Stop wasting hours hunting down fragmented AI resources and falling behind on tools that could transform your small business operations.
AI Reading List is a carefully curated, publicly shared Google Doc organized by industry expert Jack Soslow that aggregates the most relevant AI articles, research papers, and resources in one searchable location. Instead of bouncing between Twitter, newsletters, and news sites, you get a single source of truth updated regularly with vetted content about AI trends, tools, and applications specifically useful for small business owners trying to stay competitive.
The document breaks down complex AI topics into digestible sections, making it accessible whether you're a non-technical founder or someone with technical experience. You can quickly find resources relevant to your specific business challenges—from AI marketing automation to customer service improvements to operational efficiency—without the noise of irrelevant content cluttering your research time.
Small business owners and managers in any industry who need to understand AI tools quickly: e-commerce store owners evaluating AI product descriptions and customer service tools, marketing agencies implementing AI-powered content creation, service-based businesses exploring automation, professional services firms considering AI research assistants, and startups making technology stack decisions. Also valuable for operations managers, marketing directors, and anyone responsible for keeping their small business competitive in an AI-accelerated economy.
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Small business owners typically spend 5-10 hours per week hunting scattered AI resources across multiple platforms, often learning about tools weeks after they could have started saving time. This reading list compresses that research time to 30-60 minutes per week while dramatically improving the quality of your knowledge. By staying informed on practical AI applications relevant to your business, you can implement productivity improvements worth $500-$2,000+ per month depending on your operation size, discover tools that eliminate repetitive tasks costing your team 10+ hours weekly, and make better technology decisions that prevent costly wrong investments. For a small business spending $50,000-$200,000 annually on tools and software, better-informed purchasing decisions alone often pay for the time saved.