NotebookLM for Small Business: How to Use Google’s Free AI Tool to Find New Revenue Opportunities

NotebookLM for Small Business: Find Revenue Hidden in Your Own Documents | AI Alchemist
AI Tools 📖 Google NotebookLM 📈 Revenue Growth 🅾 100% Free

NotebookLM for Small Business:
How to Use Google’s Free AI Tool to Find Revenue Hiding in Your Own Documents

Most small business owners have never heard of NotebookLM. That’s about to change. Google’s free AI research tool doesn’t search the internet — it reads your own documents and finds what you’re missing. Your reviews. Your old quotes. Your competitor’s website. The answers to where you’re leaving money on the table are already in there. You just haven’t had a tool to surface them. Until now.

Here’s the thing about the revenue opportunities hiding in your business right now: they’re not hiding very well. They’re in your Google reviews. They’re in the proposals you sent last year. They’re in your competitors’ websites. They’re in the gap between what you charge and what your market will actually bear.

The problem isn’t that the information isn’t there. The problem is that you’ve never had a tool that could read all of it at once and tell you what it means. NotebookLM is that tool. And it costs nothing.

Free
NotebookLM is completely free at notebooklm.google.com — sign in with your Google account
50
sources per notebook on the free tier — enough for every document your business has
0%
of your documents used to train AI models — Google confirmed: your data stays private

What Is NotebookLM? (Plain English, 90 Seconds)

NotebookLM is Google’s free AI research assistant. You go to notebooklm.google.com, sign in with your Google account, create a “notebook” and upload your documents. NotebookLM reads everything you’ve given it and then answers questions — in plain English — based only on those documents. Not the internet. Not generic training data. Just what you’ve uploaded.

Every answer it gives you comes with a citation: a direct link back to the exact section of the document the answer came from. So you can verify everything. No hallucinations about your business. No generic advice that doesn’t apply to you. Just grounded, specific insights drawn from your own material.

💡 The Critical Difference From ChatGPT
ChatGPT knows the internet. NotebookLM knows your business. When you ask ChatGPT “what services should my café add?” it gives you advice based on cafés in general — advice that’s been given to every other café owner who asked the same question. When you ask NotebookLM the same question after uploading your own reviews and pricing, it tells you what your customers are asking for that you’re not providing. The difference in specificity — and therefore in value — is significant.
⚠️ ChatGPT Knows the Internet
Generic advice based on millions of businesses worldwide. Useful for writing and brainstorming. Not useful for finding what your specific customers want or where your specific business is losing revenue.
✅ NotebookLM Knows Your Business
Specific, cited answers drawn only from documents you upload. Knows your reviews, your prices, your proposals, your competitors. Finds the revenue opportunities hiding in your data — not a theoretical average business.

What Can I Actually Upload?

This is where most small business owners are surprised. You don’t need to prepare special documents or create anything new. The sources that produce the most valuable insights are things you already have, most of which take under two minutes to get into NotebookLM.

Google & Trustpilot Reviews
Go to your Google Business Profile, select “See all reviews”, select all and copy. Paste directly into NotebookLM as a text source. Done in 60 seconds.
🌐
Competitor Websites
Paste your competitor’s website URL directly into NotebookLM. It reads the full page content automatically. Add 3–5 competitor URLs in under two minutes.
📄
Old Proposals & Quotes
Upload PDFs directly, or copy-paste text from old quotes and emails. The patterns across 10–20 old proposals reveal exactly where and why you lose business.
📊
Industry Reports & PDFs
Upload trade body reports, government sector data, or market research PDFs. NotebookLM reads and cross-references all of them simultaneously.
🎥
YouTube Videos
Paste any YouTube URL. NotebookLM reads the transcript automatically. Useful for competitor video content, industry conference talks, or customer testimonial videos.
📞
WhatsApp & Email Threads
Copy-paste customer WhatsApp conversations or email threads as plain text. Patterns in enquiry and complaint language reveal what your market is really asking for.
🔒 Free Download
5 AI Prompts That Save 5 Hours This Week
While NotebookLM finds your revenue opportunities, the CRAFT Method helps you act on them. Free copy-paste prompts for every business task — no tech skills needed.
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5 Revenue Use Cases — With Copy-Paste Questions

These are the five workflows that produce the most direct revenue insights for small business owners. Each one includes the exact questions to ask NotebookLM once you’ve uploaded the relevant sources. Copy them exactly. The specificity is deliberate — vague questions produce vague answers, here just as with ChatGPT.

Use Case 01 of 05
⭐ Mine Your Reviews for New Revenue Streams
“Your customers are already telling you what they want to buy from you. They’re just not saying it directly. NotebookLM hears what they mean.”

Upload your Google reviews, Trustpilot reviews, and any customer feedback you’ve received. This is the fastest route to uncovering upsell opportunities and new services your existing customer base is already willing to pay for — because they’re asking for them in the reviews you haven’t had time to analyse properly.

A café owner who tried this found that 23 separate reviews mentioned wanting a “loyalty scheme” or “stamp card.” She introduced one within a week. A plumber found that 14 reviews mentioned wishing he offered boiler servicing alongside repairs. A florist found that a third of 5-star reviews mentioned wedding flowers — a service she’d never formally promoted. Each of these is a revenue stream hiding in plain sight.

📄 Sources to Upload

Google reviews (copy from Google Maps), Trustpilot reviews, Facebook reviews, any customer survey responses.

  • What do customers most frequently mention wanting that we don’t currently appear to offer?
  • What specific services or products are customers recommending to friends in these reviews?
  • What problems or frustrations do customers mention that we could solve with an additional service?
  • What do our 5-star reviews have in common that we could do more of intentionally?
  • What seasonal patterns appear in the feedback — are there months when customers ask for things we don’t currently offer?
Use Case 02 of 05
🌐 Find Your Competitor Gaps in Ten Minutes
“Manual competitor research takes hours. NotebookLM does it across five competitor websites simultaneously and tells you exactly where the positioning gaps are.”

Paste the URLs of your top three to five competitors’ websites directly into NotebookLM as sources. It reads their full service pages, pricing signals, about pages and testimonials. Then ask it to identify the gaps between what they offer and what the market is looking for — those gaps are your positioning opportunities.

A letting agent used this and discovered that none of her three local competitors mentioned pet-friendly properties on their websites — despite multiple reviews on Google Maps from tenants mentioning pets as a search criterion. She added a dedicated pet-friendly landlord page and saw a measurable increase in enquiries within three weeks. The opportunity was visible to anyone who looked. Nobody had looked.

📄 Sources to Upload

Competitor website URLs (paste directly — NotebookLM reads them), competitor Google Business Profile descriptions (copy-paste), competitor Trustpilot review pages.

  • What services or benefits do I offer that none of these competitors appear to mention?
  • What language and phrases do these competitors use most often to attract customers — and what’s missing from that language?
  • What customer concerns or questions do these sites fail to address that a potential customer would want answered before choosing?
  • What pricing signals do these competitors give, and where does their positioning appear weakest?
  • If a customer read all five of these websites, what single reason would they have to choose my business that none of them offer?
Use Case 03 of 05
📄 Find Why You’re Losing Proposals
“You wrote those proposals. You can’t be objective about them. NotebookLM can. And it will tell you exactly where the pattern of loss is.”

Upload your last ten to twenty sales proposals, quotes or client email threads — especially the ones that didn’t convert. NotebookLM reads across all of them and surfaces the patterns: the objections that come up repeatedly, the things you consistently forgot to address, the pricing signals that are ambiguous, the questions that suggest the prospect wasn’t yet convinced before you sent the quote.

A freelance web designer did this with fifteen declined proposals and discovered that twelve of them sent the price without first establishing the ROI of a better website. She restructured her proposals to include a one-paragraph “value case” before the price section. Her conversion rate improved in the following month. The pattern was sitting in fifteen documents she’d already written. She just needed something to read them all at once.

📄 Sources to Upload

Old proposals (PDF or copy-paste text), declined quote emails, follow-up email threads, any “we went with someone else” responses you’ve received.

  • What objections or concerns appear most frequently across these proposals and correspondence?
  • What questions do prospects ask that suggest they don’t yet understand the value before seeing the price?
  • What information appears to be consistently missing from these proposals that a buyer would need to make a confident decision?
  • What language patterns in the “no thank you” responses suggest the real reason for not proceeding?
  • Where does the structure or sequence of information in these proposals work against building confidence before the price is revealed?
Use Case 04 of 05
📊 Find the Trends Your Business Isn’t Responding To
“Industry reports are free. Nobody reads them. NotebookLM reads them for you and tells you exactly what a business like yours should be doing differently.”

Most trade associations and industry bodies publish annual reports. Government departments publish sector statistics. Journals publish trend data. All of it is freely available, almost never read by the independent business owners it’s written about, and packed with signals about where money is moving in your sector.

A pub landlord uploaded the British Beer and Pub Association’s annual report, the Office for National Statistics data on leisure spending, and three articles about post-pandemic hospitality trends. He asked NotebookLM what the data suggested about where his business should be investing. The answer — low-alcohol and alcohol-free drinks category, which was growing at 24% annually — was clearly visible in the data. He hadn’t read any of those three documents. He’d downloaded them and forgotten about them.

📄 Sources to Upload

Trade association annual reports (PDFs), government sector statistics, industry journal articles, competitor earnings reports if public, any research you’ve downloaded but not fully read.

  • What trends in this data should a small independent business in this sector be actively responding to right now?
  • What consumer behaviour changes appear in this data that are not yet widely reflected in how small businesses in this sector operate?
  • What specific market segments or customer groups appear to be underserved based on this data?
  • What do the most successful operators in this sector appear to be doing differently according to this research?
  • What risks to the traditional revenue model of a small business in this sector does this data suggest — and what alternative revenue streams does it point toward?
Use Case 05 of 05
📈 Find Where You’re Undercharging
“Your pricing was set based on what felt right at the time. NotebookLM compares it against the reality of what’s actually involved in delivering it — and finds the gap.”

Upload your current price list or service menu alongside your standard operating procedures, your old time-tracking records (even rough notes), and your competitor pricing pages. Ask NotebookLM to identify where the time or complexity involved in delivering a service appears to be underrepresented in what you charge for it. This is one of the highest-value exercises in the guide — because underpricing is almost never the result of a decision. It’s the result of never having looked.

A mobile dog groomer uploaded her price list, a rough log of how long each service type actually took, and the pricing pages of six competitors in adjacent towns. NotebookLM identified that her “full groom” service for large breeds was taking an average of 90 minutes longer than her pricing implied — and that competitors in the next town charged 35% more for an equivalent service. She hadn’t put up her prices in two years. The data to justify the increase had always been there.

📄 Sources to Upload

Your current price list or rate card, your SOPs or service descriptions, rough time logs or job records, competitor pricing pages (paste URLs), any client feedback mentioning value or pricing.

  • Where does the complexity or time required for a service appear to be underrepresented in the pricing compared to how it’s described in the SOPs?
  • Which services appear most underpriced relative to competitor positioning in these sources?
  • What services or add-ons are described in the SOPs that don’t appear in the current price list?
  • Where does the language used to describe services in the pricing undersell the value compared to how customers describe the outcome in the reviews?
  • What is the most defensible price increase across the service menu based on all the evidence in these documents?

How to Start in Ten Minutes

The barrier to starting is lower than you think. You don’t need to prepare anything special. You don’t need a paid subscription. You don’t need to understand how the AI works. Here is the exact sequence:

▶ Your First Session — Step by Step
Step 1: Go to notebooklm.google.com and sign in with your Google account.

Step 2: Click “New Notebook” and give it a name — something like “Revenue Research June 2026.”

Step 3: Add your first source. Start with the easiest: go to your Google Business Profile, find “See all reviews,” select all the text, copy it and paste it into NotebookLM using “Copied text.”

Step 4: Add one competitor website URL as a second source. Paste the URL directly.

Step 5: Ask your first question from Use Case 1 above. NotebookLM will respond within seconds with a cited answer.

The first answer you get will almost certainly surprise you. That surprise is the point. The insight was always there. You just hadn’t had a tool to surface it.
✅ One Rule That Makes Everything Better
Always ask follow-up questions. NotebookLM’s first answer is the starting point, not the destination. After it answers “what do customers most want that we don’t offer?” immediately follow with “which of those opportunities would require the least investment to introduce?” or “what would be the most profitable one to test first?” The conversation deepens the insight. One question gives you information. Five questions give you a strategy.

Is It Safe? What About My Sensitive Documents?

Google has officially confirmed that NotebookLM does not use your uploaded sources or your conversations to train its AI models. Your documents are private to your account. This is meaningfully different from some other AI tools and makes it appropriate to upload real business data: your actual proposals, pricing, client feedback and financial context.

For most small business owners doing standard revenue research — reviews, proposals, competitor analysis, industry reports — NotebookLM is considered safe and appropriate by the vast majority of business users and has been endorsed for business use by the US Small Business Administration. If you work in a heavily regulated sector (legal, medical, financial services under FCA oversight), check with your professional compliance advisor before uploading client-specific data.

💡 The Bigger Picture
NotebookLM and ChatGPT are not competing tools — they solve different problems. Use ChatGPT (and the CRAFT Method) to write and communicate: customer emails, social posts, review replies, proposals. Use NotebookLM to research and discover: what your customers want, where competitors are weak, why you’re losing business, where your pricing is out of step. Together, they give a small business the research capability of a marketing consultant and the communication ability of a professional copywriter — both free, both available today.

Frequently Asked Questions

NotebookLM is Google’s free AI research assistant available at notebooklm.google.com. It is completely free to use — sign in with a Google account and start immediately. The free tier allows up to 50 sources per notebook. Unlike ChatGPT, NotebookLM only works from the documents you upload. Every answer is cited from your specific sources, making it more trustworthy for business research than a general AI chatbot that draws from the internet.
ChatGPT draws from the general internet and produces generic advice that doesn’t know anything specific about your business. NotebookLM draws exclusively from documents you upload — your reviews, proposals, competitor websites, industry reports — and gives cited answers specific to that material. For finding revenue opportunities in your own business data, NotebookLM is significantly more powerful because the answers are already in your documents. You just haven’t had a tool to surface them.
NotebookLM accepts PDF files, Google Docs and Slides, Google Sheets, plain text, website URLs, YouTube video links (reads the transcript), audio files and images including screenshots. For small business owners this means: Google reviews (copy-paste), competitor websites (paste the URL), old proposals (PDF or paste), industry reports (PDF), YouTube videos about your industry (paste the URL), and your own price lists and SOPs.
Yes — Google has confirmed that NotebookLM does not use your uploaded sources or conversations to train its AI models. Your documents remain private to your account. For most small business owners doing standard revenue research — reviews, proposals, competitor analysis, industry reports — NotebookLM is considered safe and appropriate. It has been endorsed for business use by the US Small Business Administration. For regulated sector data, check with your compliance advisor first.
Under ten minutes from opening the website to your first useful insight. Go to notebooklm.google.com, sign in with your Google account, click ‘New Notebook’, paste your Google reviews as the first source and ask your first question. Most small business owners who try it for the first time report that the first answer is genuinely surprising — something they knew was in their data but had never had time or tools to surface.
Yes — NotebookLM works in a mobile browser at notebooklm.google.com. There is no dedicated mobile app as of June 2026, but the web interface is functional on smartphones. The Audio Overview feature — which converts your research into a podcast-style conversation — is specifically designed for mobile listening, letting you absorb insights while commuting or between appointments.
👥 Found Your Opportunities — Now Act on Them
The CRAFT Method — Turn NotebookLM Insights Into Customers
NotebookLM tells you where your revenue opportunities are. The CRAFT Method gives you the prompts to communicate them — the customer emails, review replies, social posts and proposals that convert insight into income. Start with the free guide.
👉 Get the Ebook — $27Instant download · 30-day money-back guarantee
K
Kieron Penrose
Creator of the CRAFT Method · AI Alchemist

Kieron spent 20 years as a management trainer working with Pepsi and Cadbury. He now helps small business owners get real, practical results from AI — without a tech background, a coding degree, or an IT department. NotebookLM is one of the tools he recommends most often to business owners who want to find growth before they spend on marketing.

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