ChatGPT 5.5 Is Here and its Impressive
I’ve had some time to play around with 5.5 since it launched last week and it is very impressive!
OpenAI says ChatGPT is becoming stronger at complex, multi-step work: research, coding, data analysis, document creation, spreadsheets, reports, and working across tools until a task is complete. For small businesses, that matters because AI is no longer just helping draft an email. It is beginning to help complete real business workflows.
One of the biggest developments is workspace agents in ChatGPT. I wrote about this in the last article, and I love this feature! These are shared agents that teams can build to handle recurring workflows, such as weekly reports, lead follow-up, product feedback routing, sales assistants etc. OpenAI says these agents can work across tools, remember context, ask for approval when needed, and keep working even when you are away.
That is a major opportunity for small businesses. Imagine an agent that prepares a weekly sales summary, drafts follow-up emails, reviews customer feedback, or organizes documents before a team meeting. That kind of support can save hours every week.
OpenAI also released ChatGPT Images 2.0, its newest image generation model, with improved text rendering, multilingual support, and stronger visual reasoning. For businesses, that means better flyers, ads, product mockups, social graphics, presentation visuals, and branded content inside ChatGPT itself. It is very good; you need to try it out immediately!
The takeaway is simple: ChatGPT is becoming more than a place to ask questions. It is becoming a place where small businesses can plan, create, analyze, design, and automate.
But the same rule still applies: use AI as a thought partner, not an autopilot. Let it do the heavy lifting, but keep human judgment in charge.
About the Author
Jonathan Liebert is CEO/Executive Director of the Better Business Bureau of Southern Colorado, an AI thought leader and an adjunct professor at the University of Colorado Colorado Springs. He is the author of
Thought Partner, which explores how leaders can collaborate with AI to improve decision-making and strategy. Jonathan also leads AI education and training programs through BBB of Southern Colorado to help businesses build practical AI skills for the modern marketplace.
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