AI email assistants, explained for business owners
Here's a quick test. Open your sent folder and look at yesterday's emails. How many of them could a competent assistant have written if they knew your business? For most owner-run businesses the honest answer is "most of them" — order confirmations, quote follow-ups, the same five questions answered for the hundredth time.
That's the gap an AI email assistant fills. Not the important emails. The repetitive ones that eat your evenings.
What it actually does
- Sorts your inbox — enquiry, order, supplier, junk, needs-the-human. The triage you currently do in your head, done before you open your laptop.
- Drafts replies in your voice — trained on examples of how you write, so "Hope you're well, lekker, will sort it Friday" stays exactly that.
- Chases what you sent — the quote nobody answered gets a polite follow-up on day three, automatically.
- Reports daily — "handled these 14, these 3 need you, here's why."
What it should never do
This is where a properly built assistant differs from a gimmick. Ours (and any good one) runs with hard rules:
- Draft-first by default. Early on, nothing sends without a human clicking send. Autonomy is earned, category by category, once you've seen it get things right.
- No promises, no prices beyond an approved list. Anything involving a discount, a complaint, or a legal-sounding sentence escalates to a person.
- Everything logged. You can see every message it touched and why.
The honest maths
Say email takes 90 minutes of your day and the assistant takes over two-thirds of it. That's roughly an hour a day, five hours a week, 20-plus hours a month back — for a setup cost around that of a decent laptop bag and a monthly fee less than your phone contract. If your time is worth anything close to your billing rate, it pays for itself inside the first month.
And the less obvious gain: speed. The enquiry that gets answered in four minutes converts better than the one answered at 9pm. Customers don't know you were on a site visit; they just know who replied first.
Is your business ready for one?
Three signs that say yes: you answer the same questions weekly; enquiries sometimes wait a day or more; and you've caught yourself doing email at 10pm more than once this month. Two signs to wait: you get fewer than ~10 emails a day (just answer them), or your replies are all genuinely bespoke judgement calls (an assistant can sort, but not draft, for you).
Want to see one working?
We run our own business on the exact system we sell. Book a free call and we'll show you, live.
Book a free call ↗