What I Actually Use Running a Small Marketing Operation
Marketing teams have been hit with more "this will change everything" AI tools than possibly any other function. I've been wading through them for the better part of two years running content and campaigns for a small team, and the honest answer is: most of them overlap, few of them are indispensable, and a handful are genuinely transformative.
This review is for small and mid-size marketing teams — five people or fewer — who want to cut production time, produce better content, and run smarter campaigns without inflating headcount. I'll tell you what I use, what I dropped, and what I'd try if I were starting fresh today.
Quick Picks (TL;DR)
- Best for long-form content creation: Claude or Jasper
- Best for AI-powered SEO research: Surfer SEO or Clearscope
- Best for social content and scheduling: Buffer with AI assist or Lately
- Best for email marketing automation: ActiveCampaign AI or Mailmodo
- Best for visual content and ads: Canva AI or Adobe Firefly
- Best for campaign analytics: HubSpot AI or Triple Whale (e-commerce)
AI Marketing Tools Compared
| Tool | Best for | Free plan | Starting price | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Claude | Long-form writing, briefs, research | Yes | ~$20/mo Pro (verify) | Nuanced tone, large context window |
| Jasper | Marketing-specific AI writing | No | ~$49/mo (verify) | Marketing templates, brand voice |
| Surfer SEO | SEO content optimization | No | ~$89/mo (verify) | Real-time SERP analysis, Content Score |
| Canva AI | Visual content, ad creatives | Yes | ~$14.99/mo (verify) | Magic Design, text-to-image in one tool |
| HubSpot AI | CRM, email, campaign analytics | Yes (limited) | ~$50/mo (verify) | All-in-one, AI across the whole stack |
| Lately | Social content repurposing | No | ~$49/mo (verify) | Turns long content into social snippets |
| ActiveCampaign | Email automation + AI | No | ~$29/mo (verify) | Predictive sending, AI email copy |
Content Creation Tools
Claude
Best for: Content briefs, long-form articles, thought leadership pieces, and anything where brand tone matters.
I switched from GPT-4 to Claude for most content work about six months ago, and I haven't looked back for writing tasks. The reason is simple: Claude follows complex style instructions more consistently. When I paste in three examples of our brand voice and a detailed brief, Claude produces a first draft that needs significantly less editing than what I got from other tools.
Honest pros: Excellent instruction-following, handles large documents well, nuanced and readable prose.
Honest cons: No image generation, fewer marketing-specific templates than Jasper, less plugin ecosystem.
Who should skip: Teams that need everything — writing, images, scheduling — in one tool. Claude is a writing specialist.
Jasper
Best for: Marketing teams who want an AI writing tool built explicitly for marketing copy — ads, emails, social posts, landing pages.
Jasper's advantage is its template library. Instead of starting from a blank prompt, you pick a template (Google Ad, Facebook Ad, AIDA framework, etc.), fill in your product and tone, and get usable output fast. The Brand Voice feature lets you train it on your existing content, which meaningfully improves consistency.
Honest pros: Marketing-specific templates, Brand Voice training, team collaboration features, integrations with Surfer SEO.
Honest cons: Expensive, general AI writing quality doesn't consistently beat Claude or ChatGPT, can feel formulaic.
Who should skip: Small teams on tight budgets — you can replicate most of Jasper's output with a good prompt library and Claude at half the cost.
SEO and Research Tools
Surfer SEO
Best for: Content teams that publish regularly and want to optimize articles for search without guessing.
Surfer's Content Editor is genuinely useful. You type a keyword, it analyzes the top-ranking pages, and gives you a real-time score based on word count, keyword usage, headings, and NLP-related terms. It doesn't guarantee rankings — nothing does — but it removes a lot of guesswork from on-page SEO.
Honest pros: Real-time optimization feedback, clear scoring, integrates with Google Docs and Jasper, solid keyword research.
Honest cons: Expensive for a small team's budget, can lead to keyword-stuffing if followed too mechanically.
Who should skip: Teams publishing fewer than four articles per month — the cost-per-article economics get rough at low volume.
Visual Content and Creative
Canva AI
Best for: Marketing teams that need fast, brand-consistent visual content without a dedicated designer.
Canva was already the default for non-designer marketers. The AI additions — Magic Design, Background Remover, Magic Write, and now text-to-image — have made it meaningfully faster. I use it weekly for social graphics, email headers, and presentation decks. The Brand Kit feature keeps colors, fonts, and logos consistent across everything.
Honest pros: Incredibly fast, genuinely useful AI features, brand consistency tools, huge template library, affordable.
Honest cons: AI image quality doesn't match Midjourney or Adobe Firefly for hero imagery, limited control for complex layouts.
Who should skip: Design-heavy teams with a dedicated designer — they'll want more control than Canva provides.
Email and Campaign Automation
ActiveCampaign
Best for: Small marketing teams that need email automation with AI features baked in — predictive sending, AI-generated email copy, automated follow-ups.
I've used ActiveCampaign for two years and the AI additions have genuinely improved our email results. Predictive sending times out emails based on when individual subscribers historically open — it's not magic, but it consistently outperforms fixed send times in our tests. The AI email generator is decent for drafts; I still edit everything but it saves 20–30 minutes per campaign.
Honest pros: Solid automation, predictive send, CRM included, good deliverability, AI copy generation.
Honest cons: Interface takes time to learn, gets expensive with list growth, some AI features feel bolted on.
Who should skip: Pure e-commerce teams — Klaviyo is better optimized for that use case.
Analytics and Campaign Intelligence
HubSpot AI
Best for: Marketing teams that want AI woven throughout their entire stack — CRM, email, landing pages, reporting — rather than point solutions.
HubSpot has been layering AI across every feature. The AI email writer, AI-powered lead scoring, and AI-generated reports are all solid. But the real value is consolidation: if you're already in HubSpot, the AI features are right there, not in a separate tool that you have to context-switch into.
Honest pros: AI across the full stack, excellent reporting, strong CRM, reduces tool sprawl.
Honest cons: Expensive as you grow, not the best-in-class at any single AI function, free tier is very limited.
Who should skip: Tiny teams on a shoestring — the free tier doesn't include meaningful AI features, and paid plans are a significant investment.
How to Build Your Marketing AI Stack
Here's the honest framework I'd use building from scratch:
Tier 1 (start here): One general AI assistant for content drafting (Claude or ChatGPT), Canva for visuals, and an email platform you already use with AI features turned on.
Tier 2 (once you've stabilized Tier 1): Add Surfer SEO or Clearscope if content volume justifies it. Add a social scheduling tool with AI repurposing if you publish regularly.
Tier 3 (once Tier 2 is running): Consider consolidating into a platform like HubSpot if you want less tool management. Or keep best-of-breed tools if your team is technically comfortable.
The mistake I've seen teams make is buying Tier 3 tools before Tier 1 habits are locked in. AI tools amplify your process — if your process is broken, better tools just break it faster.
FAQ
What's the single best AI tool for a small marketing team? If I had to pick one: Claude or ChatGPT for content and research. Content is the bottleneck for most small marketing teams, and the right AI assistant cuts production time by 40–60% on first drafts. Start there before anything else.
Can AI replace a marketing copywriter? Not a good one. AI handles the first draft and the repetitive variations — subject line tests, ad copy variants, social captions. It struggles with authentic brand storytelling, counterintuitive hooks, and anything requiring real market intuition. Use it to speed up the 80% and invest human judgment in the 20% that differentiates you.
Is it worth paying for AI marketing tools or are free tiers enough? For most small teams, free tiers of Claude or ChatGPT (with the free limits) are enough to start. Paid plans ($20/mo) are worth it once you're hitting limits or need features like larger context or more requests. Specialist tools like Surfer SEO are worth it only once you're publishing consistently enough to justify the cost per article.
How do we maintain brand voice when using AI for content? Three things that work: (1) Create a brand voice document with examples and share it with every AI session. (2) Always edit for tone before publishing — AI draft, human finish. (3) Build a style guide your AI can reference. With Claude especially, a well-written brand guide in the system prompt makes a meaningful difference in output consistency.