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What Tasks Should I Automate First in My Small Business?

Sara Phelan
Sara Phelan

The best tasks to automate first are the ones that are repetitive, low-risk, and already clearly understood.

Not the most exciting task.

Not the task everyone is talking about on LinkedIn.

Not the thing that feels fancy.

Start with the work that eats time, follows a pattern, and does not require deep judgement every time.

That is usually where small businesses get the fastest win with the lowest risk.

I know automation sounds like it should be big.

But in most small businesses, the best place to start is smaller than people think.

Start with the repeat work.

The admin.

The follow-ups.

The first drafts.

The checklists.

The reminders.

The information that gets copied from one place to another.

That is where AI and automation can help without creating chaos.

Why small businesses should not automate everything at once

A lot of business owners jump into AI and automation because they want relief.

Fair.

Business is busy.

Your team is stretched.

You are probably answering the same questions, fixing the same issues, and chasing the same tasks every week.

But automating a messy process does not fix the mess.

It usually speeds it up.

That is why I always come back to this:

Evaluate before you automate.

Before you hand a task to AI or connect another tool, you need to know what the task is, who owns it, what good looks like, and where human review is still needed.

That does not need to be complicated.

It just needs to be clear.

The best tasks to automate first

Start with tasks that meet most of these conditions:

  • They happen often
  • They follow the same steps each time
  • They do not involve sensitive client, employee, financial, legal, or health information
  • They do not require final decision-making
  • They already have a clear outcome
  • They are slowing your team down
  • They can be reviewed by a human before being used

Good examples include:

  • Drafting standard email replies
  • Summarizing meeting notes
  • Creating first drafts of social posts
  • Organizing FAQs
  • Turning calls or notes into task lists
  • Creating checklists from existing processes
  • Drafting internal SOPs
  • Sorting common customer questions
  • Creating content outlines
  • Preparing follow-up reminders
  • Drafting job descriptions from approved role details
  • Summarizing feedback from surveys or forms

These are practical starting points because they reduce time without removing ownership.

Your team still reviews.

Your team still decides.

AI supports the work.

It does not take over the business.

What tasks should not be automated first?

Do not start with tasks that are unclear, high-risk, or decision-heavy.

Avoid automating:

  • Final pricing decisions
  • Hiring or termination decisions
  • Legal advice
  • Financial approvals
  • Client strategy recommendations without review
  • Performance management
  • Sensitive HR work
  • Confidential client analysis
  • Anything involving private information without clear rules
  • Broken processes no one can explain

These areas may still benefit from AI later.

But they need more structure, stronger guardrails, and a clear review process first.

A simple way to choose your first automation

Use this quick filter.

Pick one task in your business and ask:

  1. Is this task repeated every week?
  2. Is the current process already clear?
  3. Would saving time here make a real difference?
  4. Is the risk low if AI helps with a first draft?
  5. Can a person review the output before it is used?

If the answer is yes to most of these, it may be a good place to start.

If the answer is no, pause.

The issue may not be automation.

The issue may be workflow, ownership, or unclear expectations.

That is not a failure.

That is useful information.

A short example

One of the first places I often look with small businesses is follow-up.

Not because it is exciting. Because it is usually inconsistent.

A business owner has a great conversation with a client or prospect.

Then the follow-up gets delayed because the owner is busy, the notes are scattered, or the next step is sitting in someone’s head.

That is a perfect place to use AI carefully.

You can use AI to turn call notes into:

  • A follow-up email draft
  • A task list
  • A summary of agreed next steps
  • Questions that still need to be answered

That does not mean AI owns the relationship.

It means the business owner is not starting from a blank page every time.

That is the kind of practical AI use that actually helps.

It saves time.

It improves consistency.

It keeps the human in charge.

What this means for your business

You do not need to automate your whole business.

You need to identify the right first task.

The right first task should be simple enough to test, useful enough to matter, and safe enough to review.

That is how you build confidence.

That is how your team learns.

That is how you avoid turning AI into another messy tool no one knows how to use.

Start small.

Make the process clear.

Set the rules.

Review the output.

Then decide what comes next.

Questions to ask before automating a task

Use these questions with your team:

  • What task keeps repeating every week?
  • Where are we losing time because the same work gets recreated?
  • Which task has clear steps but takes too long?
  • What could AI draft, summarize, sort, or organize for us?
  • Where do we still need human judgement before anything is sent, shared, or decided?

 

AI prompt to try

Use this prompt to find your best first automation opportunity.

Copy and paste below into your AI:

You are acting as a practical AI and operations advisor for a small business.

Help me identify the best first task to automate or support with AI.

Ask me one question at a time if needed.

Use the following criteria:

  • The task should be repetitive
  • The task should be low-risk
  • The task should not require final decision-making by AI
  • The task should not involve confidential, private, legal, financial, health, or sensitive employee information
  • The process should be clear enough to explain
  • A human should be able to review the output before it is used

Here is some context about my business:

Business type:
Team size:
Main services or products:
Tasks we repeat every week:
Tasks that slow us down:
Tasks that frustrate the team:
Tools we currently use:
Any tasks we should not automate:

Please create:

  1. A shortlist of 3 practical automation opportunities
  2. A risk level for each one
  3. The easiest one to start with
  4. The reason you chose it
  5. A simple first test we can run this week
  6. What human review should remain in place

Do not suggest advanced automation until the simple first step is clear and you are 95% confident in completion. 

- END. 

If you are already using AI in your business but are not sure what to automate first, start with the process.

Not the tool.

That is where better decisions happen.

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