Most small businesses that try an AI assistant hit the same wall after a week or two. It answers well, then forgets everything by Monday. You re-explain your refund policy, your supplier names, your busiest months, every single time. It is less like hiring help and more like training the same new employee on an endless loop.
The short version: Anthropic rolled out Claude Tag this week, an always-on version of Claude that lives inside Slack, keeps a running memory of what happens in the channels it is invited to, and gets sharper about your business the longer it sticks around. It is in beta now for Claude Team and Enterprise customers. It builds directly on Claude for Small Business, the connector pack Anthropic launched in May that already plugs Claude into QuickBooks, HubSpot, Canva, Docusign, Google Workspace, and Microsoft 365. Put together, the message is consistent: Anthropic wants Claude to behave less like a search box and more like a colleague who was actually in the meeting.
What is Claude Tag, exactly?
Claude Tag is a persistent presence in a Slack channel. Instead of opening a fresh conversation with no context every time, you tag @Claude and it responds with awareness of what has already happened in that channel, plus, if an admin grants permission, relevant context pulled from elsewhere in the workspace. TechCrunch reported this week that the same Claude identity serves the whole channel, so it is not relearning your business from scratch with every team member who talks to it. It also has an ambient mode that can flag issues on its own and follow up on tasks that quietly stalled, rather than waiting to be asked.
For a small operation, that is the actual unlock. A five-person agency does not need an AI that is brilliant in isolation. It needs one that remembers the client kicked off in March, that invoices go out on the 1st, and that Maria handles vendor calls, not Josh. Memory is what turns a clever chatbot into something closer to institutional knowledge.
How does this connect to Claude for Small Business?
Claude Tag did not appear out of nowhere. Anthropic spent the spring building the other half of this picture. Claude for Small Business, launched May 13, is a set of connectors and fifteen ready-to-run workflows across finance, operations, sales, marketing, HR, and customer service, wired into tools small businesses already use: QuickBooks for payroll planning and the monthly close, HubSpot for lead triage and customer pulse checks, Canva for marketing assets, Docusign for contracts, plus Google Workspace and Microsoft 365 for everyday work. Every task still routes through an approval step before anything actually executes, so the system is built to assist rather than to act unsupervised.
Anthropic co-founder Daniela Amodei put the thesis plainly: small businesses have always lacked the budget for a dedicated ops, finance, and marketing department, and AI is the first technology positioned to close that gap rather than widen it. Brian Ludviksen, COO of Purity Coffee, an early user, described it less as a tool and more as a second set of eyes: it surfaced problems he did not know existed. Claude Tag is the connective tissue that makes those workflows easier to live with day to day, because the assistant doing the work is the same one sitting in your Slack, not a separate window you have to brief from zero.
Do I need an enterprise plan to use any of this?
Not for the small business toolkit. Claude Tag itself is currently a beta feature limited to Claude Team and Enterprise customers, so the persistent-memory version in Slack is not yet available to someone on a free or Pro plan. Claude for Small Business, however, is accessed through Claude Cowork and was built with smaller teams as the explicit target, no enterprise contract required. The realistic path for most SMBs right now is to start with the small business workflows, get comfortable handing over the kind of work that used to eat a Tuesday afternoon, and treat Claude Tag as the next step once a team is big enough to live primarily inside Slack.
It is also worth sizing up the moment rather than just the feature. We have already covered how 67 percent of small businesses running AI agents saw revenue growth above 20 percent last year, while most competitors still run none. Persistent memory is exactly the kind of upgrade that separates a business experimenting with AI from one that has actually adopted it, because it removes the daily tax of re-explaining context that experimentation never gets past.
What is the catch?
Memory cuts both ways. An assistant that remembers your refund exceptions also remembers everything else said in that channel, including the things nobody meant to hand to software. Anthropic’s answer is admin-level control over which tools, channels, and information each Claude instance can see, and that control is worth actually configuring rather than accepting by default. We made a similar point when ChatGPT’s own memory upgrade reached free users: a longer memory is a genuine improvement, but it is also a new place where sensitive business detail can quietly accumulate. Set the boundaries before the assistant starts learning, not after.
There is a second, friendlier risk: treating this as a replacement for judgment rather than a multiplier of it. The approval step built into Claude for Small Business is doing real work here, the same instinct we have argued for whenever an AI agent starts touching customer-facing tasks, as with Salesforce’s recent move to buy an AI agent that already closes most support tickets on its own. A human still needs to be the one who says yes.
How should a small business actually start?
Pick one channel, not your whole company. A weekly ops channel or a client-specific thread is a good test bed, since the value of memory shows up fastest where the same handful of facts get repeated constantly. Invite Claude in, let it sit for two weeks, and see whether it actually saves the re-explaining you expected it to. If your team mostly lives in spreadsheets and email rather than Slack, start instead with the QuickBooks or HubSpot connectors in Claude for Small Business, since that is where the workflow gains will show up first.
Which task does your team explain to a new hire, or to an AI, more often than anyone would like to admit? That is usually the right place to hand over the memory and see what happens.
Frequently asked questions
What is Claude Tag?
It is an always-on version of Claude inside Slack that keeps persistent, channel-specific memory, so it does not need to relearn your business context in every conversation. It is currently in beta.
Is Claude Tag available to small businesses today, or only large enterprises?
Right now it is limited to Claude Team and Enterprise customers. Smaller teams not yet on those plans can still use Claude for Small Business, which does not require an enterprise contract.
What is Claude for Small Business, and is it different from Claude Tag?
Claude for Small Business is a separate, earlier release: a set of connectors and fifteen workflows linking Claude to tools like QuickBooks, HubSpot, Canva, and Docusign. Claude Tag is the newer Slack memory layer that complements it.
Is it safe to give an AI persistent memory of my team’s Slack conversations?
It is safer when an admin actively limits which channels and tools each Claude instance can access, rather than leaving default permissions in place. Treat that configuration as a first step, not an afterthought.
