This year, there’s a lot to be excited about. AI tools are making it easier than ever to market your business, serve customers, and streamline operations. But with every new opportunity comes new risk – and when it comes to AI cybersecurity for small business, the threat landscape is evolving faster than most owners realize.
AI Is a Double-Edged Sword for Small Businesses
AI has opened incredible doors for small businesses. According to Verizon’s 2025 State of Small Business Survey, 38% of SMBs are now actively using AI across their operations – from marketing to customer service to hiring. But here’s the thing: cybercriminals are using those same tools, too. AI cybersecurity for small business isn’t just a buzzword. It’s a real and growing challenge, because the technology making your business more efficient is also making attacks against it more sophisticated.
The New Threats You Need to Know About
Today’s threats are more personalized, more convincing, and far harder to spot than anything small businesses have faced before. Here are the three you need on your radar:
AI-Powered Phishing — Now Harder to Spot Than Ever
Gone are the days of obvious scam emails with typos and suspicious links. AI can now generate highly convincing phishing messages tailored to your business, your employees, and your vendors. AI-driven phishing attacks have surged by 300% in recent years (CyberTalents, 2025) – and they’re designed to look exactly like the emails you receive every day.
Deepfakes and Voice Cloning — When You Can’t Trust What You Hear
Cybercriminals are using AI to clone voices and create realistic audio or video of executives and trusted contacts. Imagine receiving a voicemail that sounds exactly like your business partner asking you to approve a wire transfer. Deepfake incidents have increased 550% since 2019, and the technology is becoming more accessible every year (CyberTalents, 2025).
Ransomware-as-a-Service — A Lowered Barrier for Attackers
AI has made it easier for even low-skill criminals to launch sophisticated ransomware attacks through Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS). Ransomware demands increased by 140% in 2024 — and small businesses are a prime target because attackers assume, often correctly, that recovery resources are limited (CyberTalents, 2025).
Why Small Businesses Are the Target
You might think your business is too small to be on a cybercriminal’s radar. Unfortunately, that’s exactly why you’re on it. 43% of cyberattacks target small businesses, and 60% of breached SMBs close within six months of a major attack. Limited IT staff, fewer security tools, and the “it won’t happen to us” mindset make small businesses an easy, high-reward target. Understanding AI cybersecurity for small business starts with accepting that size is not a shield.
What You Can Do to Stay Protected
The good news: there are practical, straightforward steps every small business can take right now. Use this table as your quick-reference guide to strengthening your defenses:

You don’t have to navigate this alone
Navigating AI cybersecurity for small business is a real challenge – but it doesn’t have to be yours to carry alone. At Macatawa Technologies, we help West Michigan small businesses stay protected, stay focused, and stay ahead of the threats that keep business owners up at night. Whether you’re just starting to think about cybersecurity or you’re ready to take a more proactive approach, we’re here to be your trusted IT partner.
Leave the tech stress behind – and get back to what matters most: your business.
Have more questions about this topic? We’re here to help. Contact us for answers, guidance, or support.




