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    Home»Business»Anthropic courts mom-and-pop shops with Claude for Small Business
    Business 3 Mins Read

    Anthropic courts mom-and-pop shops with Claude for Small Business

    Business 3 Mins Read
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    Anthropic on Wednesday launched Claude for Small Business, a new package of agentic workflows, skills, and connectors designed to automate business tasks common to smaller companies.

    Claude for Small Business includes workflows for payroll planning, month-end close, business performance monitoring, and marketing campaign management. It also includes skills, or reusable capability packages for AI agents, focused on cash-flow forecasting, invoice chasing, contract review, lead triage, content strategy, and more, Anthropic says.

    Users get connectors, or integrations, to commonly used platforms including QuickBooks, PayPal, HubSpot, Canva, DocuSign, Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, Slack, and others. Small business owners can start using the product by installing a plug-in for Claude CoWork, Anthropic’s general digital platform.

    Anthropic believes small businesses are increasingly interested in AI but have been underserved by the tech industry. “The software industry has been built for enterprises, for VC-backed startups, and consumers, but not the 50-employee HVAC contractor or the 25-person landscape company,” says Lina Ochman, Anthropic’s head of U.S. Small and Medium-Sized Businesses. “No one has really shown up with something designed for how small businesses actually work.”

    Anthropic is also launching a free on-demand AI training course co-developed with PayPal and taught by small business owners. The “AI fluency” course gives small business owners a framework, called the 4D Framework, for understanding and applying AI to business functions. Its four components are:

    • Delegation: Deciding which tasks to hand over to AI.
    • Description: Best practices for writing high-quality prompts to get the best output.
    • Discernment: Creating quality-assurance mechanisms to check for hallucinations or errors.
    • Diligence: Establishing a governance framework for human-centric AI collaboration within a company.

    “That in particular helps the small business owner who doesn’t know how to get started on AI to kind of get them comfortable and over the learning curve,” Ochman says.

    Claude for Small Business is also going on tour, Ochman says, with 10 free workshops across U.S. cities through the end of June. About 100 small business owners will participate in hands-on sessions using Claude Cowork, Anthropic’s desktop automation tool. The tour kicks off May 14 in Chicago. Anthropic will grant each attendee one month of its Claude Max subscription, which normally costs $100 to $200 per month.

    Anthropic cited its own market research to show small businesses’ readiness for AI tools. The company found that 64% of respondents want agents or automations that can run workflows, while 81% said they are open to new AI tools, with 47% actively shopping for the right solution. Anthropic also said 50% of respondents cited data security as the top barrier to adoption, while 85% ranked software integrations as the most appealing AI concept.

    Anthropic and other AI labs are racing to help large enterprises infuse existing workflows with AI, or reinvent them entirely, and that process is only beginning to take shape. Anthropic has remained focused on enterprise customers, but Ochman says small businesses are an important parallel focus.

    “Small businesses are a really important part of the economy and the labor force, and it is important that they are not, for lack of a better word, left behind in this,” she says. “Ensuring that we’re able to close the knowledge gap in terms of AI adoption is incredibly important.”



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