A list of "essential tools" ages badly. We accept that. What follows is not a forecast, it is a snapshot of the stack we actually use to do CAA™ work in early 2026, with explicit reasoning for why each tool is on the list and what we would replace it with if the field moved tomorrow. Read it as a working note, not a verdict.
If you are entering AI advisory work, you do not need all eight of these on day one. You do, however, need a thoughtful answer for why you have made the choice you have made on each row, because your clients are going to ask, and "I read it on a blog" is not the answer that builds advisory trust. Below, in order of how often we reach for them.
What is deliberately missing.
A few omissions worth naming. We did not include any image-generation tool in the core stack because the differences between Midjourney, Imagen, Ideogram and the Adobe stack are mostly stylistic for advisory work, and any of them is fine. We did not include Microsoft Copilot or Google Workspace AI because those are platform-level capabilities that a Canadian SMB will adopt as a function of its core productivity suite, not as a standalone advisor recommendation. And we did not include any of the specialized vertical tools, legal research assistants, medical scribes, financial-analysis copilots, because those belong to a different list entirely.
How we expect this list to age.
Three of the eight will likely be replaced or substantially repositioned within twelve months, the tools layer is moving that fast. The principles, however, will not change: a generalist assistant for reasoning, a careful writer for long-context work, a research layer for citable answers, a code editor for shipping, two automation platforms (one technical, one accessible), an audio layer, and an embedded-assistant for inside-team work. Whichever specific products fill those rows, the shape of the stack will hold.
Module 04 of the CAA™ program walks through this stack live, with hands-on exercises in each tool. If reading the list made you want to try one of them yourself, we'd say start with Perplexity for research and Cursor for shipping, those two changed our own working patterns more than the rest combined.
The CBEA Editorial Board, Toronto