The Best AI Tools for Business (From My Actual Day-to-Day)

Quick outline:

  • What I run and why I test tools
  • The tools that stuck and real stories
  • What I love, what bugged me, and who each tool fits
  • My current stack and rough costs

Prefer a living, breathing version of this list? Check out my always-updated rundown of the best AI tools for business.

I’m Kayla. I run a small brand studio and a tiny online shop. I test tools the way I test coffee: often, and with a sharp nose. I write ads, ship client work, track cash, and post content. Some tools helped. Some got in the way. Here are the ones I actually use, with real wins and a few “ugh” moments.
If you’re hunting for an expanded, regularly updated directory of AI picks, I curate one on PTools that digs even deeper than this post. For an external vantage point, I also keep an eye on Unite.ai’s comprehensive overview of the best AI tools for business—handy when I want to sanity-check my own findings.

1) ChatGPT (daily helper, messy genius)

What I use it for:

  • Sales emails, meeting notes, and quick press pitches
  • Spreadsheet formulas and simple code fixes
  • Customer reply ideas when my brain is toast

Real example:
For our Black Friday push, I asked it for seven subject lines based on last year’s copy. We A/B tested two of them. Our open rate went from 22% to 31%. Small shop, small list, real bump.

What I love:

  • Fast drafts that don’t feel flat
  • It explains stuff like VLOOKUP in plain words

What bugged me:

  • It makes things up if you let it
  • Brand voice can wobble; I still do a final pass

Who it fits: Owners who wear many hats and need a smart buddy on call.

If you want to see how ChatGPT stacked up against a dozen other writing assistants, dive into my field notes on the best AI writing tools I’ve tested.

2) Notion AI (my brain’s second pocket)

What I use it for:

  • Summaries of long SOPs
  • Project plans from messy notes
  • Action lists after meetings

Real example:
I fed it our 18-page onboarding guide. It made a two-page playbook with steps and check boxes. We shaved a week off a new hire’s ramp.

What I love:

  • It sits right in my docs, so I stay focused

What bugged me:

  • It can miss nuance in niche tasks; I add context

Who it fits: Teams living in Notion who hate busy work.

3) Canva Magic Write + Magic Design (quick brand-safe visuals)

What I use it for:

  • Ad sets, story posts, and deck slides
  • Fast mockups for client reviews

Real example:
I made a Mother’s Day ad set in 30 minutes. Same colors, clean fonts, five sizes. Click rate went from 1.2% to 2.1% on Instagram that week.

What I love:

  • Templates hold brand look like glue
  • Magic Write helps with short copy blocks

What bugged me:

  • Photo picks can feel too stock; I still tweak

Who it fits: Small teams that need “good enough” design, fast.

On a related note, sharpening the visual appeal of your own on-camera presence can be as simple as tweaking an outfit or two; I picked up a few fun pointers from this rundown of weird clothing hacks that make you more attractive—scroll through if you want quick, low-cost style fixes that photograph well.

For a wider look at pure-play image generators, I ran a gauntlet of freebies—you can see which AI picture makers actually delivered right here.

4) Descript (edit video by editing text)

What I use it for:

  • Founder story clips and reels
  • Removing filler words and noise

Real example:
We cut a 7-minute interview to 2:10 by deleting text. It also auto-removed nine “uhs.” I made two audiograms for LinkedIn in under an hour.

What I love:

  • It makes video feel like docs
  • Captions are easy and clean

What bugged me:

  • Exports can be slow on my old Mac

Who it fits: Non-video folks who still need video.

5) Otter.ai (meetings without the scramble)

What I use it for:

  • Client call notes with time stamps
  • Action items sent to Slack

Real example:
On a brand kickoff, Otter flagged a request I missed: “Send sample box by Friday.” That saved a week of back-and-forth and one awkward apology.

What I love:

  • Clear speaker labels
  • Search by keyword, which is wild

What bugged me:

  • Names get mixed if two voices sound alike

Who it fits: Anyone who leads calls and wants proof of what was said.

6) Zapier + AI steps (glue for messy workflows)

What I use it for:

  • Tagging inbound emails as “lead,” “support,” or “spam”
  • Routing hot leads to the right person in Slack

Real example:
Before, we replied to leads in about four hours. Now? Forty-five minutes on average. The AI step reads the email and picks a label. Then Zapier sends it to the right channel with context.

What I love:

  • It cuts repeat steps I used to hate

What bugged me:

  • Setups can feel fussy the first time

Who it fits: Busy inboxes and mixed tools that need to talk.

If customer support is your pain point, I also rounded up the best customer-service automation tools that saved my sanity.

7) HubSpot + ChatSpot (CRM with a chat window)

What I use it for:

  • Reports by chat (“show last quarter deals by source”)
  • Quick follow-up email drafts tied to contacts

Real example:
I pulled a pipeline report during a call by typing a short request. No clicks. No filters. My client thought I had it prepped. I didn’t. I just asked.

What I love:

  • Data at my fingertips, fast

What bugged me:

  • Some answers are vague unless I phrase it well

Who it fits: Sales and ops folks who live in the CRM.

Data geeks can go even deeper with my comparison of the business intelligence tools that I lean on for real-time insights.

Curious how location-specific classifieds create their own micro-funnels? A quick glance at the patterns unearthed in Listcrawler Germantown demonstrates how search intent, profile positioning, and compliance cues interplay—insights you can remix for any geo-targeted lead-gen play.

8) Shopify Magic + Klaviyo AI (store copy and email sparks)

What I use it for:

  • Product blurbs that sound human
  • Subject lines and short email copy

Real example:
We wrote 50 product blurbs in an afternoon. Time on page went up 19% the next month. Fewer bounces too.

What I love:

  • It keeps tone steady across the catalog

What bugged me:

  • It plays safe; I add a real brand twist

Who it fits: Small shops that need clean copy now.

Marketers looking beyond store copy can skim my blow-by-blow of the best AI marketing tools I actually use—complete with wins and misses. Another great cross-functional list is StoryChief’s take on AI tools for business, which pairs nicely with my marketing-centric notes.

9) Grammarly (tone and typos, with a light AI nudge)

What I use it for:

  • Tone rewrites from “stiff” to “friendly”
  • Catching commas I always miss

Real example:
A formal proposal felt cold. I hit “make it warmer.” The client said, “This sounds like you.” We won the work.

What I love:

  • Clear fixes, quick wins

What bugged me:

  • It can push me into bland; I roll some edits back

Who it fits: Anyone who writes under pressure.

10) Slack AI (catch-up without the scroll)

What I use it for:

  • Daily summaries of my two busiest channels
  • Quick answers like “what did we decide on packaging?”

Real example:
I was out half a day. Slack AI gave me a tidy recap with decisions and links. No doom scroll. I was back on track in five minutes.

What I love:

  • Summaries cut noise

What bugged me:

  • It sometimes misses a tiny detail or emoji cue

Who it fits: Teams that chat a lot, maybe too much.


What surprised me most

  • Speed stacks. One minute here, five minutes there. It adds up. I got back about six hours a week.
  • You still need taste. AI can draft; you bring voice

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