Protocol thinking
Human pages are not enough for AI execution.
A beautiful listing site tells a person what to click. It rarely tells an AI assistant what fields are required, which values must be confirmed, how success is declared, or what to do after a failure.
AIXE fills that gap. It turns supported site capabilities into readable contracts that explain purpose, fields, rules, SuccessCode outcomes, and next steps.
Current instructions beat stale memory.
Real workflows change. Required fields can be added, writing guidance can be tightened, and approval rules can evolve. If an AI assistant uses old instructions, it can create bad records or skip the conversation the professional needed.
HutDepot's AIXE contracts are meant to be loaded at the point of use. The assistant reads the current contract, uses the current version key, and acts from the living instruction set.
The professional stays at the center.
AIXE does not mean an assistant should silently take over. Good real estate work still needs human review, approval, and taste. HutDepot uses the contract to guide the assistant toward useful conversation, not programmer-speak.
The assistant can gather facts, research a neighborhood, draft persuasive copy, show a structured review, and ask for approval before submitting.
That creates a new category of listing platform.
National portals are excellent at aggregating and presenting property inventory. HutDepot is focused on something different: making property work executable by approved AI assistants while preserving human approval.
That is why AIXE belongs here. Real estate is full of structured work hiding behind human conversation, and HutDepot gives that work a cleaner path.