Automating with AI sounds like a huge project, but the ones that genuinely save time are simple and boring. If you run a business and don’t know where to start, these are the first automations we recommend setting up in 2026: high return, low risk and results you’ll notice in the first week.
1. Email triage and replies
Sorting emails by priority and preparing reply drafts for the usual ones. Don’t auto-send anything delicate, but having 80% of the draft done saves hours every week.
2. First contact and client follow-up
Instantly answering frequent questions and never leaving a lead without follow-up. Making sure nobody goes unanswered is what shows most in sales; hand off to a person the moment it gets complex.
3. Repurposing content
Turning an article into social posts, a newsletter or a script. You create once and AI helps you adapt it to each channel, keeping your voice.
4. Routine reports and summaries
Summarising meetings, generating the weekly report or pulling data from several tools. The tasks you do every Monday almost without thinking are the first candidates.
5. First-line customer service
An assistant that resolves frequent questions at any hour and passes the important stuff to a human. Done well, it improves the experience; done badly (no human exit), it makes it worse.
Our recommendation: where to really start
- Start with ONE, the one that hurts most: pick the repetitive task that steals the most time and automate just that. Ten half-done automations are useless; one done well isn’t.
- Do the task by hand first: if you can’t explain the steps, neither can the tool. Mapping the process is half the work.
- Measure the saving: in hours or money. If it doesn’t justify the setup and upkeep, leave it manual with no regrets.
Our advice: automate the boring, repetitive stuff, not the flashy, and always leave an alert for when something fails. An automation that breaks silently causes more problems than it solves. Grow bit by bit and with a plan B.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to code to automate with AI?
Less and less. With no-code tools like Make or n8n and ready-made connectors, you can build a lot without code; but you always have to understand the process.
What’s the first automation for a small business?
Almost always, first-contact handling or email triage: high impact, low risk and noticeable from day one.
Conclusion
You don’t need a big project to start automating: you need a concrete, expensive task. Start with one, measure the result and grow from there. To go deeper, see how to automate with AI step by step and, if you’re serious, what MCP is for connecting AI to your tools.