You've probably tried ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot at this point — typed in a question, gotten a decent answer. Maybe you were impressed. Maybe you thought, this is useful, but it doesn't know anything about my business.
That second thought is the important one.
A standard AI assistant knows a lot about the world in general. It doesn't know who your customers are, what's in your CRM, what emails are sitting in your inbox, or what projects your team is working on right now. And without that context, it can only take you so far.
Before MCP existed, getting an AI tool to work with your business data was a custom engineering project every single time. Want your AI assistant to read your emails? Someone writes special code for that. Want it to check your calendar? More custom code. Want it to pull a customer record from your CRM? Yet more custom code — specific to your CRM, your version, your setup.
This meant AI integrations were expensive, fragile, and mostly available only to large companies with dedicated development teams.
MCP was designed to solve that problem with a standard.
MCP stands for Model Context Protocol. It's an open standard — introduced by Anthropic, the company behind the Claude AI, in late 2024 — that creates a universal way for AI assistants to connect to external tools, data sources, and services.
The analogy that works best: think of MCP like USB.
Before USB, every device — printers, keyboards, mice, cameras — used a different connector. You needed a different cable and a different driver for everything. USB created one standard connector that works across everything. Now you plug in a USB device and it just works, regardless of brand or type.
MCP does the same thing for AI and software tools. Instead of building a custom connection between an AI and each tool it needs to use, you build one MCP "connector" per tool — and any AI that supports MCP can use it.
When an AI assistant has MCP support and you've connected it to your tools, here's roughly what happens when you make a request:
The AI isn't storing your data or learning from it. It's asking for specific information at the moment it needs it, through a secure channel you control.
The list is growing fast, but today businesses are already using MCP connectors to give AI assistants access to things like:
The key point: these aren't demos. Businesses are using these today, with off-the-shelf connectors that take minutes to set up.
Here's the practical implication: AI assistants are becoming significantly more useful as MCP adoption grows.
Before MCP: You describe your situation to the AI, it gives you a generic answer based on its training. You still have to go look things up yourself and bring the information back.
With MCP: The AI can go get the information itself — from your actual systems — and give you an answer grounded in your real data. You describe the situation once, and it does the legwork.
Some concrete examples of what this looks like in practice:
None of this requires a developer. It requires the right AI tool (one that supports MCP), the right connectors (many are now available off the shelf), and a few minutes of setup.
Here's a specific scenario that plays out in nearly every small business.
You have a CRM — HubSpot, Salesforce, whatever you use. It has 80 contacts in it. Some are active customers, some are warm leads, some are people you talked to once six months ago and never followed up with. You know you should be more systematic about follow-up, but between running the business and handling existing customers, the CRM sits there quietly getting stale.
Without MCP: You'd have to log into your CRM, build a filter for contacts with no activity in the last 21 days, export the list, review it manually, and then write a follow-up email — or a slightly personalized version of one — for each person. It takes the better part of a morning, so it doesn't get done as often as it should.
With MCP: You type a single request into your AI assistant: "Which leads in our CRM haven't heard from us in over three weeks? Draft a short, personalized check-in email for each one."
The AI connects to your CRM, pulls the stale contacts, reads any notes or previous activity on each record, and produces a draft email for every one — personalized by name, company, and whatever context is in the record. You review them, make any tweaks, and send. The whole thing takes 10 minutes instead of a morning.
That's not science fiction. That's a standard MCP connector to HubSpot or Salesforce, available today.
MCP is powerful, but it's worth going in with clear eyes:
You control what the AI can see. MCP connectors only expose what you configure them to expose. You decide which tools the AI can access and what it can do — read only, or read and write. Start with read-only access until you're comfortable.
Not every AI tool supports MCP yet. As of 2025–2026, support is growing quickly. Claude (by Anthropic), and several other AI platforms support MCP. Microsoft Copilot has its own similar integration framework. Check whether your AI tool of choice supports MCP before building a workflow around it.
The AI is only as good as the data it connects to. If your CRM records are incomplete or your inbox is a disaster, the AI's answers will reflect that. MCP makes AI more useful, but it doesn't fix messy data.
Security matters. Any connector that gives an AI access to your business systems should be reviewed carefully. Who set it up? What permissions does it have? Is it from a reputable source? Treat MCP connectors the way you'd treat any third-party software integration.
MCP is the plumbing that turns a general-purpose AI assistant into something that actually knows your business. It's not magic — it's a standard, and like most good standards, it matters most because it makes a whole ecosystem of tools interoperable.
If you've felt like AI tools are interesting in theory but not quite useful enough in practice, MCPs are worth paying attention to. The gap between "AI that knows general things" and "AI that knows your things" is closing fast.
Curious how AI tools could connect to your existing business systems — email, CRM, ERP, or helpdesk? Book a free 15-minute call with PC Methods — we can help you figure out what's worth trying and what's just hype.