Community Is the Growth Strategy Most Small Businesses Skip

by May 4, 2026

Why Community Is Not Optional for Entrepreneurs

Ruth Ellen said it plainly: community is everything to small businesses. Not as sentiment, as a survival mechanism. Knowing other local businesses, understanding what resources exist, and having access to leaders and mentors can change what a founder believes is possible.

Free Help Exists, and Most People Never Use It

A major theme in the conversation was awareness. Many entrepreneurs simply do not know that SBDCs exist in every state. The Arizona SBDC Network provides no-cost, confidential expert advising across business planning, financials, pitching, access to capital, and more. Ruth Ellen emphasized that these services are designed to be accessible in rural and underserved areas, often housed in community colleges and supported by teams who have been entrepreneurs themselves.

Entrepreneurs Become Each Other’s Best Resource

Ruth Ellen described what happens when you bring business owners together in structured training. The topic could be marketing or financial statements. The real unlock is the side conversations: founders swapping hard-earned lessons, sharing how they solved problems, and realizing they are not alone.

Rural Growth Gets Stuck on Workforce and Bandwidth

When the discussion moved to what rural businesses are missing, Ruth Ellen pointed to a common blocker: talent. Workforce challenges combine with the realities of distance and cost of living, and owners end up working in the business instead of on the business. That creates stagnation, not because the business is weak, but because the owner is carrying too much.

Paid Programs Are Not Always Better

A useful thread in the episode was the comparison between free resources like SBDCs and paid accelerators or incubators. Ruth Ellen acknowledged that some people value paid environments because they associate payment with seriousness. Yet she pushed back on the assumption that paid automatically means better. She described the SBDC advantage as agility: if an advisor is not the right fit, the network can match a founder to someone with a more specialized background.

Purpose Shows Up in the Vulnerable Moments

One of the most human parts of the conversation was Ruth Ellen’s description of why this work matters to her. She became an entrepreneur young, returned from the Peace Corps, and learned how much real-world experience and guidance can change a founder’s trajectory. Supporting entrepreneurs now feels personal because she remembers what it felt like to be in the trenches.

Kindness Builds the Local Economy

When asked about love in business, Ruth Ellen’s answer went to kindness and connection. Not every customer is your customer. Being willing to refer someone to another local business that fits them better strengthens the entire business ecosystem. It creates referral networks, builds trust, and lifts the whole community’s economic health.

A Practical Step That Works in Any Town

Ruth Ellen closed with a simple, tactical move: have a party at your business. Bring people in. Celebrate. Make yourself approachable, especially if you are new to the community.

Key Takeaways

  • Community is not a nice-to-have for entrepreneurs. It is the infrastructure that reduces risk and increases resilience.
  • Free, high-quality advising exists through SBDCs, and most founders never use it simply because they do not know it is available.
  • Entrepreneurs become each other’s best resource when structured trainings create space for real peer learning.
  • Rural businesses often get stuck on talent and bandwidth, which creates stagnation even when demand exists.
  • Kindness and referrals strengthen the whole local economy and create long-term trust that comes back around.
  • A practical move: host an open house and invest visibly in local institutions and relationships.

Final Thoughts

Most small business problems are not solved by working harder in isolation. They are solved by building the right network, asking for help earlier, and becoming known as someone who contributes to the local ecosystem, not someone who extracts from it. Ruth Ellen’s perspective is a reminder that community is not separate from growth. It is the growth strategy.

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