"The businesses that thrive over the next decade won't simply have access to money. They'll have access to better information."
When America celebrated its 250th birthday this July, I found myself thinking less about history and more about what comes next.
For 250 years, the backbone of this country has never been Wall Street.
It's been Main Street.
It's been the local contractor who decided to hire a second employee.
The restaurant owner opening a second location.
The family purchasing their first franchise.
The entrepreneur willing to risk comfort in exchange for opportunity.
That entrepreneurial spirit built America, and despite economic uncertainty, it isn't slowing down.
In fact, it's evolving.
The International Franchise Association's 2026 Economic Outlook projects that the United States will grow to approximately 845,000 franchise locations, employing nearly 8.9 million people while generating more than $921 billion in economic output. Growth is expected to continue despite higher operating costs and a more selective lending environment.
Those aren't boom numbers.
They're healthy numbers.
Measured.
Disciplined.
Intentional.
That may actually be better.
We're moving away from "growth at any cost" toward sustainable businesses with stronger unit economics and smarter operators.
That's a good thing.
Ten years ago, obtaining financing often meant finding a lender willing to approve a loan.
Today, approval is only part of the equation.
Business owners now have access to:
Ironically, having more choices has made funding decisions harder.
The question is no longer:
"Can I get approved?"
It's becoming:
"Which capital structure best supports my business over the next five years?"
That shift changes everything.
When people hear AI, they often picture chatbots writing emails.
That's the smallest part of what's happening.
Across financial services, artificial intelligence is beginning to transform how information moves through underwriting, compliance, risk analysis, document review, fraud detection, customer communication, and portfolio management.
The franchise industry is experiencing the same shift.
According to industry outlooks, AI is moving from experimental software to core infrastructure. Franchise systems are increasingly deploying intelligent automation for operations, staffing, forecasting, marketing, customer engagement, and network support rather than viewing AI as a standalone tool.
Commercial lending won't be any different.
We're already seeing AI assist with:
Notice what isn't on that list.
Replacing people.
The firms creating the most value aren't eliminating human expertise.
They're amplifying it.
For years, the commercial lending industry competed on speed.
Fast approvals.
Fast funding.
Fast decisions.
Speed still matters.
But intelligence matters more.
The next generation of funding platforms won't simply connect borrowers with lenders.
They'll help business owners answer questions like:
Those aren't lending questions.
They're business strategy questions.
And that's where technology becomes incredibly powerful.
Every major technological advancement has sparked concern that automation would replace professionals.
History usually tells a different story.
Technology removes repetitive work.
People become more valuable.
The advisors who thrive over the next decade won't be the ones filling out applications faster.
They'll be the ones interpreting data better.
Helping clients avoid mistakes.
Seeing patterns before they become problems.
Providing context that software alone cannot.
That's true for lenders.
It's true for franchise consultants.
It's true for accountants.
It's true for attorneys.
AI isn't replacing trusted advisors.
It's raising the standard for what trusted advisors deliver.
Whether you're purchasing your first franchise or expanding an existing company, the businesses best positioned for the future are preparing now.
That means:
Well-organized financial statements reduce underwriting friction and improve financing options.
Many owners wait until they're under pressure to explore financing. Better outcomes often begin months before capital is required.
AI should remove administrative work so leaders can spend more time serving customers and growing their businesses.
The best financing decision isn't always the largest approval.
Sometimes it's the one that leaves the most flexibility for the future.
America's entrepreneurial story has always been about adaptation.
Railroads.
Telephones.
Computers.
The internet.
Cloud software.
Mobile banking.
Artificial intelligence is simply the next chapter.
The businesses that succeed won't necessarily be those with the biggest budgets.
They'll be the ones combining technology with good judgment.
The ones willing to embrace innovation without losing sight of relationships.
The ones who understand that funding isn't just about capital.
It's about creating opportunity.
At LendZee, that's the future we're building toward every day.
Not replacing the human conversation.
Making it more informed.
Because after 250 years of entrepreneurship, one thing remains true:
Businesses are still built by people.
Technology simply gives them better tools.
Jason Smith is Chief Development Officer at LendZee, where he works with franchise systems, business owners, and strategic partners to simplify commercial financing through AI-powered funding intelligence. With more than 30 years in business development and capital strategy, he focuses on helping entrepreneurs align financing with long-term business goals rather than simply pursuing approvals.