Automation5 min read

Don't Drown in Repetitive Tasks: Real Automation Tools for Small Businesses

Dan Hartman headshotDan HartmanEditor··5 min read

Tired of manual busywork? I'm a solo founder and I've found the best automation tools for small businesses that actually save time and money. Here's my honest take.

The Content Repurposing Treadmill Broke Me

Last month, I was completely overwhelmed by content. I mean, I love writing, but the sheer volume of tasks after hitting publish on a blog post was soul-crushing. There’s the LinkedIn post, the Twitter thread (or X, whatever), the Instagram caption, the email Beehiiv snippet, the evergreen quote for later… it never ends. I was spending nearly as much time repurposing content as I was creating the original piece, and that’s a terrible return on effort. I desperately needed to find some solid automation tools for small businesses, not just for my sanity, but for my bottom line.

My process was manual, clunky, and prone to error. I’d finish a blog post in Notion (where all my content lives), then open up a new tab for ChatGPT to summarize it, then another tab for Buffer, then another for my email marketing platform. It was a time sink, a context-switching nightmare, and frankly, it was making me hate content creation. That’s a problem when content is a core part of your business model.

Building My Own Content Machine (Almost)

I knew there had to be a better way, a real way, to automate this. I’ve tried a lot of these platforms, and honestly, the free plans are often a joke if you’re doing anything beyond the most basic two-step automation. So I bit the bullet and invested in a better orchestrator: Make (formerly Integromat). I’d used Zapier before, and while it’s good, I think Zapier’s pricing model is often overpriced for what solo founders need, especially if you have complex, multi-step scenarios. Make.comgives you way more operations for your buck, and its visual builder just clicks better with my brain.

🤖
Recommended Reading

AI Side Hustles

12 Ways to Earn with AI

Practical setups for building real income streams with AI tools. No coding needed. 12 tested models with real numbers.


Get the Guide → $14

★★★★★ (89)

Here’s how I set it up: When a blog post in Notion gets marked as ‘Published’, Make kicks into gear. First, it grabs the content of the post. Then, it sends that full content over to Claude Opus with a series of very specific prompts. I’m asking Claude to generate three distinct outputs: a concise LinkedIn post, a longer Twitter thread, and a short email newsletter blurb. I’ve spent a lot of time refining these prompts, which, yes, is annoying but totally worth it. Claude’s responses are usually spot on, capturing the tone and key takeaways I need.

Once Claude delivers, Make takes those pieces and distributes them. The LinkedIn post goes directly to a draft in Buffer. The Twitter thread gets formatted and sent to another Buffer queue. The email blurb is appended to a new page in Notion, ready for me to drop into my newsletter platform later. This whole sequence runs in the background, without me lifting a finger after the initial blog post is live. It’s glorious.

The concrete love here is simple: I actually *have* a consistent social media presence now. Before, it was hit-or-miss, depending on whether I had an extra hour to manually churn out posts. Now, it’s just… done. My social channels are active, and my email list gets regular updates, all flowing from the primary content I’m already creating. It’s freed up so much mental energy.

Where the Gears Grind: My Gripes with AI Automation

It’s not all rainbows and perfectly formatted tweets, though. My concrete gripe? Make’s error handling can be incredibly opaque. Sometimes, a module in a complex scenario fails, and debugging *why* it failed can be a nightmare of trial and error. The error messages aren’t always descriptive, and you’re left poking around connection settings or data structures, trying to figure out what went wrong. It often feels like you need to be a full-stack developer just to understand a simple API timeout, and good luck finding docs for some niche API integrations.

Also, even with top-tier models like Claude Opus, the AI isn’t perfect. It occasionally ‘hallucinates’ or gives bland, generic output that requires manual tweaks. This isn’t a deal-breaker, but it means I still have to review everything before it goes live, which defeats *some* of the ‘set it and forget it’ dream. It’s still faster than writing from scratch, but it’s not 100% hands-off.

Honestly, I still manually check every piece of generated content before it goes out. You have to.

The Real Cost of Doing Business (and My Take on Value)

Let’s talk money. For my setup, I’m on Make’s Pro plan, which runs me about $29/month. For what it enables me to do – essentially automating several hours of work every single week – that price is incredibly fair. It gives me enough operations and data transfer to run several complex workflows without constantly worrying about hitting limits. For a solopreneur or a small business with limited resources, it’s a no-brainer investment. You’ll make that money back in saved time alone, probably within the first week.

Then there’s the AI. I subscribe to a team plan for my generative AI, which costs a bit more, but you can get started with individual subscriptions to ChatGPT Plus or Claude Pro for around $20/month each. If you’re just starting, pick one. I prefer Claude for creative writing tasks; I find it less ‘canned’ than ChatGPT sometimes. The value here is undeniable if you’re producing any kind of content. These aren’t just fancy toys; they’re essential automation tools for small businesses trying to compete.

If you’re still doing repetitive tasks by hand – sending follow-up emails, scheduling social media, summarizing content – you’re leaving money and time on the table. These tools aren’t just about efficiency; they’re about enabling you to focus on the high-impact work that actually moves your business forward. Stop grinding. Start automating.

— The Colophon

One AI tool. Tested. Reviewed.
In your inbox every Sunday.

~3 minute read. Real outcomes from operators, not marketers.

Free. One email per Sunday. Unsubscribe in one click.