Three automations most small businesses are missing
Every small business owner we talk to is doing at least one of these by hand. And every one of them could be fully automated in an afternoon. Here's where the boring, valuable time-savings hide.
1. Website form → CRM → team notification
What most people do: a lead fills in your contact form, you get an email, you screenshot it or copy-paste the details into your CRM, you reply a few hours later, maybe you forget to tell the team.
What automation does:
- Lead fills in the form.
- A new contact is created in your CRM with all their details mapped correctly.
- The team gets a Slack or email ping with the lead's info and a link to their CRM record.
- A personalised "Got your message, we'll reply within the hour" email goes out immediately.
- A follow-up reminder is scheduled on whoever owns that lead.
Time saved: 3-5 minutes per lead, plus you stop losing leads to "I meant to reply to that one". If you get 10 leads a week, that's a solid hour back — and a noticeably faster response time, which wins more of them.
What we use: n8n or Zapier, connected to your CRM (HubSpot, Capsule, Pipedrive — whatever you already use), your team chat, and your email.
2. New order → invoice → accounting → inventory
What most people do: an order comes in on your website, you manually create an invoice in Xero or QuickBooks, you update your stock in a spreadsheet (or worse, across multiple marketplaces), you email the customer a confirmation.
What automation does:
- Order drops into WooCommerce / Shopify / wherever.
- Invoice is generated in your accounting system automatically, with VAT applied correctly.
- Stock is decremented across every channel where you sell.
- Customer gets a branded confirmation email; you get a ping if stock is running low.
- Your bookkeeper gets a weekly digest without having to ask for one.
Time saved: 5-10 minutes per order. For anyone doing more than 20 orders a week, that's a part-time job you never have to pay for.
What we use: your e-commerce platform's webhooks + n8n or Make + your accounting API.
3. Content published → cross-posted everywhere that matters
What most people do: you publish a blog post / upload a YouTube video / record a podcast, then spend the next hour copy-pasting it across LinkedIn, Telegram, your email list, X, maybe Facebook, and your internal wiki.
What automation does:
- You publish once.
- A draft post goes up on each of your socials with the right thumbnail and framing for that platform.
- Your email newsletter gets a fresh entry queued for the next send.
- Anyone who subscribed to your Telegram channel gets a ping immediately.
- A row appears in your content spreadsheet for tracking.
Time saved: genuinely hours per week, depending on how much you publish. More importantly, the distribution is consistent — which is the thing most small businesses fail at, not the publishing itself.
What we use: n8n usually, reading from your blog's RSS feed or YouTube upload webhook, then fanning out.
The quiet third benefit
All of these save time. But the bigger win is that nothing falls through the cracks any more. No more "did you reply to Sarah?" or "did we invoice that one?" or "I meant to post about the launch". It just happens.
Want one built?
If one of these is very familiar and you want to stop doing it manually, say hello. We usually scope these in under a week and have them running shortly after.