Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Kimberly Burris is a business banking senior relationship manager for Bank of America Kansas City.
The 2025 Business Owner Report confirmed what we see every day from entrepreneurs across our communities: cautious yet determined optimism. Nearly three in four business owners expect revenue gains in the next 12 months, and many plan to expand (59%), hire (43%) and secure financing (83%).
These findings suggest four practical steps Kansas City business owners can take now to position their business for success this year.
Invest in the right digital tools
Innovation remains a reliable path for efficiency and growth. Nearly all (91%) business owners plan to adopt digital tools over the next five years, with 52% aiming to accept more forms of digital payments and 50% planning to implement AI.
Many businesses have already made progress: 77% integrated AI over the past five years, using it for marketing (50%), content production (38%), customer service (37%) and inventory management (28%).
Building on that momentum, owners are modernizing payments to reduce friction at checkout and accelerate cash conversion, adding options such as Zelle, Venmo and Apple Pay to meet customer preferences. Others are testing focused AI use cases such as automating routine customer inquiries and drafting product descriptions.
New tools can also help business owners digitize repetitive workflows, such as scheduling, invoicing, and inventory alerts, freeing staff time for higher-value contributions. This can be particularly helpful for companies impacted by labor shortages (61%). As digital capabilities expand, businesses are also planning to increase cybersecurity measures (30%), strengthening authentication and data protection to preserve trust alongside growth.
Leverage community engagement around local events
Community engagement can help businesses grow and attract new customers. More than half of business owners (58%) have modified their operations around major events such as sports games, concerts and festivals by introducing targeted promotions, social content, themed campaigns and sponsorships. The approach has paid off: approximately half reported increased sales (51%), and nearly half saw growth on social media (47%). Roughly four in five plan to repeat these efforts in the future.
Smaller-scale events like street fairs, neighborhood theater and regional festivals can create meaningful ripple effects. Businesses can set measurable goals for event days, aligning staffing and hours in advance and pairing in-person activations with digital calls to action to extend reach.
Manage cash flow with discipline
Disciplined cash flow management is critical for business owners, especially heading into 2026, when inflation (70%) and interest rates (58%) are top concerns. Most entrepreneurs (88%) report inflation impacting their businesses, prompting many to raise prices (64%) and scrutinize cash flow and spending plans (39%). Concurrently, 75% are facing supply chain pressures, leading to price adjustments (52%) and sourcing challenges (32%).
In response, business owners are proactively adjusting their financial strategies. This includes reevaluating cash flow projections, optimizing spending and exploring local sourcing options to build more resilient supply chains. Beyond these operational adjustments, a disciplined focus on liquidity is key. Owners should also engage with their bankers to review existing loan structures, ensuring they align with current cash flow profiles and the interest rate environment.
Plan for financing and succession
Demand for capital continues to underpin long-term operational health. 83% of business owners intend to obtain financing within the next 12 months, with business credit cards (53%) playing a key role, alongside personal savings (41%), traditional bank loans (32%) and personal credit cards (29%). Financing plans are informed by factors including expected growth, hiring and retaining staff and ongoing investments in digital tools.
Succession planning also remains a critical component of long-term planning, yet 40% of business owners have yet to prepare one. They can begin by identifying potential successors, outlining governance and core processes and tracking value drivers, such as margins and recurring revenue. Advisory teams, including bankers, CPAs and attorneys, can help, especially when engaged early in the process.
Turning optimism into action
Findings from the 2025 report signal that business owners are entering 2026 focused on steady growth, practical decision making and a readiness to invest where it matters. They are embracing digital tools and AI to remove friction for customers and streamline operations, engaging strategically with local events, tightening cash flow disciplines amid persistent cost and supply pressures, and taking a longer view on capital and succession to protect hard-won value.
In Kansas City, we have strong workforce development efforts that businesses depend on, that aim to prepare our community for evolving labor markets. Expressly with BofA collaborations with organizations such as PREP-KC, that aim to deepen partnerships with local businesses to help the Kansas City community flourish.
Kimberly Burris is a business banking senior relationship manager for Bank of America Kansas City.





































