
How Will People Create Wealth if AI Does it All?
There are conversations that stay with you long after they end. A recent podcast episode featuring Addam Kuzman, an AI entrepreneur and father from Pennsylvania, was one of those. Over the course of an unscripted, wide-ranging discussion, Addam unpacked his journey from a rebellious youth to a man of deep faith, a devoted husband, a hands-on dad, and now a business owner riding the wave of the AI revolution. What emerged was something rare: a portrait of a person who has genuinely figured out what matters.

A Troubled Start and the Power of Rehabilitation
Addam did not come from a straight and narrow path. He openly admits to getting into his share of trouble as a young person, enough to land him in a military style rehabilitation boot camp in the 1990s. Those programs, he recalls, were serious operations. Drill sergeants, strict discipline, and a genuine commitment to turning young lives around.
What struck him most, even then, was the range of kids inside those walls. Some had committed violent crimes. Others had stolen candy bars. The program was designed to meet them all where they were and rebuild them from the inside out. One young man Addam encountered had arrived at fourteen for murder and was graduating after three years of intensive rehabilitation. By the time he left, his life had genuinely changed. That experience left a mark on Addam, proof that people are capable of transformation when someone actually invests in them.
The Neighbor Effect: What Parenting Actually Teaches You
Addam is a father of two, and he speaks about parenting with the earned confidence of someone who has paid attention. His biggest lesson? Patience. Not the passive kind, but the active, present, intentional kind.
He talks about what he calls the “neighbor effect,” that strange phenomenon where your kids will refuse to eat a certain food at home, cross the street you told them not to cross, and generally ignore your best guidance, only to turn around and do all of it willingly the moment a neighbor or friend suggests it. Any parent within earshot of that observation will laugh in painful recognition.
His advice to new parents is simple but often overlooked: live in the moment with your kids. Do not wish away the phase they are in. Play dress up with your daughter. Change the oil with her, too. Sit down and play video games with your son. Meet them where they are, not where you want them to be. “You will miss out on so much in that moment,” he says, and he means it.
He also draws a clear distinction between being a parent and trying to be your child’s best friend. You can love your kids deeply and still hold the line. In fact, holding the line is part of loving them deeply. Kids do not listen to their friends the same way they listen to an authority figure, and confusing those roles does everyone a disservice.
The Grandfather Who Built the Foundation
When asked where his ambition comes from, Addam does not hesitate. His grandfather. A man who was pulled out of school in the eighth grade after his own father died in a sawmill accident, left to become the man of the house for his mother and younger siblings before he had even become a man himself.
That grandfather modeled something Addam has never forgotten: you do not stop until the work is done. Whether splitting firewood or teaching a young boy how to push through discomfort, his message was consistent and clear. Addam recalls being out on the farm, exhausted, asking if they were finished yet. The answer was always the same. “Not until that wood pile is split.” Sometimes it was literal. Sometimes it was a lesson. Either way, it stuck.
The second source of his drive, Addam says without hesitation, is his faith. Living for Jesus, as he puts it, is not a passive or performative thing for him. It is the engine behind his desire to serve others, to keep showing up, and to build something that actually helps people.

A Love Story That Started at a Mechanical Bull
Addam met his wife at a country bar in Pennsylvania. He was working security. There was a mechanical bull involved. She saw him and, apparently, knew right away. He, on the other hand, spent about a month convincing himself he had no shot and actively tried to redirect her attention toward a friend.
He was wrong. She was persistent. And to this day, he jokes that she is the one who did the pursuing. “You stalked me,” he still tells her. “Not the other way around.”
What he admires most about her is the calm she brings. Addam is self-aware enough to admit he can be short-tempered, and he sees that trait passed down to his kids as well. But his wife, when things are falling apart, stays level. She reasons through the chaos. Both of his children have inherited that quality from her, and he is grateful for it every single day.
Their marriage is rooted in faith, forged through genuine struggle, and held together by a shared commitment not to let the hard seasons become exits. They made a promise early on never to put the word divorce on the table. Not as a threat, not as a hypothetical. It simply was not an option. That choice, he says, changes the way you fight for your relationship.
AI Is Not Just a Smarter Google Search
Addam’s professional world has shifted dramatically in recent years. He is now the founder of Azon Advisory, a company that builds AI-powered systems and agentic workflows for small businesses. And he is deeply enthusiastic about what this technology actually means, not in a hype driven way, but in a practical, I have seen it work way.
The pitch is straightforward. Most small business owners, especially contractors, spend their days doing the actual work. They are on job sites, under vehicles, inside walls. They are not sitting at a desk answering phones and qualifying leads. By the time they get back to their truck at the end of the day, there are twenty missed calls waiting for them, many of which could have been handled automatically.
Azon Advisory builds the systems that handle those calls, engage with website visitors, book appointments, answer frequently asked questions, and qualify leads, all without the business owner having to stop what they are doing. And when implemented well, the people on the other end of those interactions often cannot tell they are talking to an AI at all.
Addam sees this as a genuine equalizer. Big companies have had access to this kind of infrastructure for years. Now, the HVAC company with five employees can operate with the same efficiency as a corporate giant. That, to him, is the real story of AI in 2026.
He is also clear about what AI is not. It is not a replacement for human connection. It is not going to eliminate the need for a real person to sit across from a client and close a deal or solve a complex problem. What it does is free people up to do more of that human work by handling the repetitive and administrative tasks that drain time and attention.
Service as a Way of Life
What comes through most clearly in talking with Addam is that his business ambitions are not separate from his values. They are an expression of them. He talks about pulling over to help strangers broken down on the side of the road, something his wife tolerates with patient exasperation. He talks about his church’s soup kitchen and thrift store, and the local community work that fills his weekends. He talks about reaching back toward people who are going through what he once went through.
His philosophy on helping people is worth sitting with: you do not have to be at the top before you start giving back. There is always someone slightly behind you on the path who could use the knowledge you have already gained. Whether you are earning a million dollars or working the counter at a fast food restaurant, someone nearby needs something you can offer. Sometimes it is advice. Sometimes it is just holding the door.
“It could be just a kind word as you’re leaving,” he says. “Holding the door for somebody. But that sticks in that person’s head and brings them joy for the whole day.”

What Is Next
Addam is focused on scaling Azon Advisory through 2026, onboarding beta clients, and working out the remaining kinks before opening the doors fully. He is also quietly building something new on the side: a podcast with a fellow believer called the Bald Believers Podcast, the BBP, built around faith, real talk, and the kind of unscripted conversation that actually connects with people.
For anyone interested in AI automation, mentorship, or simply a conversation with someone who has walked a winding road and come out the other side with clarity, Addam is reachable through azonadvisory.com and across social media under the same handle.
He ends every chapter of his story the same way he lives it: with gratitude, with faith, and with the belief that the best way to honor what you have been given is to use it to help someone else find their footing.
That is not a bad philosophy for a guy who once had to split every last log in the pile before he was allowed to go home.
About me:
I am currently a Master Facilitator for The Elliott Group in addition to being on the board of advisors for our Cultural Transformation Department in ELLIOTT ARMY.
With over 14 years of client service experience, I have held substantial leadership roles in the automotive industry. I’m also an accredited coach, a writer, a speaker, and a triathlon finisher. To contact me for engagements, you can reach me at [email protected].