If you're a small business owner, you're probably spending 2–3 hours a day on email. A good chunk of that is the same five questions, over and over. "What are your hours?" "Can I get a quote?" "How do I reset my password?" "Is this still available?" This guide covers three things you can set up this week — no technical skills required — to handle the repetitive stuff automatically, so you can focus on the emails that actually matter.
Most people try one of two things: canned responses (too robotic, customers can tell) or email rules/filters (good for sorting, terrible for replying). Neither solves the real problem, which is that someone still has to write the reply.
What actually works is giving an AI assistant enough context about your business that it can draft a real, personalized reply to common questions — one that sounds like you, references your actual policies, and doesn't feel like a form letter. You review and send. Or, for the most routine stuff, you let it send automatically.
Here are three patterns that work in practice, starting with the easiest.
Before any automation can help you, it needs to know your business. The fastest way to do this is a simple text document — call it your "business FAQ" — that covers everything a new team member would need to answer customer emails on their first day.
Think of it as training a new hire, except once. Write it once, update it occasionally.
What to include:
A landscaping company in Denver put together a 600-word FAQ doc: hours, service areas (ZIP codes), rough pricing ranges for common jobs, and answers to questions like "do you do snow removal?" (yes) and "can you work on commercial properties?" (no). They paste it at the top of every AI chat session before asking it to draft email replies. Their email response time went from next-day to under two hours — with one person checking a draft queue twice a day.
The key detail: Don't write this for an AI — write it like you're training a new employee. Plain sentences, real answers, no jargon. The simpler it is, the better the AI does with it.
One of the highest-leverage things you can do costs nothing and takes 15 minutes. Set up a simple rule that sorts incoming email into two buckets: emails that need a real response from you, and emails that can be handled with a template or quick AI draft.
How to split them:
Once you have the split, batch the draft queue. Instead of context-switching to email every time something arrives, you sit down twice a day, open the draft queue, use your FAQ doc + an AI assistant to generate replies, review them (takes 20–30 seconds each), and send. Done.
A freelance web designer found that 60% of her new inquiry emails were asking roughly the same three things: what's your rate, how long does a project take, and do you do e-commerce? She set up a Gmail filter to label anything from a non-existing contact as "Draft Queue." She opens that label at 9 AM and 3 PM. Takes 15 minutes total per day instead of 90 minutes of constant interruption.
Most people ask AI assistants to help with email like this: "Write a reply to this." That gives you a generic, forgettable response. A simple prompt template gets you something that sounds like you wrote it — and usually needs zero editing.
The template that works:
"You are helping me reply to customer emails for my business, [business name]. Here's our FAQ doc: [paste your FAQ doc]. Tone: [friendly and direct / professional / warm and casual — pick one]. Keep replies under 100 words unless the question really needs more. Don't use filler phrases like 'Great question!' or 'I hope this email finds you well.' Here's the email I need to reply to: [paste the email]."
Save this as a text snippet (tools like TextExpander, Raycast, or even a Notes app shortcut work fine) so you can paste it in two keystrokes. You'll get a draft back in 5 seconds that, most of the time, you send as-is or with one small tweak.
Why this works better: The instruction "under 100 words" is the single most important part. AI assistants default to longer replies. Customer emails should be short. Short = fast to read, fast to send, fewer follow-up questions.
The three tips above will save you an hour a day. The next four take it further — covering how to set up a fully automated first-response system, how to handle appointment booking by email without back-and-forth, a follow-up sequence that runs itself, and the exact setup for an "away mode" that doesn't lose customers.
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