Artificial intelligence is no longer a distant concept reserved for large enterprises. It is now accessible and practical for businesses of all sizes.
For SMBs, this creates a real opportunity. AI can help improve productivity, streamline workflows, support decision-making, and reduce time spent on repetitive tasks. But it also raises an important question: how can organizations adopt AI in a way that is useful, secure, and properly governed?
That was the focus of our recent webinar, Safely Unlocking the Power of AI for SMBs, presented by Larry Keating, President and Founder of NPC DataGuard, and Darren Mar, Director of Client Solutions.
At its core, AI is a system designed to simulate aspects of human intelligence. It can identify patterns, generate content, support decisions, and respond to questions. But AI does not think like a human. It predicts, classifies, and generates outputs based on large volumes of information.
That distinction matters. AI can be useful, but it still requires human judgement, validation, and oversight.
For many SMBs, the easiest place to begin is with practical use cases. AI can help draft emails, summarize documents, create reports, generate marketing content, support customer communication, and automate routine administrative work. These are areas where businesses can often see value quickly because they reduce manual effort and help teams work more efficiently.
AI should not be viewed as one single tool. It is better understood as a toolbox. Predictive AI can help forecast outcomes. Generative AI can create content. Conversational AI can support customer or employee interactions. Automation AI can help execute repetitive workflows. Computer vision can analyze images, video, or documents. Each type of AI serves a different purpose, and the right use case depends on the business problem being solved.
As AI becomes more capable, businesses are also beginning to hear more about agentic AI. This refers to AI systems that can take action, not only provide answers. These tools can complete multi-step tasks, interact with software, and work through a defined objective. While this area is still emerging, it reinforces why governance, permissions, and oversight are so important before AI becomes deeply connected to business systems.
Before expanding AI use, SMBs should understand where they are in their own AI maturity journey. Some organizations are just beginning to experiment. Others are using AI in specific departments. More advanced organizations are beginning to build repeatable processes, governance, and measurement around AI adoption.
This maturity lens is important because not every business should move at the same pace. A company that is still learning how AI works should not approach adoption the same way as one that already has approved tools, trained employees, and defined internal policies. Understanding the current stage helps leaders decide what should come next.
A structured approach can help SMBs move from interest to implementation. This begins with identifying a few high-impact business opportunities where AI may provide measurable value. From there, organizations can look at their existing processes and determine where AI can support or improve the workflow.
Once the opportunity is clear, the next step is selecting tools through both a value and risk lens. The question is not only whether a tool can improve efficiency, but whether it fits the organization’s security, privacy, and operational requirements. After that, a small pilot can help teams test the solution, measure results, and learn adapt before scaling.
Governance should not come after AI adoption. It should be part of the foundation.
Responsible AI use requires clear data privacy policies, security protections, compliance monitoring, human oversight, and employee training. These are not technical details. They are business responsibilities. Leaders remain accountable for how AI is used inside their organizations, especially when sensitive information, client data, or internal systems are involved.
Without proper governance and set up, AI can introduce real risks. Employees may enter confidential information into public tools. AI-generated outputs may be inaccurate or incomplete. Businesses may face compliance concerns if AI is used without proper review. Staff may also begin using tools independently, without approval or oversight, creating gaps the organization may not be aware of. For SMBs, permissions, controls, and governance should be reviewed before enabling these types of integrations.
AI can provide meaningful value for SMBs, but successful adoption requires a clear understanding of the technology, a realistic view of maturity, and a governance-first approach to implementation.
The opportunity is to use AI in a way that supports productivity, protects the business, and gives leaders greater confidence as the technology continues to evolve.