What Is AI for Marketing — And Do Ordinary Businesses Actually Need It?
By PlainAI · Updated June 2026 · 7 min read
You keep hearing that AI is going to transform marketing. But if you run a small business, a side project, or a local service — do any of these tools actually apply to you? Honestly, yes. And most of them are free or very cheap to start.
The marketing AI conversation tends to get dominated by enterprise software and agency jargon. This post ignores all of that. It’s for people who write their own social posts, send their own emails, and don’t have a marketing team — but wouldn’t mind getting more done in less time.
Here’s what AI marketing tools actually are, what they’re genuinely good at, and which ones are worth your time.
What does “AI for marketing” actually mean?
It sounds grand, but it mostly means two things: writing assistance and automation. AI can help you write faster — social captions, email subject lines, blog posts, ad copy — and it can help you automate repetitive tasks like scheduling, follow-up emails, and customer chat.
That’s it. There’s no magic audience-reading algorithm that guarantees you more sales. What there is, is a set of tools that make the time-consuming parts of marketing less painful — which for a small business owner is genuinely valuable.
Writing content — the thing AI is actually good at
If you’ve ever stared at a blank screen trying to write an Instagram caption or an email newsletter, AI writing tools are worth trying. You give them a prompt — “write three Instagram captions for a bakery in Leeds promoting a new sourdough loaf” — and they give you options to work from. You edit, you tweak, you post. It’s much faster than starting from scratch.
ChatGPT is the obvious starting point — most people have heard of it, and the free version is capable enough for basic marketing copy. For more marketing-specific output, tools like Writesonic and Copy.ai are built specifically around marketing formats — they have templates for Facebook ads, product descriptions, email sequences, and more.
“I used to spend an hour every Sunday writing social posts for the week. Now I spend about ten minutes editing what AI drafts for me. That hour back genuinely matters.”
The key mindset shift is treating AI as a first-draft machine, not a finished-product machine. The output usually needs a human voice added to it — your personality, your local references, your tone. But starting from something is always faster than starting from nothing.
Email marketing — where AI saves the most time
Email is one of the highest-return marketing channels for small businesses, and it’s also one of the most time-consuming to do consistently. AI helps in two ways: writing the emails themselves, and managing the automation behind them.
Most email platforms now have AI writing built in. Mailchimp — which you’re probably already familiar with — has an AI content generator that can draft campaigns from a brief. It’s not always brilliant, but it’s a reasonable starting point.
For more sophisticated automation (welcome sequences, abandoned cart emails, re-engagement campaigns), tools like Tidio combine live chat with email and automation in one place — useful if you run an online shop or service business and want customer communication to feel joined up.
Social media — AI as a creative shortcut
Consistency is the hardest part of social media for small businesses. AI doesn’t solve the strategy problem — you still need to know who you’re talking to and why — but it does solve the blank-page problem.
Beyond writing captions, AI image tools like Canva (which now has AI image generation and design assistance built in) make it much faster to produce graphics that look professional. You don’t need design skills. You describe what you want, it generates options, you pick and tweak.
For video content — increasingly important on most platforms — tools like InVideo can turn a text brief into a short video with voiceover and captions. It’s not Hollywood, but for a product explainer or a talking-head social clip, it’s quick and cheap.
What AI can’t do for your marketing
It’s worth being honest about the limits, because there’s a lot of hype around this space.
AI can’t replace knowing your customers. It can write a hundred variations of an email subject line, but it doesn’t know that your customers respond better to a sense of urgency than to a question, or that they hate exclamation marks. That knowledge comes from you.
It also can’t guarantee results. Writing better copy faster is useful, but if your underlying offer isn’t compelling or your audience targeting is off, no AI tool fixes that. Think of it as a multiplier on effort you’re already making — not a substitute for strategy.
And the output can be generic. AI-written copy often sounds like AI-written copy — smooth, competent, and slightly soulless. The businesses that use it well are the ones who edit it heavily and add their own voice.
Where to actually start
If you’ve never used any of these tools, the simplest entry point is ChatGPT. Open it, describe your business in one sentence, and ask it to write five social media captions for something you’re promoting this week. See what comes back. Edit it. Post the best one. That’s the whole workflow.
From there, the natural next steps depend on where you spend the most time. If it’s email, look at Mailchimp’s AI features or Tidio. If it’s social graphics, try Canva’s AI tools. If it’s video, InVideo is worth a free trial.
You don’t need to overhaul your whole marketing approach. Pick one thing that currently takes too long, find the AI tool that addresses it, and try it for a week. That’s a more useful experiment than reading about it.
Tools mentioned in this post
| Tool | What it helps with | Free plan? |
|---|---|---|
| ChatGPT | Writing copy, brainstorming, drafts | Yes |
| Writesonic | Marketing copy templates | Yes (limited) |
| Copy.ai | Ad copy, email, social captions | Yes |
| Tidio | Chat, email automation | Yes |
| Canva | Graphics, social images | Yes |
| InVideo | Short marketing videos | Yes (limited) |
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