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AISmall BusinessLas Cruces

5 AI Tools That Actually Help Small Businesses in Las Cruces

Jerry Prochazka

I've spent the past few years helping small business owners in Las Cruces and El Paso figure out where AI actually fits into their day-to-day. And I want to be honest with you: most of what gets written about AI is aimed at startups with engineering teams and venture capital behind them.

That's not us. We're restaurants on Mesilla Plaza, boutique law offices on El Paseo, HVAC companies serving the Telshor corridor, nonprofits doing real work in the colonias. We need tools that save time, don't require a PhD to set up, and ideally cost less than a part-time employee.

Here are five that I keep recommending.


1. ChatGPT (or Claude) for Writing Drafts

I know, everyone's heard of ChatGPT. But I still run into business owners who tried it once, got a weird response, and wrote it off. The key is learning to treat it like a capable intern rather than a magic oracle.

I use it to:

  • Draft first passes at job postings
  • Write email templates for follow-ups after consultations
  • Create FAQ content for websites
  • Rewrite dense policy documents in plain English

The trick is being specific. "Write a job posting for a bilingual receptionist at a family dental practice in Las Cruces" gets you something useful. "Write a job posting" does not.


2. Otter.ai for Meeting Notes

If you spend any time in meetings — with clients, vendors, your own team — Otter.ai is a no-brainer. It transcribes and summarizes conversations in real time.

I've seen this save people hours a week. Instead of scrambling to take notes during a client call, you're actually present in the conversation. The summary hits your inbox afterward.

There's a free tier that covers most small business needs. The paid version adds CRM integrations that are genuinely useful if you're in sales.


3. Canva's AI Features for Marketing Materials

Canva has quietly built a solid set of AI tools into their platform. The ones I use most:

  • Magic Write — generates copy for social posts, flyers, and email subject lines
  • Background Remover — instantly isolates product photos (huge for retailers)
  • Magic Design — creates branded templates from a single prompt

If you're already using Canva, these features are worth exploring. If you're not using Canva yet, start there before you pay for anything else.


4. Tidio for Basic Customer Chat

Tidio combines live chat with a simple AI chatbot that can handle common customer questions — store hours, pricing tiers, whether you do same-day appointments, whatever your customers ask constantly.

It plugs into most website platforms (WordPress, Squarespace, Shopify) in about 15 minutes. The free tier handles a surprising amount of volume.

The AI piece isn't magic, but it catches the easy stuff so you're not answering the same four questions sixty times a week.


5. Notion AI for Internal Documentation

If your business has any kind of internal knowledge that lives in people's heads — processes, recipes, training materials, supplier contacts — Notion with the AI add-on is worth serious consideration.

You can dump rough notes in, ask Notion AI to turn them into a proper SOP, and suddenly you have documentation. It's not perfect, but it gets you 80% of the way there in a fraction of the time.


The Honest Bottom Line

None of these tools replace judgment. They replace time. The business owners I've seen get the most out of AI are the ones who treat it as a way to clear their plate of low-complexity, repetitive work — so they can spend more energy on the things that actually require them specifically.

If you want to talk through which of these might fit your situation, or if none of them seem right and you're not sure where to start — that's exactly what I do. See how consulting works, or reach out directly for a free 20-minute call.