Everybody and their mother is talking about AI right now. I can’t even open Instagram without the first reel I see being about AI… and don’t even get me started on the AI wars.
“ChatGPT is dead. Claude is wayyyyy better.”
“STOP using Claude for this. Use ChatGPT instead.”
“If you’re not using Copilot, your business won’t survive.”
On and on it goes.
Most of you reading this are probably using AI for at least one or two things in your biz… maybe content, captions, or even how to respond to that text message from your mother-in-law.
You’re smart. Because you’re here and you’re wanting to learn more. Being curious and open about technology is always a good thing
And listen.
I love a good tool.
But I’m going to say the quiet part out loud:
AI is not going to save a messy business.
It might speed some things up and help you create content faster.
Heck it might even help you brain dump, organize your chaotic thoughts, or get you started with a solid first draft.
But if your backend is a mess, your client experience is inconsistent, your offers are unclear, your follow-up system is nonexistent, and everything is still living in your head?
AI is not the fix.
It’s just a faster way to keep working more hours.
The AI shift is real
Let’s be clear.
AI is not a fad.
I’m old enough to remember the late 90’s when everyone was saying the internet was a fad. Or the late teens when a lot of people were saying that social media was a fad.
AI is not a fad.
It’s here to stay.
But I do think we’re in a bit of a Napster era where it’s like the wild west and what we’re doing today (and how we’re using it) isn’t going to last. I have a hunch it’s either going to get really expensive or highly regulated – or potentially dangerous to use if it exposes our systems to sophisticated cyber attacks. But I digress…
We’re in the golden age of it right now. Today.
And I’m glad that small business owners like you are using it more than ever. The U.S. Chamber reported that 58% of small businesses were using generative AI in 2025, up from 40% in 2024 and more than double the 2023 adoption rate. Imagine how many are using it in 2026!
They also reported that 96% of small business owners plan to adopt emerging technologies, including AI. I love this about us! We’re often the most tech-forward group of people on the planet.
Goldman Sachs found that 93% of small businesses using AI reported a positive business impact, but only 14% had fully integrated AI into core operations. That right there is the whole conversation. People are using AI, but most are not actually integrating it into the way the business runs.
Salesforce’s small business research also found that 78% of small business leaders leaders believe investing in AI will be a major shift for their business, and 90% believe AI will make business operations more efficient.
So yes.
AI matters and we’re learning to integrate it quickly.
So the question isn’t, “Should you use AI?”
The better question is:
Where does AI actually belong in your business?
Because that’s where small business owners are getting really tripped up.
The problem isn’t that female business owners are behind.
Female entrepreneurs and business owners aren’t behind because they’re not tech-savvy enough.
Nope.
A lot of them are already using AI.
The issue is they’re trying to use AI on top of businesses that are already messy, chaotic, and stretched too thin.
They’re asking Claude or ChatGPT to write captions when they still don’t have their messaging 100% dialed in.
They’re setting up automations when they haven’t mapped a flawless customer journey.
They’re asking AI to build workflows for processes that are so rough – they definitely shouldn’t be automated (they should be trashed).
And by far the biggest one I see as I’m writing this blog post:
They’re trying to save time with tools before they’ve figured out what actually deserves their time.
And that’s what’s dangerous.
They’re using AI but it isn’t leading to more capacity.
It’s just more noise.
The “hack” nobody is talking about: AI needs good, solid systems and structure
Here’s what I think a lot of internet gurus are missing.
AI is not your operating system.
Your business still needs structure.
You still need:
- clear offers
- clean client onboarding
- organized files, inbox, and workspace
- mapped workflows
- repeatable processes
- a weekly rhythm
- a way to know what matters today
- a place for business information to live besides your brain
Then, and only then, AI can help.
Because AI is excellent at supporting systems.
It is not excellent at creating them from scratch is a Frankenstein-business with patched-together systems and a million competing priorities.
What I’ve marveled at is that many of the women I’ve coached who are adopting AI the fastest, are also working the most… even after adoption!
You’re smart. Grounded.
I know you don’t need more hype.
What you need is implementation. A business that’s cleaned up, streamlined, and designed to scale so that AI has somewhere useful to plug in and help you.
Current AI automation trends small business owners should pay attention to
1. AI is moving from “write this for me” to “help me run this”
The first wave of AI use was mostly content.
Write a caption.
Write an email.
Give me 5 blog ideas.
Summarize this transcript.
That still helps. I still use this feature and love it!
But the current trend is much bigger.
AI is moving into workflows, operations, customer service, finance, sales, and client delivery.
Anthropic recently launched Claude for Small Business, connecting Claude to tools like QuickBooks, PayPal, HubSpot, Canva, DocuSign, Google Workspace, and Microsoft 365, with built-in workflows across finance, operations, sales, marketing, HR, and customer service.
That is where the market is heading.
Not just AI as a writing helper.
AI actual operational team members. Working for you. 24/7.
But here’s the catch:
If your operations are chaos, AI cannot magically make them strategic.
It needs clean inputs. And you need a plan.
2. Small business owners want AI, but they need training
This is the part that matters for female entrepreneurs.
Most business owners don’t need another list of tools. And don’t even get me started about all the random “Magic AI prompts” floating around social media and YouTube right now.
If that stuff worked like magic, we’d all be on the beach together with our toes in the sand, sipping mojitos.
There isn’t a magic bullet.
You need systems, structure and strategy first. A business designed and primed to help you scale to 6 and multi-6-figures. A business that gives you a calm mind, a clear head, and the weekly rhythm to know what to do first, second, and third.
Goldman Sachs found that 73% of small businesses say more training and resources would help them successfully implement AI.
That tells me business owners are not necessarily resisting AI.
They’re just totally overwhelmed by implementation. And if you’re already totally overwhelmed by your business – AI isn’t going to fix that. It will only bring more stress, more YouTube rabbit holes, more purchase of cheap $39 courses to help you learn it…
instead of immediate relief.
This is the same thing we see with systems.
Women don’t usually need to be convinced that their backend is a mess.
They know.
They feel it every day.
They need a plan. A way to get clear, focused, and streamlined.
3. AI is becoming a capacity tool, not just a productivity tool
Service Direct reported that 77% of small businesses have adopted AI in some capacity, and among companies using AI, 87% reported increased productivity, 86% reported increased effectiveness, and 86% reported business growth.
That sounds amazing.
So why the heck are we now working more hours than ever before?
Because productivity isn’t the real goal.
Capacity is.
Female small business owners don’t need to cram more into their already-packed -days.
They need to get the right things done with less mental load.
AI can help you move faster.
But systems help you stop carrying the whole business in your head.
That’s the magic combo.
4. Trust and data privacy are becoming bigger issues
Small business owners must be cautious.
Anthropic’s small business survey found that half of owners named data security as their biggest hesitation about AI.
You’re right to be concerned.
Here are some ways to protect yourself:
- Don’t dump sensitive client information into random AI tools
- Don’t paste private financial data into tools you haven’t vetted
- Don’t hand over your client experience to a robot and call it customer obsession
- Don’t let AI work on native files – keep it in a sandbox environment
Use wisdom.
Use AI.
But don’t trust too easily and definitely don’t outsource your discernment.
The best AI automation tools for female small business owners in 2026
I’m not going to give you 47 tools.
I am not about to add to all the AI noise out there.
Here are the categories that actually matter.
1. AI writing and thinking tools
Tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini can help you brainstorm, outline, repurpose, summarize transcripts, draft email ideas, pull content angles, and create first drafts.
Best for:
- content brainstorming
- email outlines
- repurposing Instagram captions into blog posts (and vice versa)
- summarizing Zoom transcripts, scattered meeting notes, or brain dumps
- turning voice notes into rough content
- organizing messy thoughts
Not best for:
- replacing your voice
- inventing your strategy
- understanding your customer better than you do
- writing final copy with no human editing
- sounding exactly like you
- being you
AI can help you get unstuck.
But it shouldn’t make your business sound like everyone else. And even though it’s come along way, I still feel like we can ALL tell when an entire caption (or blog post!) was written by AI. Your voice, your unique way of wording things, your mistakes – people are going to crave this more than ever in the months ahead.
And never try to outsource your deep, strategic thinking or your creative problem solving. I have a real concern about the longterm damage the overuse of AI is going to have on our ability to think creatively in the future.
One thing I’ve done is created two desks. Inspired by the book Steal Like an Artist, I’ve now set up a digital workspace and an analog workspace. I try to write (pen and paper) for at least 15 minutes any time I face a problem – before going to AI or anywhere else.
In doing this, I’m ensuring my brain is getting the workout it desperately needs and ensuring my deep thinking isn’t stunted by the overuse and overeliance on AI.
Blessed with an L-shaped executive desk has made this easy for me. The vertical part of the L is my digital space and the horizontal line is my analog space. I encourage you to make an old-school-only workspace of your own and spend some time there each day.
2. Workflow automation tools
Tools like Zapier, Make, and n8n can connect your apps and reduce repetitive work. I’m only familiar with Zapier and looked up the other 2 but do your research and choose what you need.
Best for:
- sending form responses to a spreadsheet
- adding leads to your email list
- creating follow-up tasks
- tagging subscribers
- sending internal notifications
- organizing customer data
Not best for:
- automating a broken customer journey
- replacing thoughtful onboarding
- covering up unclear offers
- creating 87 automations nobody understands later
Before you automate, map the process on paper. Listen to your people. Find out where their stuck. What questions they have. Make it better first. Then automate.
Every time.
3. Meeting and transcript tools
Tools like Fathom, Otter, Fireflies, and Zoom AI Companion can summarize calls, pull action items, and help you create follow-up notes.
Best for:
- coaching call recaps
- client notes
- content ideas from live teaching
- testimonial mining
- follow-up emails
- remembering what was said without digging through a full recording
Not best for:
- replacing your judgment
- sending unedited summaries to clients in your voice and with your heart
- storing sensitive client details without checking privacy settings
Don’t attend group calls that aren’t your own with your AI notetakers and recording devices turned on before checking with the group leader or coach. This is an etiquette thing.
4. CRM and customer experience tools
Tools like HubSpot, Dubsado, HoneyBook, Kajabi, Flodesk, Kit, and ManyChat can use automation and AI to support marketing, sales, onboarding, and follow-up.
Best for:
- welcome sequences
- onboarding emails
- offboarding emails or surveys
- lead magnet delivery
- sales follow-up
- client reminders
- testimonial collection
Not best for:
- making cold, generic customer experiences
- removing the human touch
- pretending automation equals client obsession
Good old-fashioned customer service still matters. The issue with AI is that it’s going to take a compilation of what others have done and give you that. Don’t replace your own miraculous way of doing things with what everyone else on the marketplace is doing.
Don’t outsource serving your customers well. Only you know the unique makeup of your people. Bring your own experience and flair to this and you’ll be rewarded by standing out as the chocolate, caramel, and sea salt ice cream in a sea of sad vanilla.
Customer obsession is what makes you unforgettable. Do not outsource that.
5. Finance and admin tools
Tools like QuickBooks, payment processors, scheduling tools, and document tools are adding AI features.
Best for:
- categorizing transactions
- spotting patterns
- summarizing reports
- reducing admin
- helping you see what is actually happening in the business
Not best for:
- replacing financial oversight
- making decisions without understanding your numbers
- skipping your CEO time
The IRS is not going to say, “Oh, you used ChatGPT and it made a mistake? No worries. All is forgiven.”
You must keep a careful eye on your finances. Even when you give the reins over to another person or AI, you are ultimately responsible for this. Proceed with caution.
What female business owners should automate first
Please do not start with the shiny stuff. So many women are wasting days creating stuff and then not ever using it again. This is one of those things with AI that leaves me stunned. The abandoned AI conversations, the stuff you’ve saved but never read again, the 3-hour YouTube research sessions now sitting in an abandoned file somewhere.
A compliment I love hearing from my coaching clients is that I do not lay heavy burdens on them. I give them simple, actionable strategies that meet them where they are, exactly what they need, without overwhelming them.
So let’s do that now.
Start with the place where your business is leaking capacity.
Here’s where I’d begin:
1. Lead capture
If someone downloads your freebie, joins your waitlist, or comments a keyword, they shouldn’t be sitting there untouched. It’s your move.
Automate:
- delivery email
- welcome sequence
- tag or segment
- follow-up prompt
- internal notification to reach out/touch base
2. Client onboarding
Your clients should never be wondering what happens next.
Automate:
- welcome email
- contract or agreement
- invoice or payment confirmation
- calendar link
- intake form
- “what to expect” instructions
But write it like a human.
Please.
3. Client offboarding
This is where so many small business owners drop the ball.
Automate:
- feedback form
- testimonial request
- referral prompt
- next-step offer
- follow-up check-in
- an email reminder to you to send a handwritten note
This is not just random admin work.
This is a sign of customer obsession.
4. Content repurposing
If you have Instagram captions, Zoom trainings, newsletters, blogs, podcasts, or client coaching moments, you’re sitting on a mountain of content.
Use AI to turn:
- captions into blog outlines
- Zoom transcripts into YouTube ideas
- emails into carousels
- testimonials into sales posts or Meta Ads
- voice notes into rough drafts
Just make sure it still sounds like you.
5. Internal reminders
Stop emailing yourself reminders.
Please.
Use systems for:
- recurring weekly tasks
- follow-up dates
- content batching
- metrics review
- admin days
- CEO planning
Your inbox is not a task management system. Stop treating it like a hoarder’s house.
What not to automate right away
Don’t automate a slapped-together onboarding experience.
Don’t automate a messy process.
Don’t automate a client experience you haven’t tested manually and gotten tons of feedback on from your clients.
Don’t automate a sales process that does not convert.
Don’t automate reels into captions or carousels into blogs if the original one bombed.
Think before you automate. We want to automate and replicate what’s working.
So don’t automate generic AI content and pretend it’s your marketing strategy.
And please for the love of all things holy don’t create 19 AI agents because you’re avoiding the fact that you don’t know exactly what to work on today to truly grow your business.
Automation comes after clarity.
Not before.
The Walk Like Warriors perspective: AI is useful, but systems come first
Here’s where we stand: AI is a tool. A powerful one.
But it can’t be the foundation of your business strategy.
Your foundation is:
- how you spend your time
- how you serve your clients
- how your business is organized
- how your weekly work gets done
- how your customer journey flows
- how your backend supports growth
- how you make decisions
- how you protect your capacity
That’s why I teach systems first.
Because when your business has structure, AI can actually help. In fact, it can change everything for you.
It can make your systems faster, more efficient, and way easier to maintain!
But if you skip the systems, structure and strategy? If you try to outsource all of that to AI?
It becomes just another thing you thought would save you.
Tough love coaching: every business owner who’s lacking systems, structure, and strategy is going to try to do exactly the same thing as you. Which means in 3 months, it’s a race to the bottom. Everyone will be out there working tons of hours, spinning their wheels, using AI in the most random and haphazard way… wondering why this didn’t change everything for them.
You need a clear plan and simple structure and strategy to build the business of your dreams.
You need clarity.
You need systems you design first that will then be able to work on your behalf.
The future belongs to the business owners who combine AI with operational maturity
The small business owners who win with AI will not be the ones chasing every new tool or building a million agents.
They’ll be the ones who know what they’re trying to build.
They’ll have clean workflows, clear messaging, strong client experience, organized data, and documented processes.
Most importantly, the winners will be the businesses flourishing under human creativity and strategic thinking and customer obsession.
They’ll just be leveraging AI to do the tactical work for them to support all the growth.
That’s the difference between a business owner playing with new tools and a business owner building something that lasts.
Final thought
AI can absolutely help you save time. I love AI. As of the time of this writing, I’m paying for both Claude and ChatGPT plans. I’m obsessed.
But these tools won’t get you your time back or help you grow your business if you are just throwing spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks.
Or working nonstop and praying these AI tools like Copilot or Agent Mode will give you peace even though your business is still living in your head.
They won’t give you capacity if every process is duct-taped together.
They won’t give you clarity if you keep asking tools to answer questions you haven’t even slowed down long enough to ask.
So yes, use AI.
But fix your business first.
Map the customer journey.
Clean up the backend.
Build the weekly rhythm.
Create systems that stick.
Then automate everything that deserves to be automated.
That is how you build a business that scales without taking over your whole life.
And if you are ready for that?
That is what we build inside The Success Squad.
Click here to learn more, comment FREEDOM on Instagram or watch my Stories for details.
Cheering you on.
💛 Kelly