CO cannabis operators run METRC compliance and point-of-sale as two separate worlds — reconciliation is weekly manual pain.
Colorado · AI Automation Services
n8n pipelines for Denver SaaS, Boulder startups, and Colorado tourism operators.
CO cannabis operators run METRC compliance and point-of-sale as two separate worlds — reconciliation is weekly manual pain.
Boulder SaaS startups are strong on product but weak on RevOps — inbound leads die between Pipedrive and Slack.
Colorado tourism operators manage guide bookings, liability waivers, and gear rentals across 4 tools with no shared customer record.
Client snapshot
A Denver-area cannabis retailer was losing 10 hours a week reconciling METRC, Dutchie, and QuickBooks. I built an n8n pipeline that syncs all three nightly, flags discrepancies in a Slack channel, and auto-generates weekly compliance reports. Audit-ready within days, not weeks.
Who builds it: Waseem Nasir — AI automation engineer, digital nomad from Pakistan, based in Bali/ASEAN, serving global clients.
Yes. METRC exposes a REST API, and so does Dutchie, Treez, and Flowhub. I build n8n flows that sync inventory, sales, and transfers, and flag discrepancies before they become compliance issues. Weekly reports generate themselves.
The starter kit: form intake → Clearbit enrichment → Pipedrive or HubSpot → Slack alert on ICP fit → auto-sequence for the rest. I set it up in 2 weeks and sales spends time on calls instead of lead triage.
Booking (FareHarbor or Peek), waiver (Smartwaiver), CRM (HubSpot or Mailchimp), POS (Square or Shopify), plus n8n to unify. One customer record across all four, so repeat guests get recognised instead of re-onboarded.
Yes — all work is remote and stays on client infrastructure. I never touch cannabis product or cash, just data and workflows. Compliance sits with the client; automation sits with me.
30-minute discovery call. No pitch deck. I map your current workflow, identify the highest-leverage automation targets, and tell you whether it makes sense to work together.