For a small business, one good AI assistant replaces a surprising amount of contract work: drafting, analysis, research, customer emails, marketing copy, even light coding. But which one? We compared the majors on actual small-business tasks.
Quick picks: Best overall: ChatGPT · Best for writing-heavy businesses: Claude · Best for Google Workspace shops: Gemini · Best for research: Perplexity
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1. ChatGPT
Widest capability per dollar: documents, images for marketing, data analysis, voice, custom GPTs for repeat workflows. If the business buys one AI subscription, this is the default answer.
Visit ChatGPT →◆
2. Claude
The pick when your business runs on documents: better prose, better long-document handling, and Projects that hold your business context across conversations. Content businesses and consultancies tend to land here.
Visit Claude →◆
3. Google Gemini
Gemini's advantage is placement: it drafts in Gmail, summarizes in Docs, and reads your Drive. For Workspace-based teams the integration can outweigh raw capability differences.
Visit Google Gemini →◆
4. Perplexity
Competitor research, market questions, fact-checking — with citations you can put in front of a client. A strong second subscription for research-heavy businesses.
Visit Perplexity →◆
5. Microsoft Copilot
The same logic as Gemini, for the Microsoft world: AI inside Word, Excel, Outlook and Teams. If your business runs on Office, Copilot meets you there.
Visit Microsoft Copilot →How to choose
Choose by where your work lives. Documents and content: Claude. A bit of everything: ChatGPT. Google Workspace: Gemini. Microsoft 365: Copilot. Research: Perplexity. Most small businesses do well with one general assistant at $20/month, adding a second only when a clear gap appears.
Frequently asked questions
Which AI assistant is best for a small business?
ChatGPT for breadth, Claude for writing-heavy businesses. Both at $20/month with free tiers to trial.
Can AI replace hiring for small tasks?
It reliably replaces the blank-page stage of writing, research and analysis. Judgment, relationships and accountability remain human work.
Should a business pay for two assistants?
Only after one is clearly earning its keep and a specific gap (usually research or a second opinion on writing) justifies the second.