
Boost Productivity with Google Chrome AI Skills for Businesses
Google Chrome’s New AI Skills: A Practical Playbook to Boost Productivity for Small Businesses and Solo Law Firms Google just turned the browser into a

Google Chrome’s New AI Skills: A Practical Playbook to Boost Productivity for Small Businesses and Solo Law Firms Google just turned the browser into a

AI has moved from “nice to have” to “daily use” in many small businesses. Recent survey data suggests 85% of employees say AI saves them

AI adoption in business has crossed a major threshold: roughly half of organizations are now using AI in some form. For small business owners, this

AI is no longer “future tech” reserved for big companies with big budgets. Today, small business owners can use beginner-friendly AI tools to answer customers

Gmail has been a “set it and forget it” tool for many small businesses for nearly two decades. But Google has recently accelerated major changes

LinkedIn is often the “safe” social network for business: professional, relationship-driven, and packed with opportunity. But recent reporting uncovered hidden code on LinkedIn pages that

AI-powered payment tools have become the “set it and forget it” backbone of many small businesses. The problem: a lot of these tools are now

Service businesses in blue-collar trades don’t need “more tech.” They need fewer missed calls, cleaner scheduling, faster estimates, and customers who feel taken care of—without

Great design used to mean hiring a specialist, waiting days for drafts, and paying for every revision. Today, a wave of AI design tools is

ERP projects used to be “big company” territory: expensive, slow, and hard to change once installed. That’s shifting fast. With LG CNS advancing an AI-driven

Small businesses rarely struggle with ideas—they struggle with time. Between serving customers, managing cash flow, and keeping operations moving, consistent marketing content can feel impossible.

Many small businesses have started using AI to write blogs, social posts, and emails—but then hit a wall: “Is this content actually working?” The next