Built for educators, learners, and businesses, our agentic AI-powered systems help you turn knowledge into strategic capabilities.
Whether you teach it or run it, the system meets you where you are and takes you where you need to go.
Design your curriculum, add an AI classroom assistant, publish your courseware, and let the system market it for you. Four tiers. One journey. Any subject.
Explore the Education Journey →Learn the system yourself or let us build it for you. Either way, you get an AI-powered marketing engine that runs autonomously on your real data, your real channels, your real strategy.
Explore the Business Journey →
The Digital Engine is our marketing curriculum, born from a simple conviction: students learn by doing, not simulating. They build a real website. They create and curate content through blogs, social media, and email campaigns. They run a live inbound marketing campaign and use our proprietary InGen Analytics to make strategic adjustments based on weekly automated grading analysis (which professors love). By the end of the semester, their work lives in an evidentiary portfolio connected to a blockchain-secure LinkedIn certification. On May 1st, The Digital Engine launches its next chapter: Ginny, an agentic AI that brings this proven pedagogy to businesses ready to automate their organic digital marketing.
We built The Digital Engine for us.
We built Piper and Ginny for you.
The InGen Corporation was founded by Dr. Kyle Huggins, a Professor of Marketing at Belmont University who spent years watching the gap between what professors know and what technology lets them do.
After building The Digital Engine and watching AI transform what a single professor could accomplish, he realized the same system could work for any course, any subject, any classroom. And the same system that powers education could power a business.
InGen is not a tech company that dabbles in education. It is an education company that built its own technology. Every tool exists because a professor needed it. Every AI exists because a classroom demanded it.