How to Decide Which Business Processes Are Worth Automating
“Automate everything” has become common advice—but automating a broken process simply scales inefficiency.
Many founders fall into one of two traps: they either over-engineer complex automations for tasks that barely matter, or they continue doing repetitive work manually because they do not know where to start.
The goal is not automation for its own sake. It is focused optimisation. This guide provides a simple framework to identify which processes are worth automating—and which are not.
Track the ‘time vampires’
Before improving anything, you need visibility.
For one week, track your daily tasks. Pay attention to anything that feels repetitive, mechanical, or disconnected from strategic work—copying data, sending the same emails, updating spreadsheets.
Once you have a list, use AI to analyse it: “I have listed my daily tasks below. Act as an operations expert. Which three tasks are the best candidates for automation, and why?”
This helps you prioritise objectively rather than relying on instinct.
Apply the ‘Rule of 3’ test
Not all repetitive tasks should be automated.
Use a simple filter:
> Is it frequent? Does it happen daily or weekly?
> Is it rule-based? Can you clearly define each step without relying on judgement?
> Is it error-prone? Are mistakes common when done manually?
If a task meets all three criteria, it is a strong candidate.
Examples typically include:
> Moving data between systems
> Generating standard reports
> Sending routine confirmations
Tasks that fail this test—especially those requiring nuance or judgement—should remain manual.
