The AI Questions Every Small Business Owner Is Thinking (But Nobody Answers) | AI Alchemist
The AI Questions Every Small Business Owner Is Thinking
(But Nobody In Your Industry Bothers to Answer)
Every AI guide for small businesses covers the same ground: what is ChatGPT, how do I write a prompt, what tasks can it do. Fine. Useful. But they all skip the questions people are actually sitting with — the ones about what happens when it goes wrong, whether your data is safe, how to get it to sound British, what to do when your staff won’t touch it, and whether you’re already falling behind. Those are the questions this page answers.
CRAFT Method: Context + Role + Ask (numbered) + Format + Tonecontinue in the chat and it will pick up exactly where it stopped. For very long documents, break your request into sections: “Write section 1 first, then I’ll ask for section 2.” Or specify a shorter word count upfront: “under 200 words” keeps you well within limits. This is most common when asking for full blog posts or detailed reports. It’s not a fault — it’s a simple limit with a simple fix.Settings → Data Controls → turn off “Improve the model for everyone”. On ChatGPT Team or Business, conversations are excluded from training by default. The practical rule: never paste a client’s full name, address, bank details, medical information or anything genuinely sensitive into a free or personal AI account. Use first names and general descriptions instead. For most daily written tasks — drafting emails, review replies, social posts — this level of caution is easy to maintain without limiting what AI can do for you.Settings → Personalization → Custom Instructions. In the first box (“What should ChatGPT know about you?”) write your business context: name, type, location, customer, and how you communicate. In the second box (“How should ChatGPT respond?”) add your tone and any phrases to avoid. Save it. From that point on, every new conversation starts with this context already loaded — you never paste it in again. On mobile: Settings → Custom Instructions. Same setup, same result.Write in British English to your prompt, or add it permanently to your Custom Instructions so it applies to every session automatically. More specific instructions work even better: “Warm, friendly British English — sounds like a real person from [your town], not a US corporate email.” For tradespeople: “Plain, direct British English — how a tradesperson would actually speak to a customer.” ChatGPT defaults to American spelling and phrasing without instruction. UK business owners should treat “British English” as a standard part of every prompt until it’s saved in Custom Instructions.