Artificial Intelligence

How Do I Get Started with AI in My Business?

Updated: 4 June 2026
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Short answer

You don't need a big budget or a technical team to get started with AI — starting with one small problem is enough. First, choose the routine that slows you down most in your work, try it with a free tool, and measure the result. If it works, scale up step by step; don't rush.

AI Isn't Magic — But It Works

Artificial intelligence is software that learns patterns by reading enormous amounts of text or data, then uses that learning to answer questions, write text, or perform analysis. Think of it not as magic, but as a tireless assistant: it does the task you give it repeatedly and consistently. It has limits too — for decisions requiring creativity or situations needing accurate expertise, human oversight is essential.

Don't fall into the "let AI do everything" trap. Successful businesses use AI not to hand off all their work, but to speed up specific repetitive tasks. Once it works for one use case, move on to the next.

5 Steps to Start Using AI in Your Business

  • 1. Choose a problem: Identify the most time-consuming repetitive task slowing you down — for example, "we reply to customer questions too slowly" or "we write the same emails every week."
  • 2. Try free tools: The free tiers of ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Microsoft Copilot are good starting points. All of them work in Turkish. Try each one yourself and see which feels better for your specific task.
  • 3. Train your team on basic use: Show them how to give instructions (prompts) to the tools. Simple exercises at the level of "ask it this, this way" are enough — no expertise required.
  • 4. Measure the result: How long did that task take before? How long does it take now? Is the quality different? If you can see it in numbers, your decision becomes easier.
  • 5. If it works, scale up: Once you're satisfied with one tool for one task, systematize similar repetitive jobs or evaluate more advanced integrations.

Which Tool for Which Job?

There are several standout tools on the market: OpenAI's ChatGPT is especially strong for writing text and brainstorming. Google's Gemini is practical for those who work integrated with Google Workspace. Anthropic's Claude stands out for long-text analysis and summarization. Microsoft Copilot offers in-app assistance for those using Word and Excel. All of these tools have free and paid tiers — since prices and features change rapidly, check the current details on their official sites. There is no single "best" — the right one is the one that fits your workflow.

Turkish language support: All the tools listed understand Turkish and respond in Turkish. At the SME scale, you can handle tasks like draft invoices, customer messages, and product descriptions using Turkish-language commands.

Common Starting Mistakes

  • Trying to transform everything at once: Connecting all your business processes to AI at the same time creates chaos. One step, one task.
  • Using output without verification: AI can occasionally produce incorrect or fabricated information — always double-check, especially for numerical, legal, or medical content.
  • Trying a tool once and giving up: The first result may not be perfect. Change the prompt and try again; a good prompt brings a good result.
  • Telling employees 'AI will replace you': Manage this concern. AI speeds up routine tasks; your employees can dedicate more time to higher-value work.

"Implementing AI isn't a big project — it starts with asking the right question: Which of this week's tasks repeats the most?"

Frequently asked questions

Do you need to be a developer or technical person to get started with AI?

No. Today's AI chat tools (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot) are as easy to use as a regular website — you just type text and press Enter. Technical knowledge only becomes relevant when you want to connect these tools to your own systems (API integration) — for that stage, you can get support from a digital agency or developer.

Can you do serious work with free tools, or do you need to switch to a paid plan right away?

You can do a lot with free versions: for daily tasks like text drafts, email replies, idea generation, and simple summarization, they are often enough. For heavy use or tasks requiring longer outputs, the difference with paid plans becomes noticeable. Start free first; consider upgrading only when you genuinely hit a limit.

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