Agence 3A

How to Choose Your Automation and AI Agency: the 3 Pillars of Automation that Lasts

How to Choose Your Automation and AI Agency

Choosing an automation and artificial intelligence (AI) agency isn’t just about comparing websites or pricing pages. The real difference comes down to three pillars that few agencies openly talk about: mapping before tooling, ownership of your infrastructure, and transformation of your internal culture.

This article gives you the right questions to ask, the real numbers to demand, and the concrete pitfalls to avoid — whether you run a manufacturing SMB in Laval, a professional services firm on the North Shore, or an e-commerce store ready to level up.

AI in Quebec SMBs in 3 Numbers

  • About 72% of Quebec organizations said generative AI is a top investment priority; many focus on profitability as the main ROI measure (McKinsey, 2024)
  • Quebec’s Law 25 (in force since September 2024) imposes strict obligations on the handling of personal information — including any AI system that processes it.
  • 70% of AI projects in SMBs fail due to a lack of human support, not technical shortcomings (McKinsey, 2023).

First Things First: an AI Automation Project is 3 Envelopes - not One

This is probably the point most agencies stay quiet about at the start of a mandate. A serious agency gives you all three numbers in their quotation.

Envelope What it is Frequency
1. Implementation fees The agency’s work to build the system One-time, sometimes phased
2. Software licenses Make, n8n, Zapier, HubSpot, GoHighLevel, etc. Monthly, grows with usage
3. AI tokens and APIs OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini – paid by consumption Monthly, varies with volume

An agency that only talks about its own fees is leaving the surprises for later. You’ll discover the real cost only after the first months of use.

Pillar 1 - Mapping Before Tooling

The biggest mistake we see in automation is buying the tool before understanding the process.

A good agency starts by mapping your operations: who does what, in what order, with what information, at what moment. Without this mapping, you automate a bad process — and end up with a bad process, just faster.

What a serious agency delivers before touching any tool:

  • A visual map of existing processes, readable by a non-technical reader
  • Identification of real bottlenecks and low-value tasks
  • Prioritization based on return on investment, not the “wow” factor
  • Tool choices justified by your needs, not the agency’s preferences

An agency that pitches its favourite automation in the very first meeting, before seeing your processes, is selling you a solution looking for a problem.

Pillar 2 - Ownership of Your Infrastructure

When an agency automates your processes on its own n8n server, its own Make instance, its own HubSpot account — you own nothing. If the agency closes tomorrow, raises its prices, or you simply want to leave, your operations stop cold.

It’s the most discreet form of vendor lock-in in the industry. And it’s rarely malicious — it’s often just “easier” for the agency.

The right reflex: insist on your own toolbox. All tools, accounts, servers, automations and code must be deployed in your infrastructure. The agency works inside it, but does not own it.

Element Who owns it Why it matters
Software accounts (Make, n8n, Zapier…) You, on your card You keep access even without the agency
AI API keys (OpenAI, Anthropic…) You, tied to your account Direct control over costs and limits
Hosting (if self-hosted) You, on your server No vendor dependency
Workflows and source code You, documented and exportable Operational continuity
License terms You, written into the contract You’re the owner. Period.

A long-term-minded agency accepts this principle without hesitation. An agency that resists tells you something important about what comes next.

"An automation that belongs to your agency rather than to you isn't automation. It's dependency. The real question in 2026 is no longer whether to automate — it's in what order, and who owns the result."

Pillar 3 - Training and Culture Change

AI is not an IT project. It’s a culture change.

Nearly 70% of AI automation projects that fail don’t die for technical reasons. They die because employees don’t use them, or worse, quietly work around them.

A serious agency plans for three phases of human support:

Phase When For whom Goal
1. Awareness Before the project Whole team + leadership Lift the fear of replacement, secure buy-in
2. Structured onboarding At deployment Users of the new tools Real mastery, not just a PDF
3. Ongoing coaching 3 to 12 months after Internal champions Evolve the culture, fine-tune usage

Without these three phases, you’re buying a tool. With them, you’re transforming your business.

What Does It Really Cost?

Type of mandate Typical investment (CAD) Implementation timeline
AI audit and process mapping 3,500$ – 4,000$ 2 to 4 weeks
Single-process automation 8,000$ – 20,000$ 4 to 8 weeks
Full AI implementation + annual support 35,000$ – 120,000$ 3 to 12 months

 

On top of these fees come envelopes 2 and 3 (software licenses and AI tokens), which depend on your operational volume and which a serious agency will quote upfront during the audit phase.

The 3 Types of Agencies You'll Meet

Agency type Who they are When they’re the right pick Limits
Marketing agency with an “AI add-on” Classic marketing shop layering ChatGPT into its offering You want AI-assisted content No real technical integration capability
ERP / CRM integrator Specialist of a single platform (HubSpot, Salesforce) You’ve already chosen your platform Vendor lock-in, costs that creep up
Automation and AI agency Process-first vision + multi-tool + custom You want a system that lasts 5+ years Higher upfront investment

Agence 3A positions itself in the third category: advisory approach, mapping, multi-tool integration, and bilingual support rooted in Quebec.

Cybersecurity and Law 25

Let’s be transparent: nearly all platforms used in automation and AI – GoHighLevel, HubSpot, Make, n8n Cloud, OpenAI, Anthropic – host their servers in the United States. The marketing line about “100% Canadian data sovereignty” is, in most cases, just window dressing.

What really matters to comply with Quebec’s Law 25 is four things:

  1. You know – your agency tells you clearly where your data lives.
  2. It’s written down – your privacy policy lists subprocessors and out-of-Quebec transfers.
  3. You have consent – your customers are informed, as the law requires.
  4. Vendors are credible – OpenAI, Anthropic and GoHighLevel all offer Data Processing Agreements (DPAs) 

An agency that promises “zero data in the United States” without changing its toolset is telling you a half-truth. An agency that explains the trade-offs and frames them properly is the one actually protecting you.

In Summary

Choosing an automation and AI agency isn’t about comparing pricing pages or client logos. It comes down to validating three things:

  1. Does it map before it buys?
  2. Will you remain the owner of everything built?
  3. Does it support the culture change, not just the tool?

If the answer to all three is yes — and the agency openly walks you through the three financial envelopes from day one — you’ve likely found the right partner.

Agence 3A supports Quebec SMBs across these three pillars, with a bilingual approach rooted in Quebec, focused on client ownership. To discuss your project, contact us for a no-strings advisory audit.

FAQ

How long before I see ROI on an AI project?

Most well-mapped automations reach return on investment within 4 to 9 months. A solid upfront audit identifies the highest-yield processes and helps prioritize the right ones.

If you have repetitive processes, data sitting in any digital system (even a basic Excel file), and at least one person motivated to champion the project internally, you’re ready.

Very rarely, if you’re using the standard tools on the market. The relevant question isn’t so much “where does the data live” but “how is it protected, contractually framed, and disclosed under Law 25?”

If the infrastructure belongs to you (Pillar 2), you keep everything. If not, your operations risk a hard stop. That’s why ownership has to be negotiated at contract signing.

Not necessarily. A good agency first looks at what can plug into your existing systems before recommending an expensive replacement.

No. It replaces the repetitive low-value tasks of your team. Companies that succeed turn that freed-up time into higher-value work – client relationships, creativity, strategy.