d heard earlier? What does family mean to you? Pair these with old photos, letters, or journal entries to build a dataset that’s as authentic as it is valuable. Digital cloning at Deli is more than tech. It’s memory infrastructure. And families are one of the most important places to build it.
2,000 emails a week. That’s how much time my digital clone at Delphi saves me—every single week—by handling customer interactions around the clock. If you’ve ever felt like your inbox is holding you hostage, you’re not alone. Whether it’s clients, customers, partners, or prospects, our ability to scale relationships has always hit a ceiling: time. This is where Delphi comes in. Instead of broadcasting information one-to-many—like through podcasts or blogs—your Delphi clone invites your audience into real conversation. It isn’t a chatbot. It’s a digital representation of how you think, answer, and solve problems. Mine knows how I’d respond to a customer asking about our tech, a podcast guest wondering about an invite, or someone wanting to license our platform for their team. And it’s not just me. Some of our users have replaced entire customer support teams. Others use their clone as a full-time onboarding engine or as a coaching tool that never sleeps. One client added it to their podcast description and started capturing lead data through natural conversation. Another is monetizing it directly as a personalized experience for their audience. The result? Time back, deeper relationships, and wider reach—with the same mind. Tired of replying the same way hundreds of times a week? Maybe it’s time to clone your brain too.
Scaling yourself used to mean content that people could only watch, read, or listen to. But now? They can talk to you. Delphi isn’t passive—your digital clone has real conversations, answers questions, and helps people in ways a video never could. You're not just broadcasting anymore. You're multiplying.
You already built your course, your podcast, your audience. Now imagine adding a version of yourself that answers your community’s questions for you. That’s not a dream—it’s a Delphi clone. At the bottom of your funnel, it’s a revenue engine. Some creators are already using it as a paid upsell next to their book, their course, or even as a standalone product. Your mind becomes the product. Your clone becomes the personalized version of your content. The game just changed.
Most platforms scale attention. Delphi scales authenticity. Start with Dara talking about Deli as a new form of media. Frame this as a moment of vision and shift—where it’s not just about content anymore, it’s about capturing how people actually think. Use the part where Dara breaks down the idea of one-to-many-to-one as a new kind of digital interaction that makes personalized communication happen at scale. End the video as he finishes explaining how Delphi opens the door to things like a 'search engine of minds.' It's punchy, expansive, and it leaves people thinking.
Most people stall their ideas waiting for tech to catch up. I built a concept too early, lost money, and shut it down. But I didn’t walk away. I watched. I studied. And when the tech leveled up, I came back with a plan. That’s how Deli was born. It wasn’t timing—it was patience, obsession, and knowing the mission mattered more than the moment.
Imagine talking to a loved one decades after they're gone. Not through photos or journals, but hearing their voice, asking them questions, and getting real answers. With Deli, legacy cloning isn't just possible, it's happening. Families are capturing stories once lost to time and making them interactive for future generations. This is where memory becomes presence.
Most people scale their ideas with books or podcasts. That's passive. What if your mind itself could scale? Dara introduces how Deli makes interactive digital clones that let thousands learn from you, get personal advice, and ask questions, all at the same time. This isn't repurposing content. It’s replicating you.
Dara casually drops that his clone handles 2,000 emails a week. Not a VA. Not a chatbot. A digital version of himself, built on Delphi. This is what scaling yourself actually looks like. Human-level interaction, available 24/7. Imagine what you’d do with that kind of time back.
Creators are turning their digital clones into paid products. Instead of just selling a course, you give people a direct, one-on-one experience—with you. Some are making their clone the upsell, others are using it as the product itself. It's like building a version of you that scales and earns while you're doing something else.
Start with Dara being asked how he came up with the idea for Deli. Then cut directly to his answer: the question that sparked the company and the bold vision behind it. Highlight how it’s not just about cloning voices or scaling content. It’s about digitally scaling human authenticity. The post should end right as Dara connects this core idea to the broader mission of preserving real voices in a sea of artificial noise.
Start with Dara sharing how building Dely wasn’t smooth—trying to clone his grandfather early on turned into a financial sinkhole. Then cut to how he stayed obsessed with the idea, waited for tech to catch up, and came back stronger. Close with the insight that real progress came from focus, resilience, and building trust—not just writing code. A startup founder will instantly relate.
Imagine sitting across from your great-grandfather, hearing him tell his life story in his own voice and words. With Deli, people are preserving their families’ legacies by building interactive digital clones. Real voices, real experiences, passed down and brought to life for future generations. This isn’t fantasy. It’s happening now.
Most people scale by creating books, courses, or podcasts—but you’re still stuck in one direction. Deli flips that. This video opens with Dara explaining how passive content hits limits, then steps into the moment where he breaks down how Deli lets you scale your mind through interactive digital clones. This isn’t a better FAQ or chatbot. It’s a live, evolving version of you—talking, teaching, and thinking with your audience at scale. The flow builds trust by showing how personal Deli can be (like Dara saving 2000 emails a week) and ends by teasing a real-world use case: a clone handling 20+ minutes of deep conversation directly with an interviewer.
You’ve made content. But have you ever cloned your mind so it can talk back? This isn’t another podcast or YouTube video. Dara’s explaining how Delphi lets you create an AI version of yourself that answers questions in your voice, in real time. You’re not scaling content. You’re scaling *you*. Start with him saying most content is passive. Then drop the part where he explains what Delphi does differently. End with the idea that people can now interact with your mind like a mentor or tutor would.
This is wild. Dara built a digital version of himself that saves him from answering 2,000 emails a week. It's not just answering FAQs. People can literally have a full conversation with his clone—text, voice, or even video. That means more time, more reach, and way fewer distractions. Imagine scaling yourself without burning out.
Most people sell courses, books, maybe coaching calls. What if you could sell *your brain*? Skip the gatekeeping. Your audience can now talk directly to your digital self—on demand. You can monetize your clone like a one-on-one tutor but without showing up. No scheduling. No extra effort. It’s like selling your time on autopilot to every person, at once.
Start with the big question: how do you scale human authenticity in a digital world? Then dive straight into Dara explaining how Deli isn't just content—it's a new kind of media. He lays out how traditional media goes one-to-many, but with Deli it's one-to-many-to-one. This is where it clicks. He explains how this unlocks something entirely new: personalized conversations at scale that actually sound and think like you. End with the tease about building a search engine of minds. The idea of finding the perfect expert for anything? That’s the closer.
Start with Dara revealing a personal failure: trying to clone his grandfather and it totally flopping. That immediately grabs attention. Then shift into how he didn’t give up. Cut to him talking about watching the tech improve, waiting, and then jumping back in when the timing was right. The emotional pivot is key here—it turns a failed idea into the foundation of a mission to scale human authenticity. End on the line that ties his grit to everything Delphi is today. It’s not just about cloning tech, it’s about the journey that made it possible.
Start with the wildest use case: someone using their Deli clone to tell interactive stories that change based on audience input. It’s like real-time choose-your-own-adventure with your own digital narrator. Then pivot into a deeper use case—families using clones to preserve legacies. Explain how people are capturing their grandparents’ wisdom, voice, and values so future generations can actually interact with them, not just read old journals. End with the emotional punch: this isn’t sci-fi, it’s happening now. Your voice, your stories, your clone.