If your AI strategy is a growing list of tools and prompts, but you still personally own every important workflow, the problem is not your stack. It is how you describe the work.
Across most AI enthusiastic small-business communities, owners say the same things in different words: "I want an AI agent to handle my export documents", "I need a business bot for invoicing and CRM", "I am drowning in HR admin and tools." They do not lack options. They lack a simple way to turn messy, real-world work into something an AI can reliably own.
With Get BOB, that first step is deliberately simple. You do not have to spell out every trigger, step, and exception. You can start with a single, plain-language sentence about the overall responsibility you want a BOB to take on—for example:
"Make sure every qualified lead who contacts us about a roofing or remodeling job gets a fast, professional response and a clear next step. Run replies by me for approval, before sending them, if they contain pricing or sensitive information."
From that one sentence, BOB designs and continuously maintains the underlying workflows it needs—deciding which tools to watch, which actions to take, and when to pull you in. You can always refine and tighten things later, but you do not have to start by scripting the details.
This article is a practical playbook for that first step. It is written for non-technical owners, general managers, and operators who are curious about AI but do not want to become workflow architects. We will focus on how to write short, clear job descriptions for AI digital employees—like BOBs in Get BOB—so they can take real work off your plate instead of giving you one more dashboard to monitor.
Along the way, we will connect to ideas from our guides on agentic orchestration, digital employees, and AI automation platforms, but we will stay firmly in operator language, not framework diagrams.
If you have ever spent time on r/AiForSmallBusiness, you have probably seen clear patterns:
In almost every thread, the conversation jumps straight to tools: which stack, which agent framework, which integrations. What is missing is a simple, repeatable way for an operator to say, in plain language, "Here is the overall responsibility I want a digital employee to own."
That is the real blocker. A good brief turns AI from a clever assistant you poke occasionally into a holistic digital employee that quietly runs multiple workflows, coordinates tools, and asks you smart questions when it hits an edge case.
Most people’s first contact with AI is a prompt box. You type something like:
"Write a follow-up email for this lead who…"
That is a prompt: one-off instructions to a chat window. Prompts are great for ad-hoc help, but they do not create a system. You still have to remember when to ask, paste the right context, and move the result into your tools.
A job description is different. It defines an ongoing responsibility, not a one-time output. For example:
"Own lead triage from form submission to first response. Make sure every genuine inquiry receives a fast, relevant reply and is moved to the right next step, while looping me in on pricing and unusual edge cases."
In Get BOB, BOBs are designed to fill these ongoing roles. You hand them an area of responsibility—like incoming leads, export shipments, or onboarding—and they design, run, and maintain the necessary workflows across your tools. You stay in the manager seat, shaping goals and guardrails, just like how you'd assign new responsibilities to human colleagues.
The shift is from "do this once for me" to "own this job for me"—and from step-by-step instructions to a short, human description of responsibility that BOB can turn into a living system of workflows.
To see how this works in practice, here are three concrete examples:
You do not need to know every edge case before you start. Begin with a narrow mission in one or two sentences, and let your job description evolve as you and your BOB learn.
In reality, most small businesses already have enough tools: a CRM, email, calendar, billing, maybe a helpdesk. The missing piece is a clear responsibility for a digital employee to run across those tools.
Better approach: pick one painful recurring job (lead triage, export docs, HR onboarding, community management) and write a one- or two-sentence brief. Let that job pull in the tools it needs, rather than starting from a catalog of tools.
If you waited until every corner case was documented, you would never hire a human employee either. The same is true for digital employees.
Better approach: start with the 70–80 percent of situations you can describe. Use guardrails ("if unsure, ask me") and treat your job description as a living document you update as new patterns emerge.
Expecting full autonomy immediately is a recipe for disappointment and risk.
Better approach: follow the pattern we describe in our digital employees article: start with human-in-the-loop, where your BOB drafts and assembles work, and you approve. As trust grows, gradually grant more autonomy on low-risk actions.
Your business will change. So should your AI job descriptions.
Better approach: review each digital employee’s job description every quarter or after major process changes. Ask three questions: Is the mission still right? Are the guardrails still correct? Where did we override the BOB most often, and what does that teach us?
Many DIY stacks combine Notion, Zapier or Make, a CRM, and one or more AI tools. They are powerful—but they also turn you into the integration engineer and the project manager.
Get BOB offers a different pattern:
If you want a deeper look at how this works in practice, our case study on how two BOBs run our blogging workflow walks through an end-to-end example.
Instead of adding another tool to your stack this week, try this:
You do not need to rebuild your business in AI to see value. You just need to hire your first digital employee the way you would hire a person: with a clear responsibility, expressed in language you already use.