The real cost of managing people without AI
If you have even two or three employees, you already know: the paperwork never stops. Writing a job post takes a couple of hours. Building a training manual for a new hire takes a weekend. Putting together a performance review feels like pulling teeth. Drafting the email about the new scheduling policy — again.
None of this is the actual work of managing people. It's the administrative scaffolding around it. And most small business owners are doing it alone, late at night, when they should be done for the day.
AI doesn't replace your judgment as a manager. It just does the writing and organizing — fast — so you can spend your energy on the conversations, decisions, and culture that actually matter.
Job Descriptions & Posts
Draft a full job post in under 5 minutes. Clear requirements, right tone, ready to publish.
Training Guides & SOPs
Tell AI what the job involves — it writes the step-by-step guide. Edit once, use forever.
Performance Review Drafts
Give AI the bullet points; it writes the full review. You just review and personalize.
Shift Schedules & Policies
Draft scheduling templates, time-off request forms, and policy updates in minutes.
Team Announcements & Memos
Write clear, professional messages to your team — even when the topic is uncomfortable.
Policy Documents & Handbooks
Start with a rough outline, let AI fill in the structure, then adjust for your business.
5 things you can do this week
You don't need special software. Open ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI tool and try these.
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Write a job post in 10 minutes
Tell AI the role, your business type, key responsibilities, and what kind of person you're looking for. It'll give you a full post ready to put on Indeed or Facebook. Edit the details, but the hard part is done. What used to take two hours now takes one conversation.
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Build a "how we do things here" training doc
Think about your best employee. What do they know that the new hire doesn't? List those things out — even in messy bullet points — and paste them into AI. Ask it to organize them into a clear training guide. You'll have a reusable document that stops you from training the same thing over and over.
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Draft your next performance review
Jot down 5–6 bullet points about the employee: what they do well, what needs work, any specific things that happened. Paste those into AI and ask it to write a professional performance review. You'll get a full draft in seconds. Adjust the tone, add your own words, and you're done.
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Write your time-off and scheduling policy
If you've been making it up as you go, this is your chance to fix it. Tell AI your business type, how many employees you have, and what you currently do. Ask it to write a clear, fair scheduling and time-off policy. You don't have to follow it word for word — but having a written policy stops a lot of headaches before they start.
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Draft the hard message you've been avoiding
Telling someone their performance isn't meeting expectations. Addressing a conflict between two employees. Announcing a change people won't like. These messages are hard to write. AI doesn't make the decision for you — but it helps you say what needs to be said, clearly and professionally. Just be honest about the situation and ask for help with the wording.
Real prompts you can use right now
Copy and paste these into any AI tool. Fill in the brackets with your details.
Write a job post for a [part-time / full-time] [job title] at my [type of business] in [city]. The main responsibilities are [list 3–4 things]. We want someone who [2–3 qualities]. Keep the tone [professional / friendly / direct]. Include a short paragraph about what makes working here good.
I need a training guide for a new [job title] at my [business type]. Here's what they need to know in their first week: [paste your bullet points or rough notes]. Organize this into a clear, step-by-step guide they can follow on their own. Use simple language — no jargon.
Write a performance review for an employee who has been in a [job title] role for [time period]. Here are my notes: [paste your bullet points — strengths, areas to improve, any specific examples]. Make it professional and constructive. Include specific suggestions for improvement in the areas I mentioned.
I need to write a message to an employee about [describe the situation briefly]. I want to be direct but fair — not harsh. Help me write this so it's clear, professional, and doesn't leave room for misinterpretation. My business is [type of business] and this person is a [job title].
Before AI vs. after AI — what actually changes
This isn't about replacing how you manage people. It's about removing the part that was slowing you down.
| Task | Before | After AI |
|---|---|---|
| Write a job post | 2–3 hours, staring at a blank page | 10–15 minutes, edit a solid draft |
| New hire training guide | Weekend project, never quite done | 1–2 hours to build something reusable |
| Annual performance reviews | Dreaded for weeks, rushed at the end | 30 minutes per employee once you have notes |
| Employee handbook update | Paid a consultant or just didn't do it | Draft in an afternoon, lawyer reviews |
| Team policy announcement | Rewritten 4 times, still felt off | Clear draft in 5 minutes |
| Onboarding checklist | Existed in someone's head, not written down | Documented, formatted, ready to print |
Common questions from small business owners
Will AI give me generic, useless output?
Only if you give it generic input. The more specific you are — your business type, your employee's actual situation, your tone preferences — the more useful the output. Think of it as working with a very fast writer who needs your context.
Do I need special HR software?
No. A basic ChatGPT account ($20/month) or free tier handles everything on this page. You don't need an HR platform or any integrations to get started. You're just using it as a smart writing assistant.
Is this replacing my judgment as a manager?
Not at all. AI does the first draft. You make the decisions, add the nuance, and put your name on it. Your job as a manager — listening, making calls, building relationships — doesn't change. The paperwork just stops being a bottleneck.
What about legal compliance?
For anything with legal implications — employee handbooks, termination letters, non-competes — use AI to get a solid draft and then have a local employment attorney review it. AI saves you the $300/hour it would cost to have them write it from scratch.
Quick win: Think about the last piece of team paperwork you put off because you didn't want to write it. Open ChatGPT right now and describe the situation. Ask for a draft. You'll be done before you finish your coffee.
Start here if you manage 2 or more people
You don't need to overhaul everything at once. Pick one thing from your mental to-do list that involves writing something for your team. That's your starting point.
The pattern is always the same: describe the situation in plain language, give AI your bullet points or rough notes, and ask for a draft. Read it, tweak what doesn't sound like you, and you're done. Do that a few times and you'll have a rhythm that saves you hours every month.
The business owners who get the most out of AI aren't doing anything fancy. They're just using it every time they'd otherwise sit down to write something they dread. After a few weeks, the dread goes away — because the task takes 10 minutes instead of two hours.
Ready to go deeper?
The Ask Patrick Library has step-by-step guides, templates, and prompt collections for every part of running a small business with AI.
Browse the Library →Related guides
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