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​Zoho’s New MCP Server Connects AI Agents to Zoho and Beyond

Small business owners exploring ways to integrate AI into daily operations may want to keep an eye on Zoho’s latest development. The company has officially adopted the Model Context Protocol (MCP), launching its own MCP server that allows AI agents to securely interact with Zoho applications—and even third-party tools. For entrepreneurs juggling customer support, sales, project management, and more, this opens the door to a new level of automation without requiring deep technical know-how.

Zoho’s MCP server supports a wide library of actions across more than 15 Zoho apps, such as CRM, Mail, Calendar, Desk, Cliq, and Projects. With the integration of Zoho Flow, business owners can also link AI agents to external apps like Gmail, Slack, Salesforce, and Notion—unlocking the potential for truly cross-platform workflows.

“MCP is the protocol. Zoho MCP is the product that lets you stand up agent-ready endpoints, making Zoho apps executable by AI agents,” the company explained. That distinction matters for small businesses, because it means owners can deploy task-specific or autonomous agents tailored to their business needs—whether scheduling meetings, triaging support tickets, or managing project timelines.

The process is structured around four clear steps. First, the AI agent sends a user request. Then it gathers context by retrieving relevant information. Third, the MCP tool executes the right function. Finally, the system returns either a success or failure response. This standardized workflow ensures that AI agents can work across different applications in a consistent and secure manner.

A major benefit for smaller organizations is that Zoho MCP is model-agnostic. Whether a business is using GPT, Claude, an open-source model, or a fine-tuned proprietary LLM, as long as the model speaks the MCP protocol, it can interact with Zoho’s ecosystem. That flexibility gives business owners the freedom to choose the AI tools that best fit their strategy and budget, without locking into a specific vendor.

Security is also baked into the design. Agents operate under user-level permissions, ensuring they can only perform actions that the user is authorized to do. Zoho enforces strict access controls and encrypted data handling, offering reassurance to businesses that prioritize data privacy and regulatory compliance.

For those interested in testing the capabilities, Zoho is currently rolling out MCP servers to users on an early access waiting list. General availability is expected by the end of 2025. “Zoho expects to study the usage patterns of these customers across use cases, industries, geographical regions, and sizes during this early access phase,” the company noted. Pricing details will be announced closer to the broader release.

As AI becomes a more integral part of small business operations, tools like Zoho MCP could help level the playing field. Small teams can build AI-driven assistants that perform tasks once reserved for larger enterprises with dedicated IT departments. For example, a solo entrepreneur could create a sales assistant to automate outreach, or a support bot that handles incoming tickets and alerts the right team member.

However, the path forward isn’t without potential hurdles. Small businesses may face a learning curve when configuring agents to align with existing workflows, and some integrations with third-party tools may still require manual setup or developer assistance. Additionally, early adopters will need to navigate the offering without a finalized pricing model, which could influence long-term feasibility.

Still, for small businesses looking to automate smarter, not harder, Zoho’s adoption of MCP offers a glimpse into a more connected, intelligent, and customizable future. With its flexible architecture, built-in security, and broad integration potential, Zoho MCP could become a valuable asset for business owners aiming to scale efficiently with AI.

This article, “Zoho’s New MCP Server Connects AI Agents to Zoho and Beyond” was first published on Small Business Trends

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