Most AI tools are built for enterprises with dedicated IT teams and six-figure software budgets. Small businesses need something different: practical automation that fits the tools you already use, runs without a technical team, and pays for itself.
The work that's slowing your team down is usually the same across industries: manual, repetitive, and rule-based. That's exactly what AI is built for.
Data entry, follow-up emails, status reports, invoice processing, appointment confirmations. Your people are spending hours each week on tasks that have no judgment involved — just execution. That time has a dollar value, and it compounds every week.
Larger competitors have operations teams, automation engineers, and dedicated software stacks. SMBs are running the same races with smaller rosters. AI levels that playing field when it's implemented in a way your team can actually run.
Most small businesses have experimented with ChatGPT or some automation app, gotten limited results, and moved on. The gap isn't the technology — it's that standalone tools don't integrate with how your business actually operates. A workflow does.
These are the highest-return starting points for small businesses. Each one is scoped to your specific tools and operations before any work begins.
AI handles follow-up sequences, appointment reminders, proposal responses, and check-in messages — triggered by what's happening in your CRM or scheduling tool. Your team focuses on conversations that require real judgment.
AI pulls data from your existing tools — sales, operations, financials — and generates weekly summaries, dashboards, or exception reports automatically. You stop spending Friday afternoon compiling numbers that should arrive in your inbox Monday morning.
AI drafts proposals, contracts, SOWs, and intake documents from structured inputs — reducing the time from "qualified lead" to "document in their inbox" from hours to minutes. Review and approve. Stop writing from scratch every time.
Invoice routing, data entry from forms or emails, internal status updates, inventory alerts, onboarding checklists. The work that falls between your main software tools — what your team does manually to keep things moving — is often the highest-ROI automation target.
Most AI consultants build something that works while they're around and breaks when they leave. That's a services model, not an outcomes model.
Greg Stone's background is in CQV engineering — Commissioning, Qualification, and Validation inside FDA-regulated manufacturing. Every process he built had to work without him in the room, be documented clearly enough for someone else to run, and pass a structured test before going live. That standard doesn't change when the client is a 15-person service business instead of a pharmaceutical plant.
Every engagement ends with your team owning the workflow: trained on how it works, armed with an SOP, and capable of maintaining it without a retainer. If you want ongoing optimization support, that's available. But dependency is never the default.
AI Readiness Assessment
We map your current operations, identify where time is actually going, and rank automation opportunities by ROI. No assumptions. We work from your real numbers.
Scoping & Build
We scope the highest-ROI workflow, build it against your actual tools and data, and validate it before anything touches a live process.
Handoff & Training
Full documentation, team training, and 30 days of support. Your team runs it when we leave.
Measure & Optimize
Success criteria are defined before we start. We track against them. If the ROI isn't materializing, we fix it.
These are industry benchmarks on where small business time goes. They're baselines, not projections.
of occupations have at least 30% of their activities that could be automated with current AI — across industries and company sizes
McKinsey Global Institute, 2023
of a typical employee's workday is spent on tasks with no value-added judgment component — data entry, formatting, status updates, and manual routing
Asana Anatomy of Work, 2023
in annual productivity losses across US businesses from manual, repetitive administrative work — the largest share falling on smaller firms
IDC / Salesforce, 2022
A small business with 10 employees saving just 2 hours per person per week recovers 1,000+ hours per year. At a fully loaded cost of $40/hr, that's $40,000 in annual capacity — before you count the revenue it frees up.
QP works with owner-operated and management-led SMBs across any industry. The common thread is a specific process problem worth solving — not a general interest in "doing AI."
Not always. If you're using AI tools like ChatGPT for occasional writing tasks, you don't need a consultant. Where consulting pays off is when you want AI doing real work inside your business — automating a specific process, connecting to your CRM or operations software, or building something your team can run without you. That kind of integration takes more than signing up for a tool.
The sweet spot is businesses with 5 to 200 employees. Large enough that manual processes are genuinely costing you time and money, small enough that adding headcount isn't the obvious answer. If your team is doing work that feels repetitive and rule-based — data entry, report generation, follow-up communication — there's almost always a workflow that addresses it.
No. Most SMB clients don't. Every workflow QP builds comes with a Standard Operating Procedure written in plain language, team training, and 30-day post-launch support. The goal is for your team to own and run the automation without needing technical help after handoff.
An AI Readiness Assessment takes 2 to 3 weeks and identifies the highest-ROI starting point for your business. A focused workflow implementation — automating one specific process — typically runs 4 to 8 weeks from scoping to deployment.
A focused single-workflow implementation typically falls in the $12,500 to $30,000 range, depending on complexity and your existing tools. Hourly advisory starts at $150/hr for businesses that want to start smaller. Pricing scales with scope and your capacity to invest — the goal is a return that justifies it. The best way to get a real number is a 30-minute discovery call where we scope your situation directly.
QP is platform-agnostic. Common environments include HubSpot, Salesforce, QuickBooks, Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, Zapier, Airtable, and most industry-specific platforms. If your team uses it, we can usually integrate with it. We document every integration decision so you're never locked into our approach.
A practical 5-step framework for owners who want to move from experimenting to actually deploying AI.
ToolFind out where your business stands and which AI opportunities are worth pursuing first.
CalculatorEstimate the return on AI automation based on your team size, hourly cost, and hours saved.