- Completely replace manual reporting using Nvidia GB10 and structured AI workflows
- Automation reduces reliance on additional staff while maintaining consistent reporting accuracy
- Sequential workflows simplify testing and troubleshooting before scaling enterprise-level automation.
Many organizations rely on employees to manually collect, organize, and report performance metrics from multiple digital platforms.
recent serve the family (STH) Review replaced some of this manual reporting process using a local AI system built around Nvidia GB10 hardware.
This work involved repeated requests received through long, unstructured emails, often requesting metrics across multiple sources and specific date ranges.
Reduces the need for additional staff
Instead of hiring additional staff to manage this growing volume, STH We focused on designing an automated reporting pipeline that could reliably handle these tasks.
The automation followed a structured flow to collect and aggregate data from all relevant platforms.
Pre-built integrations within n8n allow you to connect directly to your analytical systems without the need for custom code, reducing setup time.
Planning each step ensures that time limits, filters, and query details are applied consistently.
Although the workflows were executed sequentially, this approach simplified testing and troubleshooting during initial implementation and allowed reviewers to validate results before scaling.
To validate the system, the review used approximately 1,000 historical requests with known results from 2015 to 2025.
We evaluated step accuracy by comparing different AI models such as gpt-oss-20b FP8 and gpt-oss-120b FP8.
Initial testing showed that the small model performed well for simple requests, but errors occurred as complexity increased.
Because the workflow required multiple model calls per request, even small inaccuracies compounded, reducing overall reliability.
As the model grew, the step-by-step accuracy increased to over 99.9%, reducing workflow errors from weekly workflow errors to rare annual events.
Two Dell Pro Max systems with GB10 units ran AI locally and kept all data on-premises.
Reviewers calculated that automation would eliminate the need for a dedicated reporting role and cover the cost of the hardware within 12 months.
The AI tool handled both internal and external reporting requests, including article views, video engagement, and newsletter metrics, without the need for human intervention.
This process allowed the system to maintain consistent reporting quality while redirecting resources to other functions, such as hiring an editor-in-chief.
Report automation with AI systems shows how manual metric capture and integration tasks can be removed from human workflows.
This means that roles primarily focused on gathering, cleaning, and summarizing performance data are particularly vulnerable in the presence of reliable automation.
While this review shows clear efficiency gains, success will depend on maintaining model accuracy, workflow design, and control of sensitive data.
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