Practical thinking on AI, automation, and digital strategy for regional businesses.
You got an email back from a customer last week and something felt off. The words were polite. The grammar was clean. But it read as if a stranger wrote it. That is because, in a way, a stranger did.
Read More
Most AI tools do better when they understand your business. A one-page profile gives them the context they need before they start writing.
Read More
AI can draft, summarize, and organize, but it has bad judgment. A green, yellow, red task list showing where small businesses can trust AI and where review is required.
Read More
Your team already uses AI, but nobody set the rules. A plain guide for small businesses on data risk, bad output, and a one-page policy that fixes both.
Read More
AI chatbots state false information as confidently as true facts. Here is why they make things up, where the risk is highest, and how to protect your business.
Read More
Slop" is Merriam-Webster's word of the year. After a weekend in the research, here's what people get wrong about it, and the one habit that fixes it.
Read More
Your front desk is probably doing a lot more than answering the phone. They are greeting people, scheduling appointments, taking messages, answering the same questions over and over, chasing down paperwork, sorting through emails, handling frustrated customers, and somehow trying to keep the whole day from falling apart before lunch.
Read More
This morning Google rolled out its May 2026 Core Update. By 7 PM I had rebuilt how both of my personal websites talk to AI tools, jumped past every benchmark I could find, and learned something I think every local business owner needs to hear.
Read More
Here's the problem with that thinking: AI doesn't know when it's wrong. It will give you a made-up phone number in the same tone it uses to tell you the capital of France. It will invent a court case, cite a book that doesn't exist, or quote a customer review nobody ever wrote — and it will sound completely sure of itself.
Read More
You see the notification. A new review. One star. You read it once, then again, and your face gets hot. Maybe the customer got something wrong. Maybe they were rude. Maybe they have a point. Either way, you have to respond, and whatever you write will sit there forever for every future customer to read.
Read More
There's a phrase floating around small offices across the Tri-Cities right now: "It's free, it's fast. I'll just paste the client file in and ask it to summarize." It sounds harmless. It is not. This week's AI Myth Monday is about the most common and most expensive mistake we see business owners make: uploading client files into random AI tools without knowing where that data goes.
Read More
Most people use AI the same way: type a request, hit enter, hope for the best. The result is usually fine, sometimes useful, often generic. Then they spend ten minutes editing it into something they'd actually send or post.
Read More