Services
Let's Chat

Hook

Video Poster Image

Key Takeaways:

  • Process Before Platform
    Map your customer journey first. Then choose the tools that support it. Automation without clarity just amplifies the chaos.
  • Build a Single Source of Truth
    Stop juggling multiple systems. Pick one core platform for data and integrate everything else into it.
  • Automate the Repetitive, Personalise the Rest
    Automate the predictable. Keep the personal moments human. That’s how you stay connected while scaling.
  • AI Should Be Your Teammate, Not Your CEO
    Use AI to assist, not decide. It should lighten your cognitive load — not replace your judgment.

If your business feels like it’s held together with spreadsheets and wishful thinking, this episode will show you how to scale without losing the soul of your brand.

Sub-Header 1

Sub-Header 2

Sub-Header 3

Sub-Header 4

Sub-Header 5

Sub-Header 6

Sub-Header 7

Sub-Header 8

Sub-Header 9

Sub-Header 10

How To Automate Without Losing The Human Touch (with Stebbington)

Nov 11, 2025
How To Automate Without Losing The Human Touch

 Listen on Spotify  |  Listen on Apple Podcasts

If your business feels like it’s being held together with spreadsheets and sticky notes, this episode will show you how to scale without losing the soul of your brand.

Key Takeaways

  • Process before platform. Map your workflows before choosing any tool.
  • More tools don’t fix chaos; they multiply it. Simplify before you scale.
  • Automate repetitive work, not relationships. Keep empathy in your process.
  • Build one “single source of truth” where your data actually lives.
  • Zapier is not a strategy. Integrate with intention, not duct tape.
  • AI should be your teammate, not your CEO. Let it assist, not replace you.
  • Fix your lead management system. Leaks here cost more than you think.
  • Audit your systems once a year. Keep only what saves time and improves the client experience.
“Automation should serve your people, not replace them.”

Streamlining Your Business IS Possible

If your business feels like a juggling act of spreadsheets, tools, and half-broken automations, let me tell you that every business owner feels like that at some point. Most entrepreneurs think a shiny new app will solve their stress, or at least I did! But, it usually just automates the chaos.

In this episode of Master Your Business, I, Deirdre Martin, sat down with Debbie Crompton and Stephanie Bonnie, the systems experts behind Stebbington. They’ve helped founders slash admin time, eliminate manual errors, and create systems that feel human for their teams and clients.

This conversation covers how to map your processes, choose tools that fit, and leverage AI without losing your soul (or your sanity). By the end, you’ll know how to automate your business the right way, with clarity and confidence.

“You’ve got to understand your business first before you pick the tools.” – Stephanie Bonnie

Process Before Platform – How to Stop Automating Chaos

Most entrepreneurs buy software hoping it will fix inefficiency. Instead, it magnifies it. Steph and Deb call this the “automation trap”,  when you automate messy processes and end up with faster chaos.

The fix? Map everything first. Write down each step of your client journey, from inquiry to delivery. Highlight every manual handoff, every spreadsheet, every copy-paste and literally every step between. Only after you see the full picture should you choose what to automate.

Steph suggests using a simple swim-lane process map. It shows who does what, where information goes, and where the system breaks down. This visual clarity is the foundation of any scalable business.

“If you automate broken workflows, all you do is make the mistakes happen faster.” – Deirdre Martin

Build a Single Source of Truth – The Antidote to Chaos

Fragmented tools are silent killers. When your CRM, invoicing, and project software don’t talk to each other, you lose time, context, and clients.

Debbie’s solution: create one “source of truth,” the single system that holds all your essential business data. Everything else connects to that. That means less double data entry, fewer errors, and better visibility for your team.

“Pick one system to be your source of truth. Everything else should feed into it.” – Debbie Crompton

Examples: If your CRM manages clients and projects, link it to your invoicing tool. When a new client signs, their project and invoice create automatically. Now, your team can work from one shared dashboard instead of five different apps.


Why Buying More Tools Hurts Your Brand

Adding tools feels like progress… until it isn’t. Each new app brings training, maintenance, and potential breakdowns. Soon, you’re drowning in logins, but probably not fully leveraging your shiny new tool.

As Debbie warns, “Zapier isn’t a strategy. It’s duct tape.” Every duct-taped connection increases the risk of something failing silently. And when clients feel disorganised follow-ups or errors, they question your professionalism.

The lesson? Simplify your tech stack. Use fewer tools more deeply. Your brand feels stronger when your systems are consistent, not cobbled together.

“Tools don’t make you scalable. Processes do.” – Stephanie Bonnie

Automate the Repetitive, Keep the Relationship Human

Automation isn’t meant to replace the personal touch, it’s meant to make room for it. Steph and Deb encourage founders to automate routine admin (invoices, reminders, contracts) so they can focus on what matters: relationships.

“Automation should serve your people, not replace them.” – Stephanie Bonnie

Example: Automate your “thanks for payment” emails, but write your client check-ins yourself. Schedule reminders for follow-ups, but keep those messages personal.

This approach keeps efficiency high while maintaining the warmth that builds loyalty. It’s how you scale without losing your voice.


AI as a Teammate, Not Your CEO

AI is powerful, but dangerous when used blindly. Debbie and Steph have seen businesses let AI drive communication or strategy without oversight. That’s risky.

“AI is like being given a Ferrari without a license.” – Debbie Crompton

Use AI for support, research, summarising, or structuring ideas, but don’t use it for  decision-making. Never feed it sensitive client data. Always review its work with a human eye and human empathy.

Steph puts it bluntly: AI can be your best intern or your worst intern, it depends on how you manage it.


Fix the Lead Management Leak

Every founder loses leads somewhere. They come in through forms, calls, or DMs and vanish into the ether because there’s no system to capture them.

Steph’s fix is simple: Make sure your website form connects directly to your CRM. Send an instant confirmation message that sets expectations and includes a booking link.

“Your system should make it easy for clients to say yes.” – Deirdre Martin

Leads that feel acknowledged convert faster. It’s one automation that immediately increases revenue and reputation.


The Annual Systems Review – Staying Efficient as You Grow

Systems age fast. And AI and software tools are constantly providing updates and new features. What worked last year might be costing you time today.

Debbie and Steph recommend a full annual audit: Review every process, integration, and automation. Remove anything outdated, unused, or clunky.

Even better, document your systems so new team members can plug in fast. This review ritual keeps your business scalable and your sanity intact.

“We do this quarterly for ourselves, because it’s easier to fix a small leak than rebuild the boat.” – Debbie Crompton

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know when it’s time to automate?

When you’re repeating a manual task more than three times a week, it’s ready to automate.

What’s a “single source of truth” system?

It’s the one platform that holds your client data, projects, and key business metrics, like your CRM.

Is Zapier still useful?

Yes, but use it strategically. Don’t rely on it to hold your business together.

How do I make sure AI doesn’t go rogue?

Keep clear policies: no personal data input, always review outputs, and never automate judgment calls.

What should I automate first?

Start with admin: onboarding emails, payment reminders, and recurring client tasks.

How often should I review my systems?

At least once a year. Ideally quarterly if your business evolves quickly.


Related Articles


Connect With the Guests

Debbie & Steph (Stebbington)
🌐 www.stebbington.com
💼 LinkedIn – Debbie Crompton
💼 LinkedIn – Stephanie Bonnie
📺 YouTube – Stebbington
🎵 TikTok – @stebbington


Connect with the Host — Deirdre Martin

🌐 deirdremartin.ie
📱 LinkedIn
🧠 Work With Deirdre: Book a call → https://calendly.com/deirdremartincx/first-business-soiree-instagram


Watch or listen to the full episode

Apple Podcasts → https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-master-your-business-podcast/id1667327376
YouTube https://youtube.com/@deirdremartinmyb?si=haAZF5yY4X8pYSbN


Tools Mentioned + More Resources 

  • Stebbington — Systems and automation experts helping small businesses scale sustainably.
  • Zapier — Automation tool for connecting apps (use sparingly, not strategically).
  • Airtable — Database-style spreadsheet tool for process mapping and data organization.
  • Kajabi — All-in-one platform for creators and service providers.
  • Make — Advanced automation platform for syncing tools and workflows.

Stay connected with episodes, news and behind-the-scenes updates!

We hate SPAM. And we will never sell your information, for any reason.

Frequently Asked Questions

Resources Mentioned

Recent Episodes

How To Automate Without Losing The Human Touch (with Stebbington)

8 Steps to Marketing Momentum That Actually Brings Clients In

How to Scale with Anti-Hustle Entrepreneurship