The Small Business Technology Gap, And How To Bridge It
The post The Small Business Technology Gap, And How To Bridge It appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. There’s a lot of talk right now about how AI and digital tools are transforming construction and manufacturing, and big firms are already there, deepening an already troubling technology gap for small businesses. Larger firms are using 5D project modeling, AI-based scheduling, and digital control centers to keep complex jobs on track. And it’s paying off. By some estimates, these tools are shaving months off major builds and helping companies manage risk, labor, and materials more effectively. But most small businesses don’t have access to these tools. And even if they did, they don’t have the time or training to make them useful. In fact, a recent survey from Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses Voices (10ksb Voices), of which I am a member, found that 42% of small businesses do not have access to the resources and expertise necessary to successfully deploy AI. Are you suspended in the small business technology gap? DepositPhotos Defining the Small Business Technology Gap Small construction firms, tradespeople, specialty manufacturers, and independent contractors are being locked out of the new digital landscape—not because they lack skill, but because they’re stuck operating in analog while their competitors have moved to digital. This isn’t just a technology gap. It’s an access gap: a very real barrier between having technology available on paper and being able to afford, train for, and apply it. As James M. Gordon, Managing Partner, Global CULTIVA, and a fellow member of the 10ksb Voices community, puts it: “Once small companies are made aware of new technologies, they can adopt and innovate with them very quickly, sometimes even faster than large enterprises. We don’t have the bureaucratic layers that slow bigger firms down. That agility is a key advantage.” If the past is predictive, then the future of infrastructure, manufacturing, and clean energy depends…

The post The Small Business Technology Gap, And How To Bridge It appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
There’s a lot of talk right now about how AI and digital tools are transforming construction and manufacturing, and big firms are already there, deepening an already troubling technology gap for small businesses. Larger firms are using 5D project modeling, AI-based scheduling, and digital control centers to keep complex jobs on track. And it’s paying off. By some estimates, these tools are shaving months off major builds and helping companies manage risk, labor, and materials more effectively. But most small businesses don’t have access to these tools. And even if they did, they don’t have the time or training to make them useful. In fact, a recent survey from Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses Voices (10ksb Voices), of which I am a member, found that 42% of small businesses do not have access to the resources and expertise necessary to successfully deploy AI. Are you suspended in the small business technology gap? DepositPhotos Defining the Small Business Technology Gap Small construction firms, tradespeople, specialty manufacturers, and independent contractors are being locked out of the new digital landscape—not because they lack skill, but because they’re stuck operating in analog while their competitors have moved to digital. This isn’t just a technology gap. It’s an access gap: a very real barrier between having technology available on paper and being able to afford, train for, and apply it. As James M. Gordon, Managing Partner, Global CULTIVA, and a fellow member of the 10ksb Voices community, puts it: “Once small companies are made aware of new technologies, they can adopt and innovate with them very quickly, sometimes even faster than large enterprises. We don’t have the bureaucratic layers that slow bigger firms down. That agility is a key advantage.” If the past is predictive, then the future of infrastructure, manufacturing, and clean energy depends…
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