The Good Tech Companies - How Katerina Andreeva Helps Small Businesses Adopt AI With Clarity
Episode Date: June 26, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-katerina-andreeva-helps-small-businesses-adopt-ai-with-clarity. Katerina Andreeva helps ...small businesses adopt AI with clarity—turning complex tools into repeatable workflows for content, sales, and client operations. Check more stories related to machine-learning at: https://hackernoon.com/c/machine-learning. You can also check exclusive content about #small-business-ai, #katerina-andreeva, #ai-adoption, #marketing-automation, #ai-workflows, #prompt-engineering, #ai-literacy, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @jonstojanjournalist. Learn more about this writer by checking @jonstojanjournalist's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. AI strategist Katerina Andreeva equips small businesses to move from AI confusion to confident execution. Through interviews and workflow design, she identified gaps in prompt use, tool visibility, and application mapping—then created lightweight, scalable systems for content, outreach, and automation that deliver real business results.
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How Katarina Andriva Helps Small Businesses Adopt AI with Clarity, by John Stoyan Journalist
While headlines focus on enterprise AI breakthroughs, small businesses are quietly
navigating their revolution and hitting familiar roadblocks. According to Service Direct's 2025
Small Business AI report, 62% of non-adopters cite a lack of understanding
about AI's benefits, while 60% point to limited in-house resources as the main barriers.
Even among those adopting AI, 72% struggle with integration and day-to-day usage.
This gap between curiosity and execution reflects a deeper issue. Small business owners are
interested in AI but often overwhelmed by its complexity. To explore how they can move from hesitation to
confident implementation, Hacker Noon turned to AI adoption expert Katerina
Andriva. Katerina is a data strategist with over a decade of experience and the
founder of the Braindink, an edtech startup that helps small businesses apply AI
effectively. She also serves on the executive board of Net4Tech, the leading network for women in
the STEM environment, and brings a unique interdisciplinary perspective as a coach and
neurointegration trainer.
Through dozens of customer development interviews and hands-on collaborations with entrepreneurs,
she has uncovered the reasons adoption fails and the use cases that work.
This article explores why so many founders struggle with AI, highlights four practical
and affordable workflows that drive real results, and explains why education is the missing
link in making AI work for small businesses.
Three gaps holding founders back across more than 30 in-depth interviews, Katarina Andriva
set out to understand how founders and solo professionals actually approach AI in their
daily routines.
Participants included coaches juggling client sessions, consultants balancing delivery with
sales, and business owners managing lean teams with little technical support.
Each received a practical AI use case mapped to their business workflow in return for their
time.
Most had already experimented with Chad GPT.
They asked it to write emails, summarize
articles, and brainstorm content. But beyond that first layer, patterns began to emerge.
The first gap was prompt engineering, or rather, the lack of a structured approach. Founders
described unpredictable results, frustration, and wasted time. The second was tool visibility.
Aside from Chad GPT, few could name another
platform. Automation tools, search optimization models, and audio processors. These weren't even
on their radar. The third was application mapping. Even those excited about AI struggled to tie it to
their workflows. Ideas floated, but didn't anchor to anything repeatable. The interviews spanned
professionals from multiple segments, including neurointegration
coaches, psychologists, solo consultants, small business founders, and executives managing
operations at companies with annual revenues in the hundreds of millions, says Katarina.
They all had motivation and curiosity.
What they lacked was clarity.
Operational use cases and technical configurations after identifying consistent capability gaps during the interview phase, Katarina Andriva
developed a set of eye-enabled workflows tailored to participants' operational models.
Each solution was designed to be lightweight, secure, and executable without technical teams
or vendor dependencies. Katarina notes. Every proposed setup had to meet three criteria. The solution had to be replicable, maintainable without external developers, and linked to
a measurable business function.
If they can't apply it without hiring someone else, it's not a real solution.
Automation for coaches.
Coaches and neurointegration specialists often spend 90 to 120 minutes preparing summaries,
interpreting assessments, and drafting personalized
proposals after each session. Katarina Andriva developed an automated workflow combining
transcription tools, such as Fireflies, with structured Chad GPT templates to streamline
this process. The system generates a complete session summary and commercial proposal in
under 15 minutes, significantly reducing manual workload.
Large-scale call and meeting summarization. For larger teams to automate meeting summaries,
Catarina proposed an advanced configuration to analyze sales call recordings at scale.
Instead of manually reviewing 10 out of 100 calls, companies can now process 100% of recorded
conversations to identify behavioral patterns,
performance gaps, and growth opportunities.
One business with approximately $300 million in annual revenue has already begun implementing
this system.
Automated LinkedIn Outreach for B2B founders
Ms. Andriva introduced a LinkedIn-based cold outreach automation workflow for business
owners without a dedicated sales staff.
The configuration allowed userSTOW scale lead generation without hiring additional team
members by automating personalized messaging sequences.
In a recent case, she advised a B2B founder whose LinkedIn channel had been underutilized.
Within one month, the business recorded a 30% increase in new leads entering the sales
pipeline.
A similar system is currently being implemented at Net4Tech, a non-profit organization where
Katarina volunteers.
Operating under strict budget constraints, the team was able to deploy the outreach system
using cost-effective AI tools.
AI augmented content creation
AI augmented content creation proved relevant to nearly all participants.
Ms. Andriva introduced a structured approach for generative AI to support the full content
lifecycle, from idea generation to drafting and refinement.
The method was applied to multiple formats, including social media posts, email campaigns,
and blog articles.
While technically accessible, the workflow emphasized consistency and template-based execution to ensure scalable output across channels, says Katarina.
Enabling independence through AI literacy while AI tools continue to expand in number and capability, tool accessal one does not lead to effective adoption.
Across all interview segments, Ms. Andreev observed that even well-resourced business owners often paused implementation
due to uncertainty about how to apply them systematically.
The goal is to design clear, repeatable systems that founders can operate and improve without
external support, Katerina shares.
When a tool fits into a well-defined workflow, it becomes part of how the business runs.
Without that connection, most tools lose relevance once the novelty fades.
Education turns short-term results into long-term capability. This principle forms the foundation of
her edtech platform, which is focused on practical AI literacy for small businesses.
The same logic informs her volunteer work with Net4Tech, where automation systems are built with
minimal resources and maximum transparency, enabling long-term ownership by internal teams.
Thus, effective AI adoption in small businesses depends less on access to tools and more on
structured integration, applied context, and internal capability.
Systems that align with daily operations, whether in sales, content, or client management,
deliver measurable outcomes only when owners understand
how to sustain them.
As Katerina Andrivas says, AI becomes a resource when it supports real business processes with
clarity and consistency.
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