Automation does not have to mean big projects, new software, or complex workflows. In fact, the most effective automation strategies start small. This tech resolution is simple: automate one repetitive task each week to save time and reduce errors. Over time, those small changes add up to meaningful gains in efficiency, consistency, and focus.
Why Automate?
Most business errors do not come from complex systems – they come from manual, repetitive work. Copying information between systems, remembering to send follow-ups, or completing the same steps over and over creates friction and increases the likelihood of mistakes.
Automation helps:
-
Reduce human error
-
Save time on low-value tasks
-
Create consistency across processes
-
Free employees to focus on higher-impact work
When done thoughtfully, automation is less about speed and more about reliability.
What “Automation” Really Means
For many small and mid-sized businesses, automation already exists inside the tools they use every day. It can be as simple as:
-
Rules that move or categorize emails
-
Templates that standardize responses
-
Triggers that notify the right person at the right time
-
Workflows that eliminate manual handoffs
Automation does not require coding or custom development. It often means turning on features you already pay for.
How to Identify Tasks Worth Automating
The best candidates for automation share a few common traits. Look for tasks that:
-
Happen daily or weekly
-
Follow the same steps every time
-
Involve copying or re-entering data
-
Are easy to forget or inconsistently completed
-
Interrupt focused work
Examples might include user onboarding steps, file organization, ticket routing, approval reminders, or recurring reports.
If someone on your team says, “I do this all the time,” that is usually a good place to start.
How to Know If a Task Can Be Automated
Not every process should be automated. A good rule of thumb is this: automate stable processes, not broken ones.
A task is a strong automation candidate if:
-
The process is already defined
-
Inputs and outcomes are predictable
-
Errors are costly or time-consuming
-
Little judgment is required
-
A human can review or override the result
If a process changes weekly or relies heavily on nuance, it may need refinement before automation.
Start Small: One Task Per Week
This resolution works because it avoids overwhelm. One automation per week is achievable and sustainable.
Small, incremental improvements:
-
Build confidence quickly
-
Create visible wins
-
Encourage teams to look for inefficiencies
-
Compound over time
By the end of the year, dozens of small automations can dramatically reduce friction across the business.
Use the Tools You Already Have
Many organizations already own powerful automation tools through platforms like Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, CRMs, or accounting systems. The challenge is rarely access – it is awareness and adoption.
Before buying new software, evaluate what capabilities already exist in your environment.
Measure the Impact
Automation should deliver measurable value. Even simple tracking helps reinforce the habit.
Pay attention to:
-
Time saved each week
-
Fewer errors or rework
-
Improved consistency
-
Reduced stress for employees
-
Faster turnaround times
These improvements often matter more than raw cost savings.
Make Automation a Habit, Not a Project
This tech resolution is not about perfection. It is about progress. Automating one small task each week builds a culture of continuous improvement – one that values efficiency, accuracy, and focus.
Over time, those small changes reduce tech stress and make your systems work for your people, not against them.
Have more questions about this topic? Contact us for answers, guidance, or support.




