The Lean Solopreneur Tech Stack: What I Actually Use to Run My Business Smarter Hacks Editorial Team, April 12, 2026April 12, 2026 The Lean Solopreneur Tech Stack: What I Actually Use to Run My Business Share: Smarter Hacks Editorial Team April 12, 2026 Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. I only recommend tools I’ve personally used or thoroughly researched. Every tool in my stack earns its place. I’ve cut a lot of things that seemed useful but added friction without enough return. What’s left is a tight set of tools I use daily to run content production, client work, project management, and communication — without a team.This is the stack I’d build again from scratch today. I’ll tell you what each tool does, what I pay for it, and what I’d cut if I had to start over.The Core StackProject Management: ClickUpClickUp is my command center. Everything I’m working on lives here — client tasks, content calendar, launch checklists, and daily priorities. I run a simple system: one list per active project, weekly review every Monday, daily task check every morning.Why not Notion for this? Notion is better for knowledge management. ClickUp is better for task management. I use both for different things.Cost: Free plan handles most solopreneur needs.[AFFILIATE LINK: ClickUp] → Start freeKnowledge Base: NotionNotion is where I store everything that needs to be referenced later — SOPs, research notes, content ideas, client reference docs, and planning documents. Think of it as my external brain.What I use it for: Smarterhacks planning, content research notes, systems documentation, and client knowledge bases.Cost: Free plan is sufficient for most solo operators.[AFFILIATE LINK: Notion] → Start freeAI Writing and Thinking: ClaudeClaude is my primary AI tool for writing and reasoning. Blog post drafts, newsletter issues, outlines, business strategy — it runs through Claude first. It’s not a replacement for my thinking, it’s an accelerant.What I use it for: Content drafts, research synthesis, outline building, and working through complex problems.Cost: Claude Pro at $20/month.[AFFILIATE LINK: Claude Pro] → Try ClaudeAutomation: ZapierZapier connects everything. New blog post → social promotion. New subscriber → logged to a Google Sheet. Payment received → onboarding sequence triggers. These automations run in the background and save me hours every week.What I use it for: RSS-triggered social posting, subscriber logging, onboarding sequences, and site health checks.Cost: Free plan for 5 Zaps. Starter plan at $20/month for more.[AFFILIATE LINK: Zapier] → Start freeEmail Marketing: Kit (ConvertKit)Kit runs the Smarterhacks email list. Welcome sequences, weekly newsletters, and subscriber tagging all live here. The free plan goes up to 10,000 subscribers, which gives me a long runway before I pay anything.Why not Beehiiv? I use Beehiiv for a separate newsletter. Kit has stronger automation for digital product delivery and welcome sequences.Cost: Free up to 10,000 subscribers. Paid from $33/month.[AFFILIATE LINK: Kit] → Start freeDesign: CanvaCanva handles all visual production — blog featured images, social graphics, PDF lead magnets, and presentation slides. I built a template library for Smarterhacks that keeps everything consistent without starting from scratch each time.Cost: Free plan is solid. Canva Pro at $13/month adds brand kits and better asset management.[AFFILIATE LINK: Canva Pro] → Try CanvaIdea Capture: AmpleNoteAmpleNote is my quick capture tool. Any idea, article worth reading, or note worth keeping gets dumped here immediately. I process it weekly into Notion or the ClickUp editorial calendar. The friction of capturing needs to be near zero or ideas evaporate.Cost: Free.What I Cut and WhyTools I removed from my stack and wouldn’t put back:Slack: Unnecessary overhead for a solo operator. Email and direct messages handle what I actually need.Asana: Redundant with ClickUp. Picked one and committed.Multiple AI subscriptions: I tested everything. Settled on Claude as primary, ChatGPT as secondary. Anything beyond that is redundant cost.Fancy email tools before I had an audience: Built the list first, optimized the platform later.Monthly Cost BreakdownClaude Pro: $20/monthZapier Starter: $20/month (or free with 5 Zaps)Canva Pro: $13/month (or free tier)Kit: $0 (free to 10K subscribers)ClickUp: $0 (free plan)Notion: $0 (free plan)Total: $33-$53/month depending on tiers used. That’s it.The Principle Behind the StackEvery tool should do one of three things: save time on recurring tasks, improve the quality of output, or enable revenue. If a tool doesn’t clear one of those bars, it’s clutter. The goal isn’t to have a sophisticated tech stack — it’s to have a lean one that actually runs. On Key Related Posts Best Zapier Workflows for Solopreneurs: Set These Up This Week Read More » The Lean Solopreneur Tech Stack: What I Actually Use to Run My Business Read More » How to Automate Your Client Onboarding (Without Hiring Anyone) Read More » ChatGPT vs Claude for Business: Which One Should You Actually Use in 2026? Read More » Best AI Tools for Small Business Owners (2026) Read More » Uncategorized